Reply To: Trust my intuition

As Buddhists, we believe that Right Speech takes priority over Free Speech. Put simply, Right Speech means abstaining from gossip and talk which is false, malicious, or harsh. Write only what you believe to be true and relevant, voicing your opinion with kindness and patience. Avoid worldly, partisan, or discriminatory topics and remarks that are patriarchal, misogynist, sexist, racist, anti-semitic, pro-nazi, bio essentialist, xenophobic, transphobic, homophobic or any other kind of hateful views even if such advocacy is couched in terms of ‘discussing the texts’ or ‘maintaining tradition’.

By participating in the forum, you agree to adhere to these guidelines and help maintain the forum as a supportive and enriching place for Dharma discourse. Moderators will be free to delete offensive content without having defend their choices.

If you have a question, need any sort of help, or want to inform us about offensive content or behavior, please contact us at info@thebuddhaproject.org.

Home Forums TBP cafe Trust my intuition Reply To: Trust my intuition

#2316
Ven. Gendun
Keymaster

There is no equivalent to the notion of what we call ‘intuition’ in the Dharma. It might be best seen as the feeling aspect in combination with the initial representation of the object. Bot are based on previous experiences. Wisdom arises when these representations are question by wisdom, investigation, and analysis. Moreover, what is called intuition in the West is often little more than confirmation bias at work. We notice the one time that our perception contained acute information and forget the 9 other times it didn’t. So, you’re right, the seeing restructures your perception. That’s the whole idea of the awakening factors.