301 Quotes by Oliver Sacks

  • Author Oliver Sacks
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    Biologically, physiologically, we are not so different from each other; historically, as narratives – we are each of us unique.

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  • Author Oliver Sacks
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    There is a direct union of oneself with a motorcycle, for it is so geared to one’s proprioception, one’s movements and postures, that it responds almost like part of one’s own body. Bike and rider become a single, indivisible entity; it is very much like riding a horse. A car cannot become part of one in quite the same way.

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  • Author Oliver Sacks
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    Presiding over the entire attack there will be, in du Bois Reymond’s words, “a general feeling of disorder,” which may be experienced in either physical or emotional terms, and tax or elude the patient’s powers of description.

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  • Author Oliver Sacks
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    Diseases have a character of their own, but they also partake of our character; we have a character of our own, but we also partake of the world’s character: character is monadic or microcosmic, worlds within worlds within worlds, worlds which express worlds. The disease-the man-the world go together, and cannot be considered separately as things-in-themselves.

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  • Author Oliver Sacks
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    Travel now by all means – if you have the time. But travel the right way, the way I travel. I am always reading and thinking of the history and geography of a place. I see its people in terms of these, placed in the social framework of time and space.

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  • Author Oliver Sacks
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    But her words haunted me for much of my life and played a major part in inhibiting and injecting with guilt what should have been a free and joyous expression of sexuality.

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  • Author Oliver Sacks
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    Embodiment seems to be the surest thing in the world, the one irrefutable fact.

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  • Author Oliver Sacks
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    Eccentricity is like having an accent. It’s what “other” people have.

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  • Author Oliver Sacks
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    The scientific study of the relationship between brain and mind began in 1861, when Broca, in France, found that specific difficulties in the expressive use of speech, aphasia, consistently followed damage to a particular portion of the left hemisphere of the brain.

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