What is Intuition?

by frankiespeakin 10 Replies latest watchtower beliefs

  • frankiespeakin
    frankiespeakin

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intuition_(psychology)

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intuition_(psychology)

    For some reason the ) at the end needs to be added in the address bar after being clicked.

    Intuition (psychology)

    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Jump to: navigation, search See also: Insight

    Intuition is the ability to acquire knowledge without inference or the use of reason. [ 1 ] "The word 'intuition' comes from the Latin word 'intueri', which is often roughly translated as meaning 'to look inside'’ or 'to contemplate'." [ 2 ] Intuition provides us with beliefs that we cannot necessarily justify. For this reason, it has been the subject of study in psychology, as well as a topic of interest in the supernatural. The "right brain" is popularly associated with intuitive processes such as aesthetic abilities. [ 3 ] [ 4 ] [ 5 ] Some scientists have contended that intuition is associated with innovation in scientific discovery. [ 6 ] Intuition is also a common subject of New Age writings. [ 7 ]

  • still thinking
    still thinking

    I think it is our sixth sense that we just can't explain...well I can't anyway.

  • aquagirl
    aquagirl

    I think it is onformation or knowledge that we have in our brains that we didnt necessarily put there,but is there.Maybe instinct?

  • frankiespeakin
    frankiespeakin

    In tuition should be a rather natural outcome of evolution and it's survival of the fittest process. A good sense of intuition can lead us out of dangerous situations that don't afford the time of reasoning consciously before action is taken.

  • Razziel
    Razziel

    I think it's tied to pattern recognition and fuzzy logic.

  • Lunatic Faith
    Lunatic Faith

    I wrote a paper on that subject last year. Its posted on my blog here: http://forsakingrestraint.com/2011/02/26/intuition-useful-or-misleading

  • breakfast of champions
    breakfast of champions

    Implicit knowledge.

  • Lore
    Lore

    Intuition is the ability to make a completely random guess, and when you are randomly wrong to think: "Darn" And then when you're randomly right to think: "I KNEW IT!

  • exwhyzee
    exwhyzee

    To me, intuition is information or knowledge that has registered on some level without me realizing it and helps me draw conclusions or make decisions when concrete evidence doesn't exist or doesn't seem reliable enough.

  • frankiespeakin
    frankiespeakin

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intuition_(psychology)

    Intuition in other psychological theories

    In more-recent psychology, intuition can encompass the ability to know valid solutions to problems and decision making. For example, the recognition primed decision (RPD) model explains how people can make relatively fast decisions without having to compare options. Gary Klein found that under time pressure, high stakes, and changing parameters, experts used their base of experience to identify similar situations and intuitively choose feasible solutions. Thus, the RPD model is a blend of intuition and analysis. The intuition is the pattern-matching process that quickly suggests feasible courses of action. The analysis is the mental simulation, a conscious and deliberate review of the courses of action. [ 14 ]

    According to the renowned neuropsychologist and neurobiologistRoger Wolcott Sperry though, intuition is a right-brain activity while factual and mathematical analysis is a left-brain activity. [ 15 ]

    The reliability of one's intuition depends greatly on past knowledge and occurrences in a specific area. For example, someone who has had more experiences with children will tend to have a better instinct or intuition about what they should do in certain situations with them. This is not to say that one with a great amount of experience is always going to have an accurate intuition (because some can be biased); however, the chances of it being more reliable are definitely amplified. [ 16 ]

    Jung said that a person in whom intuition was dominant, an "intuitive type", acted not on the basis of rational judgment but on sheer intensity of perception. An extraverted intuitive type, "the natural champion of all minorities with a future", orients to new and promising but unproven possibilities, often leaving to chase after a new possibility before old ventures have borne fruit, oblivious to his or her own welfare in the constant pursuit of change. An introverted intuitive type orients by images from the unconscious, ever exploring the psychic world of the archetypes, seeking to perceive the meaning of events, but often having no interest in playing a role in those events and not seeing any connection between the contents of the psychic world and him- or herself. Jung thought that extraverted intuitive types were likely entrepreneurs, speculators, cultural revolutionaries, often undone by a desire to escape every situation before it becomes settled and constraining—even repeatedly leaving lovers for the sake of new romantic possibilities. His introverted intuitive types were likely mystics, prophets, or cranks, struggling with a tension between protecting their visions from influence by others and making their ideas comprehensible and reasonably persuasive to others—a necessity for those visions to bear real fruit. [ 8 ]

    It has been asserted that Jung's analytical psychological theory of synchronicity is equal to intellectual intuition. [ 9 ]

    The Myers-Briggs Type Indicator (MBTI), first published in 1944, attempted to provide an empirical method of identifying a person's dominant ego function, in terms of Carl Jung's theory. Beginning in the 1960s, scientists performed studies to see if MBTI results were consistent with the assumed theory that Jungian functions exist and conflict in such a way that one of them must be dominant and the others suppressed. Every study has found that instead of people's MBTI scores clustering around two opposite poles, such as intuition vs. sensation, with few people scoring in the middle, people's scores actually cluster around the middle of each scale in a bell curve. This suggests that the Jungian polarities do not exist. Most contemporary psychological research rejects the existence of Jungian functions and the MBTI's ability to tell which function is dominant.

