Title: PDF Hallucinations
1Hallucinations
Description
Hallucinations don8217tbelong wholly to
the insane. Much more
commonly, they are linked to sensory deprivation,
intoxication, illness, or injury. Here Dr. Sacks
weaves together stories of his patients and of
his own mind-altering experiences to illuminate
what hallucinations tell us about the
organization and structure of our brains, how
they have influenced every culture8217sfolklore
and art, and why the potential for hallucination
is present in us all. Grateful acknowledgment is
made to the following for permission to reprint
previously published materialAmerican Academy of
Neurology Excerpt from 8220Anon8217sSyndrome
Accompanying Withdrawal Hallucinosis in a Blind
Alcoholic8221by Barbara E. Swartz and John C.
M. Brust from Neurology 34 (1984). Reprinted by
permission of the American Academy of Neurology
as administered by Wolters Kluwer Health Medical
Research.American Psychiatric Publishing Excerpt
from 8220Wer
2Mitchell8217sVisual Hallucinations as a Grief
Reaction8221by Jerome S. Schneck, M.D., from
American Journal of Psychiatry (1989). 1989 by
American Journal of Psychiatry. Reprinted by
permission of American Psychiatric Publishing a
division of American Psychiatric Association.BMJ
Publishing Group Ltd. Excerpt from 8220Heutosco
py, Epilepsy and Suicide8221by P. Brugger, R.
Agosti, M. Regard, H. G. Wieser and T. Landis
from Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery and
Psychiatry, July 1, 1994. Reprinted by permission
of BMJ Publishing Group Ltd. as administered by
the Copyright Clearance Center.Cambridge
University Press Excerpts from Disturbances of
the Mind by Douwe Draaisma, translated by Barbara
Fasting. 2006 by Douwe Draaisma. Reprinted by
permission of Cambridge University Press.Canadian
Psychological Association Excerpt from
8220Efects of Decreased Variation of the
Sensory Environment8221by W. H. Bexton, W.
Heron and T. H. Scott from Canadian Psychology
(1954). 1954 by Canadian Psychological
Association. Excerpt from 8220Peceptual Changes
after Prolonged Sensory Isolation (Darkness and
Silence)8221by John P. Zubek, Dolores Pushkar,
Wilma Sansom and J. Gowing from Canadian
Psychology (1961). 1961 by Canadian Psychological
Association. Reprinted by permission of Canadian
Psychological Association.Elsevier Limited
Excerpt from 8220Miraine From Cappadocia to
Queen Square8221in Background to Migraine,
edited by Robert Smith (London William
Heinemann, 1967). Reprinted by permission of
Elsevier Limited.The New York Times Excerpts
from 8220Liting, Lights, and Little
People8221by Siri Hustvedt from The New York
Times Blog, February 17, 2008. Reprinted by
permission of The New York Times as administered
by PARS International Corp.Oxford University
Press Excerpt from 8220Dotoiewski8217sEpileps
y8221by T. Alajouanine from Brain, June 1,
1963. Reprinted by permission of Oxford
University Press as administered by Copyright
Clearance Center.Royal College of Psychiatrists
Excerpt from 8220Suden Religious Conversion in
Temporal Lobe Epilepsy8221by Kenneth Dewhurst
and A. W. Beard from British Journal of
Psychiatry 117 (1970). Reprinted by permission of
the Royal College of Psychiatrists.Scientific
American Excerpt from 8220Abucted!8221by
Michael Shermer from Scientifi c American 292
(2005). 2005 by Scientifi c American, Inc. All
rights reserved. Reprinted by permission of
Scientific American.Vintage Books Excerpts from
Speak, Memory by Vladimir Nabokov, 1947, 1948,
1949, 1950, 1951, 1967, copyright renewed 1994 by
the Estate of Vladimir Nabokov. Used by
permission of
3Vintage Books, a division of Random House, Inc.