Question on intuition.

Do we know/recognize/intuit love-in-action (as in “love your neighbor as yourself”) deductively or inductively?

Please explain. In English.

I’m not sure I understand your question in the way you may want and mean it to be understood, but here’s a response anyways (and I hope this doesn’t derail your topic). I don’t believe that intuition works through arguments. I think it’s just a feeling that we try to articulate satisfactorily with arguments ad hoc. I know that in moral philosophy this is the case…systems of morality are concocted with the purpose of explaining our intuitions about right and wrong, and in turn moral philosophers use their own intuitions to test out the implications of these systems.

Do not go looking for the Kingdom. Do not say “look, there it is!” or “here it is!” for the Kingdom is in your midst… (pardon the paraphrase)

I think the point of this is that love isn’t something we are to try and know or recognize or intuit. It’s something that we do

But that said I don’t think it’s too hard to know/recognize/intuit loving actions… If you see someone asking for change, the loving action is giving them your change. If you see a blind person trying to cross the street, the loving action is to take their arm. If you see someone out in the cold, the loving action is to invite them in or give them a coat.

The issue isn’t knowing love but doing it. Loving itself is the hard part, and so also what we must focus all our effort on… The point of the initial passage is that we aren’t to spend our time/energy looking for love, but actually loving…