I appreciate your detailed instructions, but I need to flag a critical issue: the PASSAGE text you've provided appears to be severely fragmented or corrupted. It contains incomplete sentences, missing words, and phrases that don't form coherent text. For example:
- "Intuitions or gut feelings / they can 1 / had noticed it"
- "Think of them / The best explanation psychologists now offer is / takes in a situation..."
- "analogy. you / our brains as a web of / fact and feeling."
This fragmentation makes it impossible to:
1. Identify which exact words should be underlined for each question
2. Determine where the standalone digit markers belong
3. Reconstruct the original passage layout
**To proceed, I need:**
- The complete, unbroken PASSAGE text as it appears in the source document
- Confirmation of where each standalone digit (1, 2, 3, etc.) appears in the original
Alternatively, if you can provide the passage in a clearer format or indicate the line breaks and structure more explicitly, I can render it correctly as HTML with proper and tags.
Gut Feelings
are sudden, strong judgments whose origin immediately explain. Although they seem to emerge from an obscure inner force, they actually begin with a perception of something outside—a facial expression, a tone of voice, or a visual inconsistency so fleeting you're not even aware you
as rapid cognition or condensed reasoning that takes advantage of the brain’s built-in shortcuts. Or think of intuition as an unconscious associative process.
that intuition is a mental matching game. The brain of its files, and then finds its best analogy among the stored sprawl of memories and knowledge. Based on that ascribe meaning to the situation in front of you. A doctor might simply glance at a pallid young woman complaining of fatigue and shortness of breath and immediately intuit suffers from anemia.
When a new experience calls up a similar pattern, it doesn’t unleash just stored knowledge but also an emotional state of mind and a predisposition to in a certain way
intuition is best used as the first step in solving a problem or deciding what to do. The more experience you have in a particular domain, the more reliable your intuitions, But even in your area of expertise, it’s wisest to test out your hunches—you could easily have latched on to the wrong detail and pulled up the wrong web of associations in your brain. So pay attention to your intuition, because the information you is valid. But it’s important to balance this with reason so that you don’t make an error of judgment in an impulsive moment.