The Collaborative International Dictionary
Methodize \Meth"od*ize\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. Methodized; p.
pr. & vb. n. Methodizing.]
To reduce to method; to dispose in due order; to arrange in a
convenient manner; as, to methodize one's work or thoughts.
--Spectator.
Wiktionary
vb. (en-past of: methodize)
Usage examples of "methodized".
Therefore, what necessity was there on account of these gifts, either of soul, or body, or outward estate, to worship and invoke so great a crowd of gods, all of whom I have not mentioned, nor have they themselves been able to provide for all human benefits, minutely and singly methodized, minute and single gods, when the one goddess Felicity was able, with the greatest ease, compendiously to bestow the whole of them?
At his command, the historical examples of vice and virtue were methodized in fifty-three books, ^7 and every citizen might apply, to his contemporaries or himself, the lesson or the warning of past times.
In a sense he's a glorified gardener who values neatness and order, nature methodized, not rampant across the eons and imbued with some kind of transcendent mentality, at least as regards the human species.