Discover the most popular and inspiring quotes and sayings on the topic of Hunches. Share them with your friends on social media platforms like Facebook, Twitter, or your personal blogs, and let the world be inspired by their powerful messages. Here are the Top 100 Hunches Quotes And Sayings by 93 Authors including Marty Rubin,Mumia Abu-Jamal,Kate Adie,Usama Fayyad,Richard Bach for you to enjoy and share.
Trust your senses most of the time, your intuition some of the time, and your conclusions never.
I have learned not to do predictions. It's not helpful, psychologically. I don't sit and fret about things.
I don't sit there and speculate. I'm not that sort of person. It wastes time, actually.
Sometimes guessing is the best you can do. In the real world, we guess all the time and it serves us well.
We know nothing until intuition agrees.
I'm just a risk taker. I have gut instincts.
I'm not much into speculation.
Nobody can ever pin you down when you speculate.
It was one thing to have guessed it, another to have had that guess confirmed beyond possibility of refutation.
My track record is pretty good on predictions.
Reality is just a collective hunch.
I'm not a detective from Baker Street or an old lady who solves crimes while she's knitting in an easy chair. I'm just a book girl. So I can't make a deduction, only take a flight of fancy
er, forget I said that. I meant, I can only take a guess.
Intuition will tell the thinking mind where to look next.
I never assume anything. I anticipate the possibilities and allow my imagination to create the future.
My heart suspects more than mine eye can see.
Speculation is perfectly all right, but if you stay there you've only founded a superstition. If you test it, you've started a science.
You can trust a crystal ball about as far as you can throw it.
The same unquestioning certainty given to English rain and Irish trouble.
My intuition is always on my side. I trust it to be there at all times.
I don't want to hear any of your worries or your doubts or your remote possibilities based on so little evidence even you can't explain where those thoughts are coming from aside from the ever-popular, 'I just have this feeling'.
That's really specific, ma'am. For a prediction, I mean."
"It's not a prediction."
"It's not? Then what is it?"
"It's what is.
We need to stop, and admit it: we have a prediction problem. We love to predict things - and we aren't very good at it.
Trust the Simi. She ain't never wrong.
Those who have knowledge, don't predict. Those who predict, don't have knowledge.
One hears a great many things, true, but can gather nothing definite.
My gut tells me everything I need to know.
Those who assume hypotheses as first principles of their speculations ... may indeed form an ingenious romance, but a romance it will still be.
Boys. Nine times out of ten, they're wrong and the tenth time they made a lucky guess.
At a university they had the freshman class make the same predictions that some of the well-known psychics do every year, and they found the freshman class did better
Expert: a man who makes three correct guesses consecutively.
Astrologers that future fates foreshow.
The shrewd guess, the fertile hypothesis, the courageous leap to a tentative conclusion - these are the most valuable coins of the thinker at work. But in most schools guessing is heavily penalized and is associated somehow with laziness.
Guessing is a weakness brought on by indolence and should never be confused with intuition.
Bet on yourself.
What can we say with certainty?
But I have a gut feeling on this and it's not the oh-look-it's-a-bright-shiny-world kind. (Tate)
Methinks we have a clue. Be still, my heart.
There are moments in life when we need to trust blindly in intuition
Often intuition will direct you. If it feels right, it's probably right.
Intuition requires confidence.
Almost everyone's instinct is to be overconfident and read way too much into a hot or cold streak.
Arrows of insight have to be winged by the feathers of speculation.
Whenever I hear someone make a highly improbable assumption, I always ask, "What's your second choice?
Wishful speculation is a spirit's gluttony
A woman's intuition is better than a man's. Nobody knows anything, really, you know, and a woman can guess a good deal nearer than a man.
I'm not keen on making predictions.
The more I see, the less I know for sure.-- John Lennon
A prediction is a prediction because it's predictable.
one should never assume anything
My predictions are notably inaccurate.
I was never idle long enough to do much thinking, but I felt somehow that my instincts were right.
Predictions are preposterous.
If a man writes a book, let him set down only what he knows. I have guesses enough of my own.
I always hate speculation on the news, so I don't want to be somebody who speculates.
My senses tell me hubba.
My intuition never fails me, it is I who fail when I do not listen to it.
be him." "How would you know?" "It's just a prediction." I
The bat-and-ball problem is our first encounter with an observation that will be a recurrent theme of this book: many people are overconfident, prone to place too much faith in their intuitions.
Going to tell us why you think so, Gunny?" "I expect the belief is based on years and years of experience combined with a number of subliminal clues that I'm not consciously aware of." "Gut feeling?" Mike asked in the stunned silence that followed her declaration. "Pretty much, yeah.
Estimating is what you do when you don't know.
Going with intuition a lot of times is very lonely. You're going on hunches - a little voice in here says, "Go this way." And your mind is saying, "You're crazy."
Sometimes we just know things.
Find the trend whose premise is false, and bet against it.
Theories crumble, but good observations never fade.
I never make predictions and I never will.
There is no substitute for intuition.
You know that you can't predict and you can't expect that you should have predicted. You do the best you can, as decently as you can, and you accept the consequences.
In the absence of certainty, instinct is all you can follow.
Guessing a thing ain't knowing a thing.
Intuition is what you know before you think.
Reality is nothing but a collective hunch.
Predict the predictable, it sounds something strange and difficult, but so far is stupid. To predict the predictable is the stupid thing ever done by human kind.
Make three correct guesses consecutively and you will establish a reputation as an expert.
I've ceased making predictions on things because we'll see how they turn out.
A tendency to speculation, though it may keep woman quiet, as it does man, yet makes her sad. She discerns, it may be, such a hopeless task before her.
The rules of the betting are intelligent: recent events and the current context have the most weight in determining an interpretation. When no recent event comes to mind, more distant memories govern.
No one knows enough to be a pessimist
Intuition matters but, pay more attention to the unconscious bias.
An inference of perspective,
a glimpse of regularity,
causation of habit,
and the only recurrence:
my faith in you.
The game of speculation is the most uniformly fascinating game in the world. But it is not a game for the stupid, the mentally lazy, the person of inferior emotional balance, or the get-rich-quick adventurer. They will die poor.
Reality is nothing more than a collective hunch.
A rational prediction has an explanation based on theory.
I have really good instincts about friends.
I never make a prediction that can be proved wrong within 24 hours.
See what a ready tongue suspicion hath!
I guess I consider myself at times to have intuition.
Investigations, knowing they'd
Trust your instincts.
I guess we guess our way through life. How many times do we really know for sure?
When you don't know, you will always be right.
I'm not really good at being predictive, so I guess I'm willing to be surprised.
I followed my instincts; I followed my intuition, and it paid off.
I am a firm believer, that without speculation there is no good and original observation.
Never make bad predictions, especially about the futture.
The more we know, the better our intuitions.
It turns out that our intuition is a greater genius than we are.
Speculation is a dangerous thing without any evidence to back it up.
I'm a mathematician by education, but I have this other thing. A gut instinct.
With caution judge of probability. Things deemed unlikely, e'en impossible, experience oft hath proved to be true.
Sometimes I just know things.