Neuroscience
Melvyn Bragg and guests examine the relationship between the mind and the brain as they discuss recent developments in Neuroscience. In the mid-19th century a doctor had a patient who had suffered a stroke. The patient was unable to speak save for one word. The word was ‘Tan’ which became his name. When Tan died, the doctor discovered damage to the left side of his brain and concluded that the ability to speak was housed there. This is how neuroscience used to work - by examining the dead or investigating the damaged - but now things have changed. Imaging machines and other technologies enable us to see the active brain in everyday life, to observe the activation of its cells and the mass firing of its neuron batteries. Our extraordinary new knowledge of how the brain works has challenged concepts of free will and consciousness and opened up new ways of understanding the brain. Yet these new ideas seem to conform to some old ideas such as Freudian Psychoanalysis. But what picture of the brain has emerged, how has our understanding of it changed and what are the implications for understanding that most mysterious and significant of all phenomena - the human mind?
→ Listen on BBC Sounds website
Guests
- Martin Conway
3 episodes
Professor of Psychology at the University of Leeds - Gemma Calvert
2 episodes
Professor of Applied Neuroimaging at WMG, University of Warwick - David Papineau
2 episodes
Professor of Philosophy of Science at King's College London
Related episodes
-
Neuroscience in the 20th century
24 Dec, 1998 610 Medicine and health -
The Brain and Consciousness
19 Nov, 1998 150 Psychology -
The Brain
8 May, 2008 610 Medicine and health -
Consciousness
25 Nov, 1999 120 Epistemology -
Imagination and Consciousness
29 Jun, 2000 120 Epistemology -
The Infant Brain
4 Mar, 2010 150 Psychology -
Memory and Culture
27 May, 1999 150 Psychology -
Memory
29 May, 2003 150 Psychology -
Dreams
4 Mar, 2004 150 Psychology -
Perception and the Senses
28 Apr, 2005 150 Psychology
Programme ID: b00fbd26
Episode page: bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00fbd26
Auto-category: 612 (Human Physiology)
Hello (First sentence from this episode)
Hello. In the mid-19th century, a doctor had a patient who had suffered a stroke.