Thus the same object may supply a practical perception to one person and a speculative one to another, or the same person may perceive it partly practically and partly speculatively.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
Intuition makes much of it; I mean by this the faculty of seeing a connection between things that in appearance are completely different; it does not fail to lead us astray quite often.
Alternative descriptions of the same reality evoke different emotions and different associations.
There has been a great gulf in psychological thought between the perception of space and objects on one hand and the perception of meaning on the other.
The moment a person forms a theory, his imagination sees in every object only the traits which favor that theory.
For psychological purposes the most important differences in conation are those in virtue of which the object is revealed as sensed or perceived or imaged or remembered or thought.
When we come to images or memories or thoughts, speculation, while always closely related to practice, is more explicit, and it is in fact not immediately obvious that such processes can be described in any sense as practical.
Intuition comes very close to clairvoyance; it appears to be the extrasensory perception of reality.
All ideas come about through some sort of observation. It sparks an attitude; some object or emotion causes a reaction in the other person.
I don't ever work in a way where something is an illustration of an event, but when something is occurring at the same time I see it as very informed by that.
One has to view things realistically.