Moss Chiropractic of Inverness
Dr. Brett A. Moss
352-419-6548Schedule
Philosophy · Chiropractic Care

Innate Intelligence

Innate intelligence is the foundational philosophical concept in chiropractic — the idea that the living body carries an inborn capacity to organize, regulate, and heal itself. This principle holds that the nervous system is the primary channel through which that intelligence expresses itself in every tissue and organ. When spinal subluxations (misalignments that interfere with nerve function) are present, the expression of innate intelligence is diminished. Removing that interference through chiropractic care is, in this philosophy, the central purpose of the chiropractic adjustment (spinal manipulation).
40 spines scanned in the last 30 days · top finding: forward head posture (30)

What it is

Innate intelligence, as understood in chiropractic philosophy, is not a mystical force but a descriptive term for the self-organizing property that distinguishes living matter from non-living matter. A cut on the skin closes. A fractured bone lays down new mineral matrix. The heart adjusts its rate in response to physical demand. None of these processes require conscious direction — they are coordinated by the nervous system, which receives, integrates, and transmits the signals that keep every cell in adaptive communication with every other. Early chiropractic educators framed this self-regulating capacity as 'innate intelligence' to distinguish it from educated intelligence, which is the learned knowledge a person acquires consciously. [5] The point was not theological; the point was biological. The body already knows how to heal a wound without being taught wound care. Practitioners in the Principled Chiropractic tradition regard this capacity as the most clinically relevant fact about the human organism.

The nervous system serves as the structural conduit for innate intelligence. Nerve impulses carry information from the brain to every organ and from every organ back to the brain, forming a continuous feedback loop that governs adaptation. When vertebrae shift out of their normal position and create a subluxation — a term referring specifically to a spinal misalignment that irritates or compresses adjacent nerve tissue — that feedback loop is disrupted. [1] The disruption is not necessarily painful in the early stages, which is why subluxation-based practice does not rely on the presence of symptoms to identify a problem. The Subluxation-Based Chiropractic model of care treats interference with nerve expression as the primary concern, independent of whether the patient reports discomfort.

What to expect

A visit focused on the innate intelligence philosophy begins with an assessment of spinal alignment and nerve function rather than a symptom checklist. The chiropractor looks for subluxations along the full length of the spine, uses manual palpation (hands-on feeling of joint position and movement) and may use instrumentation or postural analysis to identify where nerve interference is most pronounced. The goal of the examination is to map the structural relationship between vertebral position and neural pathway integrity, not simply to locate the area that hurts. Patients often find that areas they did not identify as problematic are the ones receiving the most attention during care.

Once subluxations are identified, the chiropractor delivers a chiropractic adjustment — a precise, controlled force applied to a specific vertebral segment to restore normal position and motion. [8] The adjustment does not inject energy into the nervous system; it removes the mechanical interference that was limiting the nervous system's own signaling capacity. [6] Depending on the case, care at this practice may also incorporate spinal decompression, corrective exercise, or a Denneroll cervical orthotic (a contoured foam device used to restore normal spinal curvature) as part of the structural correction process. Progress is typically tracked through reassessment of alignment and nerve function at intervals determined by the initial findings.

Key benefits

Who benefits most

Anyone with a spine — which is everyone — has a structural system that is subject to subluxation from the accumulated forces of daily life: sustained postures, repetitive motion, acute trauma, and the mechanical stress of carrying the body's weight through decades of activity. The innate intelligence philosophy does not restrict its relevance to people in pain. It addresses the entire population that uses a spine, which is the whole human population. Children benefit because early structural correction may prevent the entrenchment of compensatory patterns. Adults in physically demanding occupations benefit because the cumulative load on their spines is high. Sedentary adults benefit because prolonged static loading, particularly in forward-flexed sitting positions, creates its own pattern of vertebral stress.

Patients who resonate most strongly with this philosophy are often those who have tried symptom-centered approaches and found that relief was temporary, or those who want to understand what their care is actually accomplishing at a structural and neurological level. The principled chiropractic approach practiced here treats innate intelligence not as a marketing concept but as a clinical orientation: the nervous system is the priority because it governs every other system, and structural integrity of the spine is the prerequisite for nervous system function. For details on what a course of care looks like, see .

How it connects to chiropractic

The concept of innate intelligence has been central to chiropractic since its earliest formal articulation. BJ Palmer, who developed the science and art of chiropractic from his father's foundational work, described the mechanism in direct neurological terms: abnormal sensations conducted through nerve pathways produce abnormal motor responses, and the vertebral displacements that pinch those nerves are the structural event the chiropractor is trained to correct. [1] This is not a metaphor. It is a mechanical description of how a misaligned vertebra presses against a nerve, alters the information moving through that nerve, and thereby alters the function of the tissue the nerve serves. The philosophical language of innate intelligence gives a name to the capacity that is being restored — the body's own regulatory intelligence — but the clinical target is a concrete, physical lesion in the spine.

