"… an absolute can only be given in an intuition, while all the rest has to go with analysis."
"… from intuition one can pass on to analysis, but not from analysis to intuition."
"… fixed concepts can be extracted by our thought from the mobile reality; but there is not means whatever of reconstituting with the fixity of concepts the mobility of the real."[14]
The known, clinical nursing practice, gave meaning to the above for me. Over the years in nursing conferences I had been told my grasp of nursing situations was intuitive. Most times this was offered rather disparagingly although the nursing outcomes were most times successful. Along with having {72} the attribute of intuition assigned to me persons often asked, "Why are you so fascinated with other persons' situations?" Together these relate to Dewey's view of intuition. He views intuition as a mulling over of conditions and a mental synthesis that results in true judgments since the controlling standards are intelligent selection, estimation, and problem solution.[15] In nursing practice research knowing the other and how he experiences and views his world is viewed as the problem.
Knowing intuitively, as described by Bergson, is comparable to Buber's considerations of man's necessary mode of becoming through "I-Thou" relation. The criteria Buber describes as characteristic for "I-Thou" relation are subscribed to in my approach to nursing practice and in this human or phenomenological nursology approach.[16] Buber held as prerequisite for intuitive type knowing of the other, or imagining the real of his potential for being, a knower, and "I," capable of distance from the other, able to see the other as a unique other, one who turns to the other, makes his being present to the other, and allows the other presence. The knowing, "I," in this case the nurse, responds to the other's uniqueness, does not superimpose, maintains a capacity for surprise and question, and is with the other, as opposed to "seeming to be." This kind of relating cannot be superimposed on a nurse clinician or researcher. It must be personally responsibly chosen and invested in.
The approach then of the second phase of this method and of the transactional phase of nursing when nurses are in the arena with others is the same. This method proposes that to study nursing from outside the arena for purposes of objectivity bursts asunder the very nature of nursing practice. The studier is a part of that which is being studied. Observations interpreted from outside the situation could be classified only as projections.
Phase III: Nurse Knowing the Other Scientifically
Bergson believes man knows incompletely through standing outside the thing to be known, metaphorically walking around it, and observing it. This analytical process, this viewing of a thing's many aspects, he conceives as the habitual function of positive science. This is the third phase of this phenomenological nursology method. Bergson says:
"… analysis multiplies endlessly the points of view … to complete the ever incomplete representation."
"All analysis is thus a translation, a development into symbols, a representation taken from successive points of view."