"Instinct is the nose of the mind"
About this Quote
Instinct, for Girardin, isn’t the enemy of reason; it’s reason’s first draft, a sensory organ the intellect pretends it doesn’t have. Calling it “the nose of the mind” is a sly demotion and a rescue at once. Demotion, because smell is the least “noble” sense in the old hierarchy: bodily, animal, faintly embarrassing. Rescue, because smell is also the most immediate and diagnostic. You don’t reason your way into noticing smoke. You detect it. The metaphor argues that instinct works the same way: it catches the trace of danger, desire, deception, or opportunity before the conscious mind can assemble a case.
That’s the subtext: intuition isn’t mysticism, it’s pattern-recognition with plausible deniability. Girardin frames instinct as a threshold faculty, operating in the pre-verbal zone where social performance hasn’t yet rewritten perception. In a 19th-century literary culture obsessed with propriety, persuasion, and the appearance of rational control, the line quietly legitimizes the knowledge women and outsiders were often told didn’t count because it couldn’t be footnoted. The nose knows, even when etiquette insists it shouldn’t.
The phrasing also carries a novelist’s understanding of how people actually move through plots: characters rarely act from syllogisms. They act from hunches, aversions, attractions, the faint scent of what’s coming. Girardin’s intent is practical and slightly insurgent: trust the mind’s animal sensor, not as a replacement for thought, but as its early warning system.
That’s the subtext: intuition isn’t mysticism, it’s pattern-recognition with plausible deniability. Girardin frames instinct as a threshold faculty, operating in the pre-verbal zone where social performance hasn’t yet rewritten perception. In a 19th-century literary culture obsessed with propriety, persuasion, and the appearance of rational control, the line quietly legitimizes the knowledge women and outsiders were often told didn’t count because it couldn’t be footnoted. The nose knows, even when etiquette insists it shouldn’t.
The phrasing also carries a novelist’s understanding of how people actually move through plots: characters rarely act from syllogisms. They act from hunches, aversions, attractions, the faint scent of what’s coming. Girardin’s intent is practical and slightly insurgent: trust the mind’s animal sensor, not as a replacement for thought, but as its early warning system.
Quote Details
| Topic | Wisdom |
|---|---|
| Source | Help us find the source |
| Cite | Cite this Quote |
Citation Formats
APA Style (7th ed.)
Girardin, Delphine de. (n.d.). Instinct is the nose of the mind. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/instinct-is-the-nose-of-the-mind-121428/
Chicago Style
Girardin, Delphine de. "Instinct is the nose of the mind." FixQuotes. Accessed February 2, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/instinct-is-the-nose-of-the-mind-121428/.
MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Instinct is the nose of the mind." FixQuotes, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/instinct-is-the-nose-of-the-mind-121428/. Accessed 2 Feb. 2026.
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