Observations placeholder
Ramachandran, Dr V S - Describes Tom
Identifier
001679
Type of Spiritual Experience
Background
The following example is of a little boy whose occipital lobe was probably also damaged…..
A description of the experience
Phantoms in the Brain – Dr V. S. Ramachandran [Professor and Director of the Centre for Brain and Cognition, University of California and visiting fellow All Souls College, Oxford]
The realms of art and music are punctuated with savants whose talents have amazed and delighted audiences through the ages. Oliver Sacks describes Tom, a 13 year old boy who was blind and incapable of tying his own shoes.
Although he had never been instructed in music or educated in any way, he learned to play the piano simply by hearing others play.
He absorbed arias and tunes from hearing them sung and could play any piece of music on the first try as well as most accomplished performer. One of his most remarkable feats was to perform three pieces of music all at once.
With one hand he played 'Fisher's Horn Pipe', with the other he played 'Yankee Doodle Dandy' and simultaneously he sang 'Dixie'...........
Tom composed his own music, and yet, as a contemporary observer pointed out 'He seems to be an unconscious agent acting as if he is acted on and his mind is a vacant receptor where nature stores her jewels to recall them at her pleasure'
The source of the experience
Ramachandran, Dr V SConcepts, symbols and science items
Concepts
Symbols
Science Items
Activities and commonsteps
Activities
Suppressions
Autism, savantism and other forms of PDDBlindness, macular degeneration and other sight impairment