I believe that there are circumstances in which you can say “I feel that X”. What that could rationally mean is that you yourself recognize that you do not have enough evidence or knowledge to justify a belief about X vs. not-X, but that without evidence you lean toward X because you like that alternative. You are admitting ignorance on the subject. Ideally, this would then also imply an openness with regard to forming a belief about X or not-X given some evidence—that recognition that all you have is a feeling about it means a very weak attachment to the idea of X.
I believe that there are circumstances in which you can say “I feel that X”. What that could rationally mean is that you yourself recognize that you do not have enough evidence or knowledge to justify a belief about X vs. not-X, but that without evidence you lean toward X because you like that alternative. You are admitting ignorance on the subject. Ideally, this would then also imply an openness with regard to forming a belief about X or not-X given some evidence—that recognition that all you have is a feeling about it means a very weak attachment to the idea of X.
PhilB