Friday, August 16, 2013

Intuition



by Lida Prypchan
Intuition is a really valuable factor. Albert Einstein.
The word intuition has slightly different usages. It is defined as a sudden understanding or clarification of a situation, a bright idea that oftentimes blossoms in one’s conscious and which may occur to us when we are not consciously thinking about a given subject; but intuitions are also those that occur to us suddenly, when we consciously think about a problem.
In this regard, prince Kropotin wrote: “Months of intense thought followed with the aim of finding some meaning in all that chaos of various observations, until one day, and suddenly, everything became clear and understandable as if I had been enlightened by a ray of light...” “There are not many joys in life that equal the joy of the birth of a generalization that comes to enlighten the mind after a long period of patient investigation.”
Sometimes intuitions present themselves during sleep. Otto Locur, professor of Pharmacology at the University of Gras, recounts that one night he woke up with a brilliant idea. He searched for paper and pencil, wrote down some notes. When he got up in the morning, he realized that he had had an inspiration during the night; however, try though he did, he could not decipher what he had written. All that day in the laboratory, he tried to remember the idea and understand his notes, but it was in vain. When he was going to bed, he still had not been able to remember anything, but during that night, to his delight, he awoke again with the same flash of inspiration; this time he made sure to take note of everything carefully before going to sleep. The following day, he headed to his laboratory and in one of the simplest, clearest and most definitive experiments in the history of Biology, he verified the chemical mediation of nervous impulses.
Most scientists are familiar with the phenomenon of intuition. In a survey done by the American chemists Platt and Baker, 33 percent reported being frequently aided by intuition, 50 percent only occasionally and 17 percent reported no help from intuition. The last group do not understand what an intuition is and believe that their ideas only derive from conscious thought. It may be that some of those opinions are based on an insufficient examination of our own mind’s work process.
Nor should be believe that all intuitions are correct. Unfortunately, intuitions, as the product of a fallible human mind, are not always correct.
Psychology of Intuition: The most characteristic circumstances for an intuition are the following: an intense period of work on the problem, accompanied by the desire to solve it; abandonment of the work, dedicating oneself to something else and the sudden appearance of the idea, often accompanied by a certain sensation of certainty. Frequently one feels delight and perhaps surprise that that idea had not occurred to one previously.
The psychology of this phenomenon has not been fully understood. There is a general, albeit not universal, agreement regarding the fact that intuitions arise from the subconscious activities of the mind, which has continued to think about the problem, even when the conscious mind is perhaps not paying attention to it.

The concept of the psychology of intuition set forth above provides us an explanation for the importance of: a) the freedom of the other problems and competitive concerns, and b) the help represented by periods of rest by allowing the appearance of intuitions, because these messages from the subconscious cannot be received by the conscious mind if it is constantly occupied or too fatigued. There are various cases of famous generalizations which have occurred to persons when they were sick in bed. Einstein refers to the fact that his profound generalization, relating space and time, came to mind while he was sick.
Baker affirms that the ideal moment is when one is in the bathtub and suggests that it was this favorable condition that helped Archimedes to discover his famous principle and not the fact that he noticed that his body floated. The favorable effects, both of the bed and of the bath, are probably due to there being no distracting elements and to the fact that all the circumstances help in fantasizing.
Different people have noted the favorable influence of music; nonetheless, not everybody agrees with this. Some forms of music help intuition: enjoyment of music is very emotionally similar to that derived from a creative mental activity, and the appropriate music induces an appropriate predisposition of one’s mood to creative thought. There is nothing better than music to inspire us to write a poem, as long as that type of music is appropriate to make us feel that we are in a subconscious state. It has happened to me several times that I have written a poem and then, a few days later, I read it again and I can’t explain to myself how I could have written that: the unreality of the subconscious blooms.
The huge emotional stimulus that many people experience when they carry out a new discovery or have a brilliant intuition also comes to bear. Probably, this emotional reaction is related to the amount of mental and emotional effort and that was dedicated to the problem. Also contributing to form that reaction is the sudden release of all the frustrations that have been associated with the work on that problem in particular. In this regard it is very interesting to note the statement of Claude Bernard: “Those who do not know the torment of the unknown cannot obtain the joy of discovery.”
Emotional sensitivity is a valuable attribute for a scientist; in any case, a notable scientist must be considered to be a creative artist, and it is entirely false to think that a scientist is a man who simply follows the laws of logic and experiments. Some of the great masters of the art of research have also possessed other types of artistic talent. Both Einstein as well as Planck were good musicians, lovers of music: that which understands it all. Pasteur and Bernard, from an early age, showed skill in painting and literature, respectively. Without having to go too far, in Valencia we have Dr. Guillermo Mujica Sevilla, head of the Histology Department at the U.C.: an anatomic pathologist, an educator, a supremely cultured person, lover of literature and music, especially opera. There is no place where he is not seen to collaborate. Dr. Mujica, always calm, has time for everything and for everyone.