    Intuition and spirituality

    Intuition is commonly discussed in writings of spiritual thought. Contextually, there is often an idea of a transcendent and more qualitative mind of one's spirit towards which a person strives, or towards which consciousness evolves. Typically, intuition is regarded as a conscious commonality between earthly knowledge and the higher spiritual knowledge [ 17 ] and appears as flashes of illumination. [ 18 ] It is asserted that by definition intuition cannot be judged by logical reasoning. [ 19 ]

    Thomas Merton discussed variations of intuition in a series of essays. In describing aesthetic intuition he asserted that the artist has a subjective identification with an object that is both heightened and intensified and thereby "sees" the object's spiritual reality. [ 20 ] In discussing Zen meditation he asserted that a direct intuition is derived through a "struggle against conceptual knowledge." An end result is "the existent knows existence, or 'isness,' while completely losing sight of itself as a 'knowing subject. ' " [ 21 ]

    Rudolf Steiner postulated that intuition is the third of three stages of higher knowledge, coming after imagination and inspiration, and is characterized by a state of immediate and complete experience of, or even union with, the object of knowledge without loss of the subject's individual ego. [ 22 ]

    The high value of intuition in the Sufi schemata is related by El Sayeed Idries Shah el-Hashimi el-Naqshbandi, Grand Sheikh of the Dervish Orders. [ 23 ]

    [ edit ] Empathic accuracy

    Main article: Empathic accuracy

    Empathic accuracy is a term in psychology that refers to how accurately one person (usually designated the perceiver) can infer the thoughts and feelings of another person (usually designated the target). It was first introduced in conjunction with a new research method by psychologists William Ickes and William Tooke in 1988. [ 24 ] It is similar to the term accurate empathy, which psychologist Carl Rogers had previously introduced in 1957. [ 25 ] Empathic accuracy is an important aspect of what William Ickes has called "everyday mind reading." [ 26 ]

    Contrary to popular understanding women do not seem to possess empathic abilities that men do not have. However research by William Ickes has shown that women are susceptible to stereotypes, and try harder in situations where they would expect to do better. In situations where they are unaware that this is expected, no improved performance is found.

    [ edit ] Studies and claims

    Dismissing the notion that intuitive impulses arise supernaturally, one is left to assume they originate with the five innate human senses. Remnants of perception, such as a movement occurring out of the "corner of your eye" or subtle sound that would normally be ignored as background noise, could occur simultaneously. While these events could be filtered as irrelevant by the mind, their coincidental synchronicity could lead to a sudden assumptions about one's surroundings, such as the feeling of being watched or followed.

    Intuitive abilities were quantitatively tested at Yale University in the 1970s. While studying nonverbal communication, researchers noted that some subjects were able to read nonverbal facial cues before reinforcement occurred. [ 27 ] In employing a similar design, they noted that highly intuitive subjects made decisions quickly but could not identify their rationale. Their level of accuracy, however, did not differ from that of nonintuitive subjects. [ 28 ]

    Law enforcement officers often claim to observe suspects and immediately "know" that they possess a weapon or illicit narcotic substances. Often unable to articulate why they reacted or what prompted them at the time of the event, they sometimes retrospectively can plot their actions based upon what had been clear and present danger signals. Such examples liken intuition to "gut feelings" and when viable illustrate preconscious activity. [ 29 ]

    [ edit ] Various definitions

    Intuition is a combination of historical (empirical) data, deep and heightened observation and an ability to cut through the thickness of surface reality. Intuition is like a slow motion machine that captures data instantaneously and hits you like a ton of bricks. Intuition is a knowing, a sensing that is beyond the conscious understanding — a gut feeling. Intuition is not pseudo-science.
    – Abella Arthur

    Intuition (is) perception via the unconscious
    Carl Gustav Jung

    INTUITION may be defined as understanding or knowing without conscious recourse to thought, observation or reason. Some see this unmediated process as somehow mystical while others describe intuition as being a response to unconscious cues or implicitly apprehended prior learning.
    – Dr. Jason Gallate & Ms Shannan Keen BA [ 30 ]

    [ edit ] Honor

    Intuition Peak on Livingston Island in the South Shetland Islands, Antarctica is named in appreciation of the role of scientific intuition for the advancement of human knowledge. [ 31 ] When Steve Jobs returned from India he said, “The main thing I’ve learned is intuition". [ 32 ]

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