And as it is prior to everything and the cause of everything it has an immediate knowledge of all things without effort or searching.
We thus have two kinds of necessary or immediate knowledge, the data of sense, and self-evident propositions.
In addition to these two sources of immediate knowledge, there is a third source based upon these two.
Intuition or immediate knowledge can be attained by man only through the sensory, whose universal intuitions are only space and time.
In feeling, therefore, in immediate knowledge, in faith, Jacobi thought he had found that certainty which Kant had sought in vain on the basis of discursive thinking.
Hence an immediate knowledge of it, is, as Sir William Hamilton affirms, a contradiction.
It is to be noticed, in addition, that with the exception of the tactual sense, and possibly of sight, these senses give us no direct, immediate knowledge of external things.
If illusion is the simulation of immediate knowledge, the most obvious mode of classifying illusions would appear to be according to the variety of the knowledge which they simulate.
It is only needful to remark here that, under perception, or rather in close conjunction with it, I purpose dealing with the knowledge of other's feelings, in so far as this assumes the aspect of immediate knowledge.
What the relative values of these different kinds of immediate knowledge are is a point which will have to be touched on at the end of our study.
From all alike, in relation to immediate knowledge, is the insecurity demonstrated of that of which we say “it is.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "immediate knowledge" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.