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intuition Immediate knowing of something without the conscious use of reasoning.
Ãâó: www.thepeacefulplanet.com/glossary.html
intuition [B33/A19] Intuitions are one of two sorts of representations which we synthesize to form experience; they are connected with the sensibility (concepts are the other sort of representation; they are connected with the understanding). Through intuitions, "objects are given to us by means of sensibility". Intuitions rest on "affectations": objects affect our mind in certain ways in which we are "receptive"; in us are produced "sensations" and thereby we "receive representations", viz. ...
Ãâó: www.texttribe.com/text/kant_glossary.htm
intuition that senseof faculty in the human mind by which man knows (or may know) factsof which he would otherwise not be cognizant-facts which might not beapparent to him through process of reason or so-called scientificproof. See INTUITION.
Ãâó: www.wholeagain.com/channelingglossary.html
intuition (1) According to INTUITIONISM, a special faculty or power of apprehending moral truths; also any exercise or product of that faculty.
Ãâó: www.abdn.ac.uk/philosophy/guide/glossary.shtml
intuition immediate apprehension or cognition; the power or faculty of attaining to direct knowledge or cognition without rational thought and inference. (Instructor's note: the use of the word "rational" here is key, for it refers to the conscious thought process, as opposed to the "irrational", represented by the unknown subconscious).
Ãâó: www.artsymbolism.com/definitions.html
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