Podcast appearances and mentions of colin blakemore

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Best podcasts about colin blakemore

Latest podcast episodes about colin blakemore

Great Lives
Miriam Margolyes on Charles Dickens

Great Lives

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 5, 2024 27:54


The great Miriam Margolyes chooses Charles Dickens, author of Oliver Twist and A Christmas Carol."He's the man in my life. He's tugged me into his world and never let me go. He writes better prose than anyone who's ever lived. He's told the most interesting stories, invented 2000 of the best characters, and because he was a wicked man." Miriam Margolyes is author of Oh Miriam! Helping the award-winning actor and chat show terror explore the wicked life of Charles Dickens is Professor Kathryn Hughes, author of Victorians Undone: Tales of the Flesh in the Age of Decorum. Programme includes archive of Simon Callow and Armando Iannucci.Future episodes include Reginald D Hunter on Eugene V Debs, five times socialist candidate for the US presidency; Dr Hannah Critchlow on Colin Blakemore; director Julien Temple on Christopher Marlowe, and Zing Tsjeng on Hilma af Klint, a Swedish painter who was virtually unknown throughout the twentieth century. Her recent Paintings for the Future show at the Guggenheim was the most visited in their history. Also Conn Iggulden on the Emperor Nero, and comedian Jo Brand picks the American blues singer Bessie Smith.PLUS!AN Wilson on Johann Wolfgang von Goethe; Anneka Rice on the largely forgotten wife of William Morris; and Ekow Eshun on Britain's first openly gay footballer, Justin FashanuThe presenter is Matthew Parris and the producer for BBC studios is Miles Warde who launched the series over twenty years ago in Bristol.

Last Word
Bernard Cribbins OBE (pictured), Diana Kennedy MBE, Sir Colin Blakemore, Nichelle Nichols

Last Word

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 5, 2022 28:04


Matthew Bannister on Bernard Cribbins OBE, the much-loved actor known for appearances in The Railway Children and Doctor Who as well as reading countless stories on Jackanory. Diana Kennedy MBE, the British-born food writer who dedicated her life to promoting the diversity of Mexican cuisine. Sir Colin Blakemore, the neuroscientist who received death threats after speaking out in defence of experiments on animals. Nichelle Nichols, the trailblazing African American actor who played Lieutenant Uhura in Star Trek. Producer: Sofie Vilcins Interviewed guest: Jenny Agutter Interviewed guest: Helen Lederer Interviewed guest: Gabriela Cámara Interviewed guest: Fiona Fox Archive clips used: EMI Films, The Railway Children 1970; BBC One, Fawlty Towers - The Hotel Inspectors 10/10/1975; BBC, CBeebies - Storm in a Teacup 05/04/2015; Filmfair, The Wombles - One Pair of Feet 23/02/1973; BBC Radio 4, The Food Programme 30/06/2014; Greenwich Entertainment/Submarine Deluxe, Diana Kennedy - Nothing Fancy 2020; BBC Two, The Mind Machine 13/09/1988; BBC Radio 4, Today 08/11/2011; BBC Radio 4, The Life Scientific - Sir Colin Blakemore 08/11/2011; Desilu Productions/Norway Corporation, Star Trek S02E02 Who Mourns For Adonais 27/04/1970; BBC Radio 4, Archive on 4 - Star Trek, The Undiscovered Future 03/09/2016; BBC Radio 1, Nicky Campbell - Nichelle Nichols interview 31/01/1995; NASA, Recruitment Film 1977; Yap Films, Building Star Trek (TV Movie) 2016.

Scientific Sense ®
Sir Colin Blakemore, Professor of Neuroscience at City University of Hong Kong

Scientific Sense ®

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 29, 2021 75:04


The first neurons of the human cerebral cortex, Tactile perception recruits functionally related visual areas in the late-blind, What synesthesia isn’t, and I Haven’t a Clue! Expectations Based on Repetitions and Hints Facilitate Perceptual Experience of Ambiguous Images Sir Colin Blakemore is Professor of Neuroscience at City University of Hong Kong. His research has focused on vision, development and plasticity of the brain, and on neurodegenerative diseases. He is a member of 12 scientific academies, including the Royal Society and the Chinese Academy of Engineering, and his honors include both the Faraday Prize and the Ferrier Prize from the Royal Society. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/scientificsense/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/scientificsense/support

Unbelievable?
Can science, God (or both) explain the human quest for meaning? Alister McGrath & Colin Blakemore

Unbelievable?

