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[personal profile] drwex
Oliver Sacks announced in the New York Times that he has terminal cancer. He lost sight in one eye to cancer some years ago and recovered, or so it seemed. This time around there will be no recovery.

In 1985 I read a book. I was then a freshly employed software engineer in a world where computers were fantastically efficient calculators and I had nearly given up hope trying to convince people that it was important to study and understand how human brains worked if you wanted to make these computer things better. This book taught me that brains are WAY weirder than we think they are and that people who parade around pretending they actually understand these brain things are in fact full of it.

I can't say that The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat changed my life so much as it opened my eyes to how vast the horizons of discovery and opportunities for learning could be, right inside our own heads.

In 1995 (or thereabouts - I can't remember the exact date) I first saw Sacks speak live, at a Media Lab event. I've never before or since seen someone so effectively call bullshit on Nicholas Negroponte. Of course, Sacks was too polite to use that word but that's what he was doing. The two have been friends for a long time and Sacks grinned like a madman throughout the exchange, amused at his friend's discomfort.

The world is a better place for what Sacks has done in his 80+ years and it will be a worse place when he is gone.

Date: 2015-02-19 07:51 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] chienne-folle.livejournal.com
Have you read The Brain That Changes Itself, by Norman Doidge? It's another book that completely upsets what most people believe about the brain, and I found it endlessly fascinating.

Date: 2015-02-19 08:19 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] weegoddess.livejournal.com
::sad sigh::

As a speech-language pathologist who has worked with Aphasia and similar disorders, Oliver Sachs was/is very much a hero of mine. He's made the world a much better place for being in it.

He will be missed.

*pebble*

Date: 2015-02-19 08:22 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sweetmmeblue.livejournal.com
Thank you for sharing his work with me over the years.

Date: 2015-02-20 12:38 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] c1.livejournal.com
and it will be a worse place when he is gone.

Wow. That's just full of hope. I mean, I get that you're really sad about this, but you're presuming no-one will build on his work, or see something he didn't, or whatever else could happen.

Date: 2015-02-21 03:53 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] gothtique.livejournal.com
That is horrible news!
I have been a huge fan of his for years.
His work with neurology has had a very real impact on my life.
That he has continued to work, to make a difference, long past the age most people retire... he has been a true inspiration.
The world will be a darker place without him!

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