Pentapod reviewed An Anthropologist on Mars by Oliver Sacks
Review of 'An Anthropologist on Mars' on 'Goodreads'
4 stars
Case studies of seven of Sacks' patients illustrate both how fragile the human brain is but also how adaptable - and how little we understand it. Two chapters on patients with autism are very interesting, including Temple Grandin, an autistic woman who has a successful profession, runs her own business, and gives talks on what it's like to be autistic. An artist who becomes colour blind mid-career. A blind man whose sight is restored. I found this one particularly fascinating as Sacks points out all the things that sighted people take for granted, but which aren't obvious to the blind, such as the concept of "distance". A sighted person looks at the door across the room and calculates distance based on visual experience; but a blind person can't even conceive of this concept. The blind person will calculate in terms of time: time it would take to walk there, or …
Case studies of seven of Sacks' patients illustrate both how fragile the human brain is but also how adaptable - and how little we understand it. Two chapters on patients with autism are very interesting, including Temple Grandin, an autistic woman who has a successful profession, runs her own business, and gives talks on what it's like to be autistic. An artist who becomes colour blind mid-career. A blind man whose sight is restored. I found this one particularly fascinating as Sacks points out all the things that sighted people take for granted, but which aren't obvious to the blind, such as the concept of "distance". A sighted person looks at the door across the room and calculates distance based on visual experience; but a blind person can't even conceive of this concept. The blind person will calculate in terms of time: time it would take to walk there, or time it would take for an echo to come back. The blind person knows "it is 3 seconds to the door" which the sighted person has no idea of. Thus, in cases where sight has been given to people blind since birth, they have great difficulty with depth perception and understanding that something that looks smaller is further away. As always Sacks provides a friendly and approachable introduction to fascinating topics and leaves the reader with a greater appreciation for the mysteries of the brain.