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 21, 2017 81:30


Former atheist biologist-turned-Christian theologian Alister McGrath returns to the show. His new book ‘The Great Mystery’ argues that we need both science and faith to understand our place in the universe and the quest for human meaning. Atheist scientist Colin Blakemore is Emeritus Professor of Neuroscience at Oxford University. He engages Alister, explaining why he believes the human quest for meaning can be explained by evolution and the brain. For Alister McGrath’s book The Great Mystery https://www.amazon.co.uk/Great-Mystery-Science-Human-Meaning/dp/1473634318  For Colin Blakemore http://www.magd.ox.ac.uk/member-of-staff/professor-colin-blakemore/  Get Unbelievable? the book www.unbelievablebook.co.uk  Get Unbelievable? the Conference 2017 DVD/CD & Digital Download: http://www.premier.org.uk/shop  For more faith debates visit http://www.premierchristianradio.com/Shows/Saturday/Unbelievable Join the conversation: Facebook and Twitter Get the MP3 Podcast of Unbelievable? Via RSS or Via iTunes  

Start the Week
Irving Finkel on the Ark Tablet

Start the Week

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 10, 2014 41:57


Tom Sutcliffe looks at the role of the expert. The curator Irving Finkel decodes the symbols on a 4,000 year old clay tablet and discovers the instructions for the building of an ark. Harry Collins asks why attitudes towards scientific expertise have changed and looks to reassert the special status of science. Colin Blakemore is an expert in neuroscience and vision and he reflects on his part in the documentary, Tim's Vermeer, which explores the relationship between art and science. The playwright Hattie Naylor tells the story of an astronomer going blind who learns to see the wonder of the universe in a different way. Producer: Katy Hickman.

tablet irving finkel harry collins tim's vermeer colin blakemore tom sutcliffe
Philosophy at the School of Advanced Study
Rethinking the Senses - Bea de Gelder (Maastricht)

Philosophy at the School of Advanced Study

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 25, 2013


Institute of Philosophy Rethinking the Senses - Bea de Gelder (Maastricht) Barry Smith & Colin Blakemore (Institute of Philosophy) The inaugural workshop of the AHRC grant Rethinking the Senses introduces the first part of the project: looking...

Philosophy at the School of Advanced Study
Rethinking the Senses - Casey O'Callaghan (Rice)

Philosophy at the School of Advanced Study

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 25, 2013


Institute of Philosophy Rethinking the Senses - Casey O'Callaghan (Rice) Barry Smith & Colin Blakemore (Institute of Philosophy) The inaugural workshop of the AHRC grant Rethinking the Senses introduces the first part of the project: looking f...

Philosophy at the School of Advanced Study
Rethinking the Senses - Casey O'Callaghan (Rice)

Philosophy at the School of Advanced Study

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 25, 2013 75:20


Institute of Philosophy Rethinking the Senses - Casey O'Callaghan (Rice) Barry Smith & Colin Blakemore (Institute of Philosophy) The inaugural workshop of the AHRC grant Rethinking the Senses introduces the first part of the project: looking f...

Philosophy at the School of Advanced Study
Rethinking the Senses - Bea de Gelder (Maastricht)

Philosophy at the School of Advanced Study

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 25, 2013 102:25


Institute of Philosophy Rethinking the Senses - Bea de Gelder (Maastricht) Barry Smith & Colin Blakemore (Institute of Philosophy) The inaugural workshop of the AHRC grant Rethinking the Senses introduces the first part of the project: looking...

Nottingham Medico-Chirurgical Society Archives
2002.02.27 - Professor Colin Blakemore: “Plasticity of the Brain: How, Why, Why?”

