Intro: Wondering HAND Doc
Welcome. I'm an "injured" musician turned wondering hand doctor, on a quest to understand what the hell happened to my hand function.
The way we process sensation and movement is an utterly fascinating topic that I engage with on a reflective, experiential, philosophical, and practical level.
If you haven't yet noticed, the mind is an integral part of this experience.
I am grateful to those who put their primary efforts into primary research, statistics, and scouring every piece of relevant scientific literature. I am particularly grateful for those who bring these data together to be digestible by many others.
While these activities are an important part of my job, I seem to get more kicks WONDERING about them.
I have decided to enter this discussion using the best of what I have to offer: My personal and clinical experience, my proclivity for reflection and questioning. Science needs the right questions and people to focus on what is not being noticed enough. Science needs to shine some of its light into the frontier of ignorance and onto the foundational assumptions that underpin its rigorous quantitative efforts. Science needs people on the front lines of experience verifying and applying the utility of its discoveries and signaling when something critical might be getting overlooked.
I won't be showing up with neat and tidy summaries. I won't show up having always verified that someone hasn't already "answered" the question I'm asking. I won't show up with arguments devoid of inconsistencies or holes or mistakes or faux pas. If I wait to do that, I may never write anything.
I WILL show up having made an effort to see how various ideas converge. I will show up as new perspectives occur to me. I will put observations out there as food for thought.
I invite you to take these and run with them, and to share your constructive observations in return. I am open to constructive suggestion and correction. Let's keep our eye on the goal more than on who is right. If my thoughts do something for you, great. If they don't, share with me what DOES.
Thanks for taking part in this exciting (and yes, fun and playful!) exploration.
Scott
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