- ホーム
- > 洋書
- > ドイツ書
- > Non-Fiction Books/Guidebooks
- > Guide Books
Description
Intuition wasn't the absence of logic. It was what logic looked like when it moved too fast for the conscious mind to follow. For a logical thinker, intuition can feel like the least reliable tool in the room. It is unverifiable, inconsistent, and suspiciously resistant to being proven. And yet, there are moments - quiet, persistent, difficult to dismiss - when something beyond analysis seems to know something the data doesn't.Intuition Training for Logical Thinkers explores what intuition actually is beneath the mysticism it is so often wrapped in, and why the analytical mind is not its enemy but, in many ways, its most capable interpreter. It examines how years of privileging reason over felt sense can gradually create a lopsided inner landscape - one in which the mind is highly developed but the subtler signals of the body and deeper cognition go consistently unread. It gently reframes intuition not as the opposite of logic, but as a different and equally sophisticated form of information processing - one that becomes more accessible the more honestly it is examined.This book offers insight into the practical intersection of analytical thinking and inner knowing: how pattern recognition underlies much of what we experience as gut feeling, why the body registers meaningful signals before conscious reasoning catches up, and what it means to build a more integrated relationship between evidence-based thinking and the quieter, faster intelligence that operates beneath it. It does not ask you to abandon critical thinking or surrender to feeling over fact. What it offers is something more nuanced and more honest - a thoughtful exploration of how intuition and logic, trusted together, create a richer and more reliable inner compass than either can provide alone.For anyone who has ever talked themselves out of something that turned out to be right, or reasoned their way into something that turned out to be wrong - and wondered what they missed in the process.



