intuitions in English

noun
1
the ability to understand something immediately, without the need for conscious reasoning.
we shall allow our intuition to guide us

Use "intuitions" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "intuitions" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "intuitions", or refer to the context using the word "intuitions" in the English Dictionary.

1. Her perceptions and intuitions about human nature were fascinating.

2. Adaptationism and intuitions about modern criminal justice Behav Brain Sci

3. A woman's intuitions do not ask to have a Cautionary signal repeated

4. Strong intuitions of the man assure the mariners he can be no innocent.

5. But anyway, college students not here, show systematic biases of incorrect physical intuitions.

6. To Confute intuitionists and get rid of intuitions was one main purpose of all Mill's speculations

7. Pute optimal Bundlings, and choose a final bundling based on the intuitions gained from this

8. Acts currently represents nearly 8,000 members who are involved in academic intuitions, industry, philanthropic agencies and government

9. Many quite fluent Dyirbal speakers simply represented a dead end in that their intuitions could not be accessed.

10. Furthermore the sense in which we describe certain dilemmas, impulses, intuitions, or decisions as moral ones is notoriously imprecise.

11. All experts in their fields, Arabesk's "research leaders" combine the diversity of their skills and their intuitions

12. We have very strong intuitions about all kinds of things -- our own ability, how the economy works, how we should pay school teachers.

13. And the last thing is that this algorithm also identifies what are our intuitions, of which words should lead in the neighborhood of introspection.

14. More standard accounts of intuitions treat them as “intellectual seemings” (see [ 1, 25 ]), “inclinations to believe” (see [ 33 ]), or “spontaneous mental Assentings” to classificational propositions (see [ 8 ])

15. Hildegard’s language, characterized by an original and effective style, makes ample use of poetic expressions and is rich in symbols, dazzling intuitions, incisive comparisons and evocative metaphors.

16. If Conscience simply is the expression of moral intuition, and if individuals have significantly different and irreconcilable moral intuitions, then individuals also have significantly different and difficult-to-reconcile conscientious moral Consciences

17. Conceptualist readings of Kant thus claim that there is a relevant sense in which (i) intuitions have content; (ii) the content of the intuition is conceptual; (iii) it is this conceptual content that constitutes or determines the cognitive relation of the intuition (as a mental state) to a mind-independent object (or in the case of inner sense