Nottingham Medico-Chirurgical Society Archives

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 23, 2013


Professor Colin Blakemore: “Plasticity of the Brain: How, Why, Why?”

Philosophy at the School of Advanced Study

Institute of Philosophy Professor Colin Blakemore ( Director of the IP Centre for the Philosophy of the Senses, Neurons and Knowledge) NeuroEverything?

Philosophy at the School of Advanced Study

Institute of Philosophy Professor Colin Blakemore ( Director of the IP Centre for the Philosophy of the Senses, Neurons and Knowledge) NeuroEverything?

Philosophy at the School of Advanced Study
The Unbearable Lightness of Seeing

Philosophy at the School of Advanced Study

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 10, 2012


Institute of Philosophy Professor Colin Blakemore ( Director of the IP Centre for the Philosophy of the Senses, Neurons and Knowledge) The Unbearable Lightness of Seeing

Philosophy at the School of Advanced Study
The Unbearable Lightness of Seeing

Philosophy at the School of Advanced Study

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 10, 2012 76:21


Institute of Philosophy Professor Colin Blakemore ( Director of the IP Centre for the Philosophy of the Senses, Neurons and Knowledge) The Unbearable Lightness of Seeing

Philosophy at the School of Advanced Study

Institute of Philosophy Professor Colin Blakemore ( Director of the IP Centre for the Philosophy of the Senses, Neurons and Knowledge) Darwin’s Brain

Philosophy at the School of Advanced Study

Institute of Philosophy Professor Colin Blakemore ( Director of the IP Centre for the Philosophy of the Senses, Neurons and Knowledge) Darwin’s Brain

The Life Scientific
Colin Blakemore

The Life Scientific

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 8, 2011 27:46


Colin Blakemore is a neuroscientist who nearly became an artist. He specialised in vision and the development of the brain, and pioneered the idea that the brain has the ability to change even in adulthood contrary to the popular view at the time. Professor Blakemore, the youngest ever Reith Lecturer, is an influential science communicator and is committed to raising the profile of brain research. Because of his work he was targeted by animal rights campaigners for over a decade, but rather than keeping a low profile as advised, he decided to work with the activists and explain his point of view about the need for animal testing in medical research. He was appointed head of the Medical Research Council in 2003 but threatened to resign shortly after when he was refused a knighthood, because of his defence of animal research. He has been equally outspoken on many issues including classification of drugs and GM foods. His current areas of research include how the brain develops which has implications for many conditions including autism and schizophrenia. He talks to Jim Al-Khalili about why he's not been afraid to stand up to his critics. Producer: Geraldine Fitzgerald.

The Life Scientific
Paul Nurse

The Life Scientific

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 11, 2011 27:56


Their work is changing the world we live in, but what do we really know about their lives beyond the lab? Each week on The Life Scientific, Jim Al-Khalili, Professor of Physics at Surrey University, invites a leading scientist to tell us about their life and work. He wants to get under their skin and into their minds; to find out what first inspired them towards their field of research and what motivates them to keep going when the evidence seems to be stacking up against their theories. And he'll ask what their ideas and discoveries will do for us. He'll talk to Nobel laureates as well as the next generation of beautiful minds, finding out what inspired them to do science in the first place and what motivates them to keep going. The programme will also feature short drop-ins from fellow scientists. Some will comment on our guest's early career, the implications of their discoveries, or offer alternative perspectives. In this first programme, Jim talks to geneticist Paul Nurse, arguably the most powerful scientist in Britain today. Nurse's interest in science was sparked by the early days of the space race, when one night as a boy, he chased Sputnik down the road in his pyjamas, in a vain attempt to catch up with the Russian satellite as it passed overhead. Nurse, a Nobel Laureate and President of the Royal Society is now firmly part of the science establishment but his upbringing and early academic life was far from conventional. Brought up by working class parents, in North London, Nurse struggled at first to even get accepted by any University. According to one of his tutors (who we'll hear from in the programme) Nurse didn't exactly shine as an undergraduate, either. But these experiences taught him to be self reliant, determined and not afraid of failure. It was a attitude that paid off. In 2001, Nurse shared the Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine for his research on how cells divide, a process which is not only fundamental to all living things but has major implications for understanding and treating diseases like cancer. His rise was, some say, meteoric. But it's not how he sees it, especially in the early days: " I did have a lot of trouble getting a proper job". Now President of one of the oldest and most respected scientific institutions in the world, Nurse's career has been far from predictable, and at times, controversial. Yet the same could be said for his personal life, when in his 50s, he was hit with a major revelation that would change forever how he viewed his past. Confirmed guests on future programmes include the cognitive scientist Stephen Pinker; Astronomer Jocelyn Bell-Burnell; the brains behind the Human Genome Project, John Sulston; Epidemiologist Michael Marmot, neuroscientist Colin Blakemore and Molly Stevens, a tissue engineer whose work growing bones could mean the end of metal pins for broken legs; Producers: Anna Buckley and Geraldine Fitzgerald.

