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Musicophilia: Tales of Music and the Brain
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Oliver SacksNumber Of Downloads:
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English
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399
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What an odd thing it is to see an entire species— billions of people—playing with, listening to, meaningless tonal patterns, occupied and preoccupied for much of their time by what they call “music.” This, at least, was one of the things about human beings that puzzled the highly cerebral alien beings, the Overlords, in Arthur C. Clarke’s novel Childhood’s End.Curiosity brings them down to the Earth’s surface to attend a concert, they listen politely, and at the end, congratulate the composer on his “great ingenuity”— while still finding the entire business unintelligible. They cannot think what goes on in human beings when they make or listen to music, because nothing goes on with them. They themselves, as a species, lack music.We may imagine the Overlords ruminating further, back in their spaceships. This thing called “music,” they would have to concede, is in some way efficacious to humans, central to human life. Yet it has no concepts, makes no propositions; it lacks images, symbols, the stuff of language. It has no power of representation. It has no necessary relation to the world.
Oliver Sacks
Professor of Neurology and Psychiatry at Columbia University. He received his education and suffered at first, as he and his brother entered a boarding school without the knowledge of his family, then he went to St. Paul's School in London, and received his education until he obtained a Bachelor's degree in organology and biology, and completed his studies to obtain a master's in order to qualify himself to practice medicine, Then he left England to Canada and then to the United States, which was a positive step towards a completely different career path from what he was accustomed to. He was a professor of neuroscience at the New York University of Medicine, and then he took a number of positions in a number of universities for medicine, and he wrote many books that got bestsellers, and then did a number of studies on a group of cases of people who suffer from neurological disorders, and he got He was honored on the anniversary of his death for his clear and distinguished contributions in supporting music therapy and the effect of this music on the human brain. Oxford University awarded him an honorary doctorate in civil law. D is a large number of awards that testify to his knowledge and excellence in his medical field.
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