Sentences with phrase «intuition knows»

While it may be true that we know your anatomy better than you, your intuition knows what is in your body's best interest better than any doctor possibly could.
Maybe it feels organic; your intuition knows how to stretch those muscles.

Not exact matches

As the man attempted to lead her down an even darker block that she'd known to be dangerous, she decided to listen to her intuition this time, calling out for help to a nearby group of people before sprinting away from him and getting home safe.
Jobs trusted that his intelligence, his intuition, and his experience would not only help him get where he wanted to go, but that they would also help reveal places he never knew he wanted to go.
And as we all know, a lot of decisions are not made on a purely rational basis but on the decision maker's intuition and experience.
«I think proactively knowing about customer problems can really help you build a long - term intuition about the important things you need to get right when you build your company.
That is not intuition, that is just based on the fact that I know my children.
We didn't know then just how accurate our intuition about his tragic trip was.
If you come up with I don't know, it's a clear indication that you are using your fear - based intellect and not activating your intuition.
Disney knew this to be true from his gut; he had incredible intuition!
Talbot says he's been most impressed by Brian's willingness to learn: «He has great intuition and follows this extremely well, but he also isn't afraid to say or admit that he doesn't know something and then he will go out and become an expert (or seek out expertise and best practices).
I don't know how things have worked out for you, but for me, whenever I've ignored my intuition - that little voice inside my Crown, things haven't worked out very well.
Our reasoning here applies what's known as the principle of restricted choice, which comes up in the card game bridge, and is the intuition behind the formal mathematical procedure for updating beliefs based on new information, Bayesian inference.
For example, our intuition tells us that we know something even before we have the answer.
Follow these four steps to know when you should go with your intuition and when you should take a more facts - based approach.
If you don't know what your instincts and intuitions will tell you to do under different conditions, you will have a great deal of trouble planning effective strategies and responses.»
I know your intuition will lead you to the right words that can define you and your dream life.
Yes, you know, according to economic theory and kind of according to intuition.
It's ironic that, in an era of big data, that's no longer a matter of guesswork, intuition, and hunches, we still don't have a great answer to this question.
In fact, as someone who emphasizes risk management to such a high degree, I think Marks would be able to appreciate some trend following strategies, which rely not on intuition, but rather on rules to determine when the odds are no longer favorable.
Challenging conventional wisdom and rational thought, non conformism, humility, independent thinking, intuition above induction, adopting a multi-disciplinary mindset, learning from mistakes and indeed, happily abandoning the ideas he knew were wrong; creativity and imagination and of course, curiosity.
I don't know if these conclusions are based on some unknown statistical information or merely keen intuition.
When was the last time you went against your intuition or gut feelings just to hear yourself say «I knew I shouldn't have done that, I somehow knew it wouldn't work out»?
«Knowing is a direct intuition,» a matter of «divine grace.»
These are the folks who like to talk about «common sense» and who, as we know from research is common among the religious, rely heavily on intuition aand believe all answers are intuitive.
Little did I know then that there was great merit to her intuition.
Such experience no longer regards purely particular things as do the senses, but rather through intuition finds the universal genus behind them all — indeed, experience is «the universal now stabilized within the soul,» according to Aristotle in Posterior Analytics.
Now if we regard all real religions as attempts to get at a special kind of truth to provide some answer to man's intuitions about his own nature, we shall, I believe, find that what we know as «Christianity» comprehends, develops and fulfills all that at heart we hold to be true.
Insight comes, intuition comes, understanding comes, and, for me, it usually seems to require going through that time of intense prayer and arriving at the realization that I do not know what to say, or do and it is okay.
I was more open to her intuition - based suspicions than Dan was, probably because my mother has always had good instincts about people and I've learned to trust that some people (particularly women) just know when something is wrong.
He said that «no man knows the hour» of the Second Coming, so that should have been a clear message to all these «believers» who listened to Camping rather than their own intuition and the Bible.
