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    Intuition establishes only the self-certifying character ... — Carmelics
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    Home/Perception
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    Supports→An intuition of an idea's adequacy does not by itself establish the independent existence of the object represented by that idea.

    Intuition establishes only the self-certifying character of certain ideas.

    PerceptionTruth & Knowledge
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    An intuition of an idea's adequacy does not by itself establish the independent ...The existence of a mind-independent object corresponding to an idea is a further...

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    Intuition is the only valid basis for holding and asserting self-evide...79%Self-certifying ideas of this kind constitute a form of intuition.76%The only remaining possibility is that the idea itself signals its own...76%Mathematics cannot be given a self-evident foundation.74%

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    SEP: foucault
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    How, on the Classical view, do we know that an idea is a representation of an object—and an adequate representation? Not, Foucault argues, by comparing the idea with the object as it is apart from its representation. This is impossible, since it would require knowing the object without a representation (when, for Classical thought, to know is to represent). The only possibility is that the idea itself must make it apparent that it is a representation. The idea represents the very fact that it is

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