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What is it like to be Oliver Sacks?

By Mark Changizi

15 December 2010

In The Mind’s Eye, the neurologist explores case histories of people with visual disturbances – including his own

WHAT would it be like to occupy the brain of a non-human being? This is a question that has inspired writers (Franz Kafka’s Metamorphosis), philosophers (Thomas Nagel’s “What is it like to be a bat?”) and just about every curious human being. It is this curiosity about different forms of being that helps explain our fascination with the writings of Oliver Sacks.

Although Sacks’s books generally deal with altered states, this new one on visual experience brings it home more clearly because, for the sighted among us, “what it’s…

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