I was reading the end of Daniel Dennett's "Elbow Room" on an airplane this weekend and during a passage about Newtonian mechanics I suddenly had a strong, visceral craving for a particular type of sweet. I couldn't put my finger on what it was but I strong impression of how it tastes -- tart, kind of a mealy mouthfeel. After a moment I realized I was thinking about a Fig Newton. Ah, that makes sense.
Once I finished "Elbow Room" I immediately started Oliver Sacks' new "Musicophilia", which touches on similar types of partially occluded linkages in the brain, for instance where a patient can discuss a topic and five minutes later start humming a tune whose words relate to that topic, but without being able to place the song's title or lyrics. (Of course in my case this isn't consistent and pathological; otherwise I'd probably be the least justifiably troubled subject of an Oliver Sacks story.) I think it's fairly fascinating that these kinds of mental events exist and what they seem to indicate about the unconscious connection-making that underlies the operation of the mind. I described all this to Kyle and she thought it was interesting too, but mainly for the fact that I'm capable of craving Fig Newtons at all.
I'll just go on the record here, officially stating that I have never, ever, craved, or even liked in the first place, Fig Newtons.
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