In Our Time

BBC Radio 4
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May 25, 2000 • 28min

Chemical Elements

Melvyn Bragg and guests discuss the chemical elements. The aim and challenge in chemistry, according to the Encyclopaedia Britannica, is the understanding of the complex materials which constitute everything in existence since the Big Bang, when the whole universe emerged out of the two elements of hydrogen and helium. For Aristotle there were four elements: Earth, Air, Fire and Water. Now there are one hundred and eight, sixteen of which are produced artificially, and none of which figure in Aristotle's original four. But they are all still elements - defined as substances which cannot be broken down, the building blocks of all life.Today we have the key to understanding these elements, the Periodic Table, which is a pattern embedded in nature and was miraculously discovered in a dream. With Paul Strathern, former lecturer in philosophy and science, Kingston University and author of Mendeleyev's Dream: The Quest for the Elements; Dr Mary Archer, Visiting Professor of Chemistry at Imperial College, London; John Murrell, Emeritus Professor of Chemistry, University of Sussex.
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May 18, 2000 • 28min

The Wars of the Roses

Experts discuss the Wars of the Roses, debating if it was a civil war or political myth. Delve into Duke of Suffolk's influence, Henry VI's incompetence, and Tudor era beginnings. Explore governmental changes under Edward VI, Mary, and Elizabeth amidst ad-free listening option announcement.
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May 11, 2000 • 28min

Shakespeare's Work

Melvyn Bragg and guests discuss the work of William Shakespeare. He was nominated as the Man of the last Millennium and he steps into this one - on film, on stage, in academia, in schools, in private passions, probably in song and dance as well - every bit as briskly as he did in 1600. He's been called our greatest living playwright. We are told he taught us how to be modern. That he is the true Bible of our times. We are also told that his work is irrelevant to a massive percentage of the population, sandbanked by critics, neutered by establishments and, above all, embalmed in a cargo of language increasingly out of reach and ken of those who might heave him up the next century. William Shakespeare 'was not of an age, but for all time' according to Ben Johnson. That was in the seventeenth century and it's a claim that has often been repeated since, but is it really true? Is what we see in theatre and increasingly at the cinema the work of a playwright whose works live on, or are we merely watching historical reconstructions - museum pieces - with any contemporary meaning obscured by the reverence we pay to the author? And if Shakespeare is for all time, what is it about him that makes him so eternally special?With Professor Sir Frank Kermode, literary critic and author of Shakespeare's Language; Michael Bogdanov, theatre, television, opera and film director and a founder member of the English Shakespeare Company; Germaine Greer, Professor of English and Comparative Studies, Warwick University.
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May 4, 2000 • 28min

Death

Melvyn Bragg and guests discuss Death, what the 16th century philosopher Frances Bacon called, ‘the least of all evils’. A subject which has provoked thousands of reflections which live on: How has the perception, dread or even desire for our own endings shaped the development of the culture of Europe and the West, from funeral rituals to Gothic novels, to the Aids fiction and fact of today. From the celebration of the passage of a soul to the grief of the loss of a body. And how have different eras addressed the essential existential problems that death presents us with?With Jonathan Dollimore, Professor of English, York University; Thomas Lynch, poet, essayist, funeral director and author of The Undertaking - Life Studies from the Dismal Trade; Marilyn Butler, Professor of English Literature and Rector of Exeter College, Oxford.
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Apr 27, 2000 • 28min

Human Origins

Exploring the 5 million-year journey of Homo sapiens from apes, the significance of bipedalism, the collaborative efforts in excavating ancient fossils, the evolution of early Homo species with increased intelligence, the emergence of hunting, and the importance of cooperative behavior in accessing higher quality food.
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Apr 20, 2000 • 42min

Englishness

Melvyn Bragg and guests explore the characteristics of English identity, delving into historical perceptions and stereotypes. They discuss the evolution of Englishness from the 17th to 19th centuries, the impact of colonization, interracial marriages, and the challenges of defining national identity in a globalized world.
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Apr 13, 2000 • 28min

New Wars

Exploring the evolution of warfare structures from feudal age conflicts to modern national wars, the blurred distinction between civilians and military personnel, the shift in conflict dynamics post-Cold War, the challenges to establishing a Pax-Amedicana, the role of global civil society in promoting human rights, and reflections on peace and progress in humanity.
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12 snips
Apr 6, 2000 • 28min

The Natural Order

Science enthusiast Melvyn Bragg and guests dive into the flaws of taxonomy, inspired by Borges' absurd animal categorizations. They discuss Linnaeus' influence, Darwin's evolutionary perspective, perfect archetypes, museum organization, and the clash between Darwin and Linnaeus on species classification and natural selection.
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Mar 30, 2000 • 28min

History and Understanding the Past

Melvyn Bragg and guests discuss what can be learnt from history. Many of us were taught that an understanding of the past was essential to a knowledge of the present and, more excitingly, to a view of the future. Dig deep into the pockets of Greece and Rome, the Medievals and the Enlightened, drink deep at the well of history and from that sacred study, as from the Oracle at Delphi, would come prophecies, predictions, a sense of what is to come, based on a belief in the continuity of history. But in the 1980s reputable historians predicted the end of the American empire and the rise and rise of the Russian empire. And Lord Metroland, the old booby in Evelyn Waugh’s novel Put Out More Flags, was forever reading history wrongly. But the way we read history is a matter of key intellectual significance. The eminent historian Eric Hobsbawm’s book The New Century came out when the 21st century was but a few months old. Is it really possible for history to tell us something about an era which has hardly begun? Can we ever predict the future by understanding the past? Should we seek to understand the past because it holds important lessons for the future - or is history, as Henry Ford would have it, “more or less bunk”?With Richard J Evans, Professor of Modern History, University of Cambridge; Eric Hobsbawm, eminent historian and author of The New Century.
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15 snips
Mar 23, 2000 • 28min

Materialism and the Consumer

The podcast discusses the impact of consumerism on culture and individuality, questioning the role of materialism in our lives. It explores the evolution of conspicuous consumption, the cultural significance of department stores, and the influence of consumer culture on artistry and society. Guests delve into the duality of materialism and artistic reaction, highlighting the challenges of maintaining anti-consumer ideals in today's society.

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