noun
- A philosophical doctrine holding that knowledge or truth can be obtained directly through intuition rather than through reason, logic, or sensory experience.
- The practice or tendency to rely on intuition as a guide for decision-making or understanding.
Usage: philosophy; formal
Usage: general
Examples
- The philosopher argued for intuitionalism as a valid path to moral knowledge.
- Her intuitionalism led her to make business decisions based on gut feelings rather than market data.
- Intuitionalism in ethics suggests that we can directly perceive right and wrong.
- Critics of intuitionalism claim it lacks the rigor of logical reasoning.
- The artist's intuitionalism was evident in her spontaneous creative process.
- Some mathematicians embrace intuitionalism, rejecting certain classical logical principles.