30 Philosophers, Chapter 9, Aristotle, Touchstone 25: Logic.
Reasoning and argument existed long before Aristotle. People debated, persuaded, explained, and drew conclusions in every ancient culture. What Aristotle did was move the field forward dramatically. He made reasoning more visible, more formal, and more teachable.
In the works later collected as the Organon, Aristotle explored the structure of valid argument, especially deductive reasoning through syllogisms. Many of those insights still stand. He also studied how reasoning goes wrong, identifying many of the logical fallacies of his day in Sophistical Refutations. And while deduction was his great formal achievement, he also recognized induction and explored forms of explanation that point toward later ideas, including what we now call abductive reasoning.
Aristotle did not separate these ideas the way we do today. He was not working with the modern categories of reasoning, inference, and logic. For him, this was part of a larger study of logos: argument, demonstration, explanation, and rational thought. His genius was not that he invented thinking, but that he gave thinking a structure.
In modern terms, where reasoning means inference and logic means testing structure, Aristotle’s main focus was deductive inference and logical form. He wanted to know when a conclusion followed necessarily from its premises. That is why the syllogism became so central to his work. Deduction was where Aristotle gave reasoning its sharpest early instrument.