Selfevident
Self-evident is an adjective describing a proposition that is regarded as true without needing proof or demonstration, because its truth is considered immediate or self-evident to rational reflection. The usual form is self-evident (with a hyphen); some older or alternate spellings use selfevident. In philosophy, the term denotes claims that are assumed to be manifestly true given the concepts involved, while in everyday language it can refer to beliefs regarded as obvious without argument.
In political and cultural discourse, self-evident truths are invoked to ground norms or rights. The phrase gained
Philosophically, discussions of self-evidence distinguish between intuitive knowledge and propositions justified by argument, evidence, or coherence
See also: axiom, tautology, common sense, apriori knowledge.