• Feeling isolated? You're not alone.

    Join 20,000+ people who understand exactly how your day went. Whether you're newly diagnosed, self-identified, or supporting someone you love – this is a space where you don't have to explain yourself.

    Join the Conversation → It's free, anonymous, and supportive.

    As a member, you'll get:

    • A community that actually gets it – no judgment, no explanations needed
    • Private forums for sensitive topics (hidden from search engines)
    • Real-time chat with others who share your experiences
    • Your own blog to document your journey

    You've found your people. Create your free account

Well-known British neuroscientist Oliver Sacks dies at 82

IContainMultitudes

Well-Known Member
V.I.P Member
http://www.presstv.ir/Detail/2015/08/30/427025/Oliver-Sacks-neurologist-Tourettes-Aspergers

The London-born figure was renowned for introducing such syndromes as Tourette’s or Asperger’s to the general public through his “neurological novels.” By presenting case histories and clinical tales in his works, Sacks managed to provide a groundbreaking representation of people with neurological disorders. He demystified and humanized his patients by depicting the vicissitudes of their daily lives and also their long-ignored distinctive talents.
 
I was sad when I heard this. But he lived a marvelous life, so in that there is happiness.

I was on the list for emails from the Oliver Sacks Foundation, and received this on Sunday:

"Oliver Sacks died early this morning at his home in Greenwich Village, surrounded by his close friends and family. He was 82. He spent his final days doing what he loved—playing the piano, writing to friends, swimming, enjoying smoked salmon, and completing several articles. His final thoughts were of gratitude for a life well lived and the privilege of working with his patients at various hospitals and residences including the Little Sisters of the Poor in the Bronx and in Queens, New York.

Dr. Sacks was writing to the last. On August 14, he published an essay, “Sabbath,” in the New York Times. Two more articles are to be published this week, one in the New York Review of Books and one in the New Yorker.

Sacks also left several nearly completed books and a vast archive of correspondence, manuscripts, and journals. Before his death Sacks established the Oliver Sacks Foundation, a nonprofit organization devoted to increasing understanding of the human brain and mind through the power of narrative nonfiction and case histories.

The foundation’s goals include making Dr. Sacks’s published and yet-unpublished writings available to the broadest possible audience, preserving and digitizing materials related to his life and work and making them available for scholarly use, working to reduce the stigma of mental and neurological illness, and supporting a humane approach to neurology and psychiatry.

We at the Sacks office extend our love and sympathies to Dr. Sacks’s partner, Billy Hayes, and we are enormously grateful for the outpouring of love and support from Dr. Sacks’s readers and friends around the world.
"
(Italics and bold type added by me.)
 

New Threads

Top Bottom