Thus temporal passage might be characterized intrinsically as an élan vital, creativity, durée, or perpetual perishing known through a fundamental intuition of the dynamical character of existence.
However, it does not clash with my moral intuitions to believe that Fred Phelps (or Hitler for that matter) will be judged, humiliated and utterly destroyed so that he will be no more.
Similarly, it might be that the Club has no better way to award entry into its little aristocracy - for - a-night than to make snap intuition - al judgments that inevitably, are heavily based on appearances.
There are differences, finally, as to the relation between subject and object: whether the object is known through dialectical or analytical reasoning, scientific method, phenomenological insight into essence, or some form of direct intuition.
Intellect operates where we know in order to act with some purpose; instinct operates where we act purposefully without needing knowledge; intuition where our whole being becomes one in the act of knowing.
Mr. Futterman's reference to quantum computers solving problems by a «leap of intuition» is therefore less a matter of sober scientific assessment than rhapsodic misdirection by a scientist who should know better.
The objective physical, including its mathematical structure, is always known in relationship with the spiritual, and this indeed includes rational intuition of the absolute spiritual Mind of God founding the very being of matter.
Immediate Intuition in Caritasin Veritate For Edward Holloway every human observation inherently involves a complementary interaction and interdefinition between «me and my environment», a fundamental aspect of which is the relationship between the knowing spiritual mind and ordered matter.
If we want to see and understand those forces as they truly are, then we must look not to reason (which acts as a distorting lens), but to our more immediate, primordial ways of knowing, that is, aesthetic intuition (the divine inspiration of the artist) and action.
Another way of putting the point is to suggest that the arts rely heavily on intuition and tacit knowing, whereas the more discursive disciplines stress sequential and explicit thought.
The answer, he believes, is «that we know what «knowledge» is partly by knowing God, and that though it is true that we form the idea of divine knowledge by analogical extension from our experience of human knowledge, this is not the whole truth, the other side of the matter being that we form our idea of human knowledge by exploiting the intuition... which we have of God» (155).
In any event, in a closely parallel discussion of the very same question, of how problematic terms like «know» or «love» as applied to God are to be classified, he in no way appeals to psychicalism, but argues instead that, although they are «in such application not literal in the simple sense in which «relative» can be,» they nevertheless «may be literal if or in so far as we have religious intuition» (1970a, 155).
Although he goes on to insist that this is not the whole truth, what he takes to be the other side of the matter is that we form our idea of human knowledge, not by exploiting our intuition of God as eminently knowing, but by exploiting our intuition of God — period.
For it must be in intuitions that two contrary modes of knowing are merged — that is, an immediate focus that «enters into» what is apprehended and at the same time enacts a process that includes some aspect of spatializing thought, distinguishing and somehow distancing.
Janzen's paraphrase of Whitehead applies as much to the interpreter as to the author of a text: «we experience more than we know; and we know more than we can think; and we think more than we can say; and language therefore lags behind the intuitions of immediate experience» (OTPP 492).
The relevance of this discussion of the self in the context of the problem of faith and reason stems from the basic religious intuition that reason is not free to know God because of its corruption by sin and that the seat of sin is somehow in the self.
Such «religious intuitions» are the «somewhat exceptional elements of our conscious experience» that Whitehead seeks to elucidate as evidence for God's consequent experience of the world.9 Only a living person experiencing a whole series of divine aims, sensitive to the way in which these shift, grow, and develop in response to our changing circumstances can become aware of their source as dynamic and personal, meeting our needs and concerns.10 Jesus, full of the Spirit, knew God personally in this intimate way, until these aims were taken from him in the hour of his deepest need, when he experienced being forsaken by God on the cross.
By what Whitehead styled «the appeal to the direct intuition of special occasions --» he was referring to the primitive days of the Church in which Jesus» impact was known as a reality — we may possess, and Christian conviction affirms that we do possess, a key or clue «of universal validity, to be applied by faith to the ordering of all experience.»
Your intuition and the evidence in science and nature lead you to conclude there is «No God», and my intuition and the evidence of science and nature lead me to conclude that «there must be a God».
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