Chiropractors who practice within the subluxation-based chiropractic and this related topic traditions place this mechanism at the center of every clinical decision. Dr. Fred Barge, among other influential chiropractic educators, emphasized that innate intelligence expresses itself through the body's energy and organizational capacity, and that the adjustment is the means by which its expression is freed from interference. [2] Reggie Gold, one of the most analytically rigorous lecturers in the principled tradition, described innate intelligence as an attribute of life itself — something that intelligently creates, coordinates, and adapts, and whose last name is, pointedly, 'intelligence.' [3] That framing is not rhetorical flourish. It is a claim that the body's self-organizing behavior is not random biochemistry but directed, purposeful coordination — and that interfering with the nervous system channel through which that coordination travels is a clinically significant event worth correcting.

The practical implication for this practice is that Dr. Brett A. Moss does not wait for symptoms to confirm that a subluxation is worth addressing. Subluxations can exist and diminish neural expression well before any sensation of pain or dysfunction appears. [4] The chiropractic adjustment, delivered with the precision that 28 years of clinical practice develops, uses the bony vertebral processes as levers to restore normal position and motion to each affected segment. When that interference is removed, the nervous system's own signaling capacity is restored — not by adding anything from outside, but by clearing the structural obstruction that was limiting what the body already knew how to do. [7] To learn more about Dr. Brett A. Moss and the clinical philosophy that guides this practice, visit . When you are ready to begin, is available to book your first appointment.

Learn About Our Approach

Common questions

Is innate intelligence a religious or spiritual idea?
No. In chiropractic philosophy, innate intelligence is a descriptive term for the body's built-in ability to self-organize and self-regulate. It refers to the same capacity that closes a wound, fights an infection, or adjusts your heart rate during exercise. The nervous system is the physical channel for this regulation, and the chiropractor's job is to make sure the spine is not interfering with that channel.
Do I need to have symptoms before getting checked for subluxations?
No. The innate intelligence philosophy holds that subluxations can reduce nervous system function before pain or other symptoms appear. Getting the spine checked regularly, even when you feel fine, is consistent with this approach to care.
How is this different from just treating back pain?
Treating back pain focuses on relieving a symptom. The innate intelligence approach focuses on finding and correcting the spinal subluxation that may be causing or contributing to that symptom, and on maintaining spinal integrity so the nervous system can function well regardless of whether pain is present. Symptom relief may follow correction, but it is not the only goal of care.
Residents of Inverness, Florida looking for a principled, subluxation-focused chiropractic practice will find that Moss Chiropractic of Inverness has built its entire clinical approach around the innate intelligence philosophy for nearly three decades.

Sources

  1. [1] sciencechiropra01palmgoog
    - terious substances acting upon sensory nerves, which in turn affect the motor. abnormal sensations produce ab * normal actions. this abnormal sensation and motion acts on adjacent vertebrae, displacing them so as to pinch nerves, which express their injury by twig ends being…
  2. [2] Dr. Fred Barge
    and express that innate intelligence and that innate energy. so, intelligence and that innate energy. so, intelligence and that innate energy. so, it's faith, it's chiropractic, it's it's faith, it's chiropractic, it's it's faith, it's chiropractic, it's getting adjusted, it's…
  3. [3] Dr. Reggie Gold
    flow of impulses this is not a constant flow of impulses this is not a constant flow of impulses innate's last name is intelligence innate's last name is intelligence innate's last name is intelligence it intelligently creates it intelligently creates it intelligently creates…
  4. [4] Dr. Reggie Gold
    those vertebral intent to correct those vertebral intent to correct those vertebral subluxations by using the bony processes subluxations by using the bony processes subluxations by using the bony processes as the levers using the hands to as the levers using the hands to as the…
  5. [5] Dr. Reggie Gold
    up gonna heal at all do you ever set up nights and worry if you cut your hand i nights and worry if you cut your hand i nights and worry if you cut your hand i hope it doesn't form eyeballs wouldn't hope it doesn't form eyeballs wouldn't hope it doesn't form eyeballs wouldn't it…
  6. [6] Dr. Reggie Gold
    you open up the channels you're not when you open up the channels you're not when you open up the channels you're not shooting a charge of energy through shooting a charge of energy through shooting a charge of energy through there what you're doing is restoring there what…
  7. [7] Dr. Reggie Gold
    when you open up the channels you're not when you open up the channels you're not when you open up the channels you're not shooting a charge of energy through shooting a charge of energy through shooting a charge of energy through there what you're doing is restoring there what…
  8. [8] Dr. Reggie Gold
    of never be corrected without the use of never be corrected without the use of force force force yeah but didn't you say that the innate yeah but didn't you say that the innate yeah but didn't you say that the innate intelligence collects subluxations all intelligence collects…
About the author
Dr. Brett A. Moss
DC · U.S. military veteran · License #CH7809

Find a chiropractor for Innate Intelligence near you

2 InnateScan practices listed
Browse listed practices →

Or scan your spine first

Take a free 60-second posture screening — see where you stand.

Take a free spine screening →

Educational content only — not a medical diagnosis. Consult a licensed healthcare provider for evaluation.