By Wade W.R.
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Additional resources for Solution manual, Introduction to Analysis 3ed. (2004)
Example text
In addition, right and wrong is a quality of something and independent of its consequences or (dis)utility. And, intuition is infallible, innate and a distinct faculty of knowing, one separate from the intellect (Hudson, 1980, p. 3). Intuition is thus the source and justification of moral principles and judgments. William Hamilton believed that "what is given in consciousness" - what we know intuitively -- is "a decision without appeal" (Mill, 1963, vol. 9, p. 126). Fourth, we must do what our intuition reveals to be right.
To this we shall return shortly. The IS is thus said to admire those with "acute and delicate discernment," those with the ability to distinguish "minute, and scarce perceptible differences," those with "comprehensive accuracy" (Smith, 1969, p. 64). , p. 65). However, the IS is more than a source of the intellectual virtues. The "perfection of human nature" rests upon using the intuitive-like IS in social interactions. Smith says, "that to feel much for others, and little for ourselves, that to restrain our selfish, and to indulge our benevolent affections, constitutes the perfection of human nature; and can alone produce among mankind that harmony of sentiments and passions in which consists their whole grace and propriety" (ibid, 1969, p.
P. 178). The particulars which might generate a belief that the sensation is an intuition is the simplicity, rapidity, and the role of the unconscious through which we become conscious of the sensation.