Intuition and Insight. The Analysis of their selected features with reference to Bernard Lonergan position Cover Image

Intuition and Insight. The Analysis of their selected features with reference to Bernard Lonergan position
Intuition and Insight. The Analysis of their selected features with reference to Bernard Lonergan position

Author(s): Monika Walczak
Subject(s): Philosophy, Philosophical Traditions, Epistemology, Ethics / Practical Philosophy, Special Branches of Philosophy, Existentialism, Analytic Philosophy, Philosophy of Science, Hermeneutics
Published by: Wydawnictwo Naukowe Uniwersytetu Szczecińskiego
Keywords: intuition; insight; Bernard J.F. Lonergan; receptiveness/creativity; directness/indirectness; infallibility/fallibility

Summary/Abstract: The paper discusses notions of intuition and insight. The most typical features attributed to intuition in the history of philosophy – receptiveness, passivity, immediateness, directness, self-evidence, infallibility, and indubitability – are analyzed. A variability of the notion of intuition is shown, taking as its example the category of insight, central for the epistemology of Bernard J.F. Lonergan (1904–1984), the twentieth-century philosopher locating between phenomenology, Thomism and hermeneutics. Insight is still in some respects a kind of intuition although it is creative, active, mediated, indirect, fallible and open to revision.

  • Issue Year: 2016
  • Issue No: 34
  • Page Range: 29-44
  • Page Count: 16
  • Language: English