Essay

In the study of methods of knowing, recall the 'friend lying' scenario. Describe the specific behaviors that lead to the intuitive conclusion, and explain why this example represents a reliance on subjective feelings rather than objective evidence.

Question: In the study of methods of knowing, recall the 'friend lying' scenario. Describe the specific behaviors that lead to the intuitive conclusion, and explain why this example represents a reliance on subjective feelings rather than objective evidence.

Sample answer: In this scenario, a person believes their friend is lying because they observe the friend acting strange and avoiding eye contact. This represents intuition because the conclusion is drawn from subjective feelings about the friend's behavior rather than being supported by objective, empirical evidence.

Key points:

  • The friend is acting strangely and avoiding eye contact.
  • The observer concludes that the friend is lying.
  • The conclusion is based on subjective, intuitive feelings.
  • There is no objective, verifiable evidence to support the belief.

Rubric: Answers should correctly identify: 1) the observed behaviors (acting strange and avoiding eye contact), 2) the conclusion drawn (believing the friend is lying), and 3) the explanation that this represents intuition because it relies on subjective, intuitive feelings rather than objective, verifiable evidence.

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Updated 2026-05-27

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Research Methods in Psychology - 4th American Edition @ KPU

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