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At times I was not sure whether Watson was sticking to non-fiction or whether maybe he was twisting the facts a little to make a better story. Perhaps, as is often the case, truth is stranger than fiction. Nevertheless, the case is made that elephants are sensitive, social, and mysterious beings who deserve a place to thrive on Earth.
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The pictures are as thought provoking as the words. It is these photos that enthrall my students.
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cosmetic surgery's sometimes undesirable side-effects. He speculates that, through long- term dependence on the purely rational, we have sacrificed our ability to consciously control the "sixth sense," that collection of unique abilities which have been regarded at various times as prescience, witchcraft, or mental illness. Jacobson's Organ explores the world of perfumery while shedding light on another aspect of smell, that of pheromonally based responses between people. And not just those relevant to sex --- though these will certainly be the most interesting to some readers. Watson suggests that we may release scents registered only by Jacobson's Organ, smells which 'voice' our reactions to others --- at times before, or in defiance of, intellectual recognition. (All that 70's hippie talk of good/ bad "vibes" may not have been so bizarre after all.) Perhaps this explains why we sometimes dislike an individual immediately and without apparent reason. Taken a step further, that certain out-of-control persons could be radiating a sensory signal we find unsettling. Might they posses an unintentional warning beacon which Jacobson's Organ translates as "avoid me"? We are entertained with stories of cultural diversity, instructed via biological comparison, delighted by occasional puns. Any danger of extreme seriousness which might dominate (and even destroy) such an inquiry is alleviated by a swift and subtle wit. In Jacobson's Organ, Dr. Watson demonstrates that strange phenomena are not the sole focus of his journeys; that he possesses the ability to extract magic from the seemingly commonplace. By presenting a subject which might ordinarily elicit from us no more than a casual shoulder-shrug, he bestows upon it the mantle of the extraordinary. We are snared by countless possibilities. His is the lifelong "dis-ease" of curiosity. We could do worse than catch a whiff of it ourselves.
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Evil, the Romeo Error, are all books by Lyall Watson that I have enjoyed so much. I reccomend this book because I bought it once, lent it to someone who never returned it, and fully intend to buy it again. It's that good.