Journal of Psychiatric Insight Review

"My Heart Tells Me": " And my Heart Tells me" Rashi's Intuitive Hermeneutic and the Epistemology of Clinical Intuition

Abstract

This essay examines Rashi's hermeneutical declaration ve-libi omer li ("my heart tells me") in his commen tary on the priestly ephod (Exodus 28:4) and the Lubavitcher Rebbe's theological elaboration of this moment, arguing that together they articulate an epistemology of embodied intuition directly applicable to clinical medicine.

Through close textual analysis of Rashi's commentary, the Rebbe's discourses in Likkutei Sichot (Volumes 26, 31) and related Hasidic sources, alongside contemporary scholarship on the ephod's material construction and cultic function, this study develops a phenomenological framework for understanding clinical intuition as sanctified knowledge. The analysis integrates classical Jewish exegetical sources with modern medical litera ture on diagnostic reasoning, clinical judgment, and the role of intuition in expert practice.

Rashi's appeal to cardiac intuition when transmitted textual sources prove insufficient establishes a paradigm wherein the "purified heart" (lev tahor)-refined through intellectual rigor, moral formation, and contempla tive presence-becomes a legitimate organ of knowledge. The Rebbe's theology of the ephod as the integration of inner awareness (choshen-consciousness) with outer service (ephod-consciousness) provides a structural model for the physician's dual consciousness: empathic attunement bound inseparably to technical compe tence. Contemporary medical literature on dual-process diagnostic reasoning, pattern recognition, and the tacit dimensions of clinical expertise converges with this theological framework, suggesting that reliable clinical intuition requires cultivation analogous to the tradition's emphasis on the lev mevin da'at ("heart that understands knowledge").

The recovery of ve-libi omer li as a legitimate dimension of clinical epistemology challenges medicine's residu al Cartesian dualism without abandoning scientific rigor. This theological tradition offers contemporary med icine a framework for cultivating and validating intuitive judgment-recognizing that when evidence-based protocols prove insufficient, the physician's disciplined intuition, grounded in extensive knowledge and ethi cal formation, becomes essential for addressing the irreducible particularity of each patient's suffering. The examination room, understood through this lens, becomes a covenantal space where technical excellence and compassionate presence integrate, transforming clinical encounter into sacred work witnessed by divine presence (Shekhinah).

DOI: doi.org/10.63721/25JPIR0121

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