An intuition is a conception in which incompleteness or vagueness of comprehended information is substituted by special mechanisms for producing the feelings of coherence and confidence. Intuitive decision making is mainly based on the concept of âintellectual intuitionâ that could also be used for designating forms of immediate knowledge which are not sensorial and primarily deal with philosophical concepts, formal mathematical relations or theories. Realizing two different forms of intuition is important. For instance, the statement: âEvery natural number has a successorâ is intuitively acceptable statement and it is an example of âintellectual intuitionâ. On another hand, the intuitive evaluation of the weight of an object or of the speed of a moving body would represent âsensorial intuitionsâ. Certainly, no clear-cut distinction is possible, but the terminology related to intuition is still very confusing to many people. Sometimes, intuition is referred to as a global guess for which an individual is not able to offer a clear and complete justification. Very often intuition means an elementary, common sense, popular, primitive form of knowledge, as opposed to philosophers, like Spinoza for whom intuition is the highest form of knowledge through scientific conceptions and interpretations. According to Poincaré, for example, no genuine creative activity is possible in science and/or mathematics without intuition. Trading, in my opinion, is not different. My point of view is that only highly developed intuitions could lead to consistently successful trading, designing robust trading systems and managing the money in general. The fact that there is very little knowledge about the actual mechanisms of developing useful and reliable intuition abilities makes the subject of my research that much more attractive to me.