The human mind has been described as an iceberg, with only a fraction of its operations visible above the surface of conscious awareness. Two of the most fascinating aspects of this submerged expanse are intuition and logic—two sides of the same cognitive coin. It’s an age-old dichotomy that has occupied the thoughts of psychologists, philosophers, and curious minds alike. In this blog post, I, your amiable host Percival Q. Higginbottom, will tread lightly but curiously into the intriguing dance of intuition and logic. Intuition, that mysterious gut feeling, that sixth sense, is a form of knowing that appears to bypass the rigorous procedures of logic and reason. It’s the hunch, the inexplicable certainty, the instantaneous recognition of a pattern before it fully forms. It’s a form of cognition that seems to spring from the deep, hidden realms of our unconscious mind, popping up in our consciousness like an unexpected, yet […]
Human Mind
Dear Reader, Time, that ceaseless weaver, embroiders a grand tapestry of memories, some of which we look back upon with a certain fondness – a fondness I like to call nostalgia. It is a sentiment as old as human memory itself, a bitter-sweet cocktail of joy and melancholy that can catch us unawares on a lazy Sunday afternoon, or in the quiet moments before sleep. Nostalgia, from the Greek ‘nostos’ meaning ‘return’ and ‘algos’ meaning ‘pain,’ was once considered a malady, a form of homesickness so severe it could be fatal. But today, it is recognized as an emotion that can provide comfort, foster resilience, and even kindle a sense of belonging. It is this paradoxical pleasure that I seek to explore today. Philosophers have long been fascinated by nostalgia. The German philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche, for instance, saw it as a sign of dissatisfaction with the present, a refusal to […]