Abstract

This article addresses clinical intuition from the standpoint of interpersonal neurobiology, the study of how brains, minds, and bodies are shaped through relationship. First, clinical intuition is placed in a developmental framework consistent with nonlinear science. Then, the operation of intuition is described in terms of implicit processes, which operate automatically in bottom-up fashion, as guided by the right brain, under the radar of conscious awareness. A case example of intuition in action demonstrates the holistic potential of a single image to illuminate the nature of a problem plus point the way toward resolution. This article ends with a cautionary note about the limitations of clinical intuition.

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