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Salmo if you can sleuth down the Sacks article from the New Yorker maybe a year or two ago it is worth a read. Particularly the part "Is anything real." Sacks got me interested in Neuro for sure, he had a knack for popularizing behavioral/neurological oddity. But as I've learned more about him, if we use a photography analogy for his published cases, you could say he turned up the color saturations a few notches. In some ways his flaws and perhaps what motivated the exaggerations is still really interesting.The River of Consciousness by Oliver Sacks, for a 2nd time. Nice little bit about Darwin, species, and evolution, but the psychological section on memory, perception, and epistemology in general is a mind blower. Is anything real? Seems like a good fit with contemporary politics - you don't know what you're talking about, and you can't prove I'm wrong!
Gonna buy this for Kay. Right up her alley. I can just hear it now... " Oh you bastard..." mainly because it's gonna draw her in and keep her inSalmo if you can sleuth down the Sacks article from the New Yorker maybe a year or two ago it is worth a read. Particularly the part "Is anything real." Sacks got me interested in Neuro for sure, he had a knack for popularizing behavioral/neurological oddity. But as I've learned more about him, if we use a photography analogy for his published cases, you could say he turned up the color saturations a few notches. In some ways his flaws and perhaps what motivated the exaggerations is still really interesting.
I think I would like that book, but today I'm trying to focus on the things the U.S. has done right, rather than wrong. I admire the Sioux for leaving $5 billion on the table, wanting their stolen lands back and not the money.Just started "The Day the World Ended at Little Bighorn" by Joseph Marshall. A Lakota. From oral histories he recounts the battle from the Indians' perspectives. Later the book will go into the aftermath and retributions demanded for killing Custer.