Oliver Sacks’s sin wasn’t the literary license he took with patient accounts, it was allowing his exaggerations and fabrications to be treated as medical fact. He had a responsibility to his profession and the scientific community. He shirked it.
Oliver Sacks’s sin wasn’t the literary license he took with patient accounts, it was allowing his exaggerations and fabrications to be treated as medical fact. He had a responsibility to his profession and the scientific community. He shirked it.