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Ghost-writing, neurological style

A case-book study of neurological patients provides interesting and significant material

January 18, 2013 14:55
Oliver Sacks (Photo: Adam Scourfield)

ByAnonymous, Anonymous

1 min read

With the relentless rise of neuroscience, it is becoming increasingly difficult to hold on to the complexity of subjective experience. If we can show that seeing unknown people by the bedside, or hearing voices in an empty room, is caused by damage to the brain, then, one could ask, is that not enough?

And is it not reassuring to be told, for example, that the bewildering encounters a person might have with benign or terrifying others (who are not “really” there) are due to some kind of cortical misfiring rather than to madness?

Maybe all such experiences are produced by bangs in the brain, whether as a result of accidents, illness, drug abuse or something genetically unlucky.

Perhaps that even extends to religious experiences: moments of awesome encounter with an Other who seems to transcend everything and to be wholly benign and loving. Maybe God is a kind of phantom limb, hallucinated to make sense of a neurological gap.