The House I Grew Up In
Colin Blakemore

The House I Grew Up In

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 26, 2010 28:13


Neurobiologist Professor Colin Blakemore was a war baby brought up in devastated Coventry. His two-up two-down home had the first TV in the street on which he lived next door to relatives and a family of ten. As an only child, his parents were able to cash in an insurance policy of £16 which enabled him to go to the local grammar school where he proved himself to be more of an artist and actor than a scientist. Producer: Smita Patel.

tv coventry colin blakemore
The Next Big Thing: Nanotechnology - for iPad/Mac/PC

Atomic scale engineering – facts and the fiction. A panel discussion chaired by Colin Blakemore.

The Next Big Thing: Nanotechnology - for iPad/Mac/PC

Transcript -- Atomic scale engineering – facts and the fiction. A panel discussion chaired by Colin Blakemore.

The Next Big Thing: Nanotechnology - for iPod/iPhone

Atomic scale engineering – facts and the fiction. A panel discussion chaired by Colin Blakemore.

The Next Big Thing: Nanotechnology - for iPod/iPhone

Transcript -- Atomic scale engineering – facts and the fiction. A panel discussion chaired by Colin Blakemore.

Desert Island Discs
Professor Colin Blakemore

Desert Island Discs

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 8, 1996 37:45


The castaway in Desert Island Discs this week is the scientist Colin Blakemore. A brilliant student, he became an Oxford professor at the age of 35 and since then he has commanded enormous influence through his research and the way he has tried to communicate the importance of science to the world at large.He'll be talking to Sue Lawley about his main work - the functioning of the human brain - and about his research on the relationship between vision and brain development. He'll also be describing how his experiments in this area involving animals have made him the target of attacks from animal rights activists. [Taken from the original programme material for this archive edition of Desert Island Discs] Favourite track: Die Zauberflote Oittre Nicht - The Magic Flute by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Book: The Discoverers by Daniel Boorstin Luxury: Solar-powered internet (to receive, not send)

professor oxford desert island discs sue lawley colin blakemore desert island discs favourite
Desert Island Discs: Archive 1991-1996
Professor Colin Blakemore

Desert Island Discs: Archive 1991-1996

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 8, 1996 37:45


The castaway in Desert Island Discs this week is the scientist Colin Blakemore. A brilliant student, he became an Oxford professor at the age of 35 and since then he has commanded enormous influence through his research and the way he has tried to communicate the importance of science to the world at large. He'll be talking to Sue Lawley about his main work - the functioning of the human brain - and about his research on the relationship between vision and brain development. He'll also be describing how his experiments in this area involving animals have made him the target of attacks from animal rights activists. [Taken from the original programme material for this archive edition of Desert Island Discs] Favourite track: Die Zauberflote Oittre Nicht - The Magic Flute by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart Book: The Discoverers by Daniel Boorstin Luxury: Solar-powered internet (to receive, not send)

professor oxford desert island discs sue lawley colin blakemore desert island discs favourite