What chess taught me about clinical reasoning and humanism

I first learned to respect silence over a chessboard. Two players sit across from one another, the clock ticking audibly, 64 squares holding more possibility than certainty. You arrive, survey the position, and wait. You gather information, recall principles, recognize patterns, and only then commit, knowing that every decision constrains the future in ways you

Read more…

What chess taught me about clinical reasoning and humanism originally appeared in KevinMD.com.

 

Back to the Featured Stories

Connect with us

Whether you are a professional looking for a new job or a representative of an organization who needs workforce solutions - we are here to help.