The Story of Science: Power, Proof and Passion

The Story of Science: Power, Proof and Passion

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8.14
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Ratings: 8.14/10 from 95 users.

For thousands of years we have wrestled with the great questions of existence. Who are we? What is the world made of? How did we get here? The quest to answer these is the story of science.

Each week, medical journalist Michael Mosley traces the often unpredictable path we have taken. From recreating a famous alchemist’s experiment, to following in Galileo’s footsteps, and putting himself in the hands of a hypnotist, Michael unpicks how science has changed the way we see ourselves, and the way we see our world.

It is a tale of courage and of fear, of hope and disaster, of persistence and success. It interweaves great forces of history – revolutions, voyages of discovery and artistic movements – with practical, ingenious inventions and the dogged determination of experimenters and scientists.

This is the story of how history made science and how science made history, and how the ideas which emerged made the modern world.

1. What Is Out There? How we came to understand our planet was not at the center of everything in the cosmos.

2. What Is The World Made Of? How atomic theories and concepts of quantum physics underpin modern technology.

3. How Did We Get Here? Michael Mosley tells how scientists came to explain the diversity of life on earth.

4. Can We Have Unlimited Power? The story of how power has been harnessed from wind, steam and from inside the atom.

5. What is the Secret of Life? Michael Moseley tells the story of how the secret of life has been unraveled through the prism of the most complex organism known - the human body.

6. Who Are We? The twin sciences of brain anatomy and psychology have offered different visions of who we are. Now these sciences are coming together and in the process have revealed some surprising and uncomfortable truths about what really shapes our thoughts, feelings and desires.

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78   Comments / Reviews

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  1. he skipped many important issues and facts,a true member of the new mainstream media.

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  2. I did not agree with some content of Moseley's documentary "The Story of Science" as he made some monumental errors.

    1. Totally ignored non-Western science and no mention at all of the Renaissance.

    2. Perpetuated Descartes's myth with the phrase "Cogito, Ergo sum" thus, he could not be fooled.
    Unfortunately "Ergo" is not completely defined, consequently Descartes can be fooled.

    3. Perpetuated Turing's Test for artificial intelligence. Unfortunately neither science nor a computer
    will ever be able to distinguish good from bad.

    4. Perpetuated the myth that Science is/was the most important human endeavour.
    Science is flawed at its core and cannot make humans happy except materialistically.

    5. Unfortunately this documentary lacked depth and insight.

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  3. What I want to know is since it is said that the Mayans and ancient Egyptians and other similiar of the oldest cultures had a seemingly near perfect understanding of 'the heavens,' at least this is what so many documentaries suggest with their calendar and the pyramids and other early so called wonders, which supposedly as almost as precise as our 'modern' models based on the science of today. HOW can this be so, if as is also known and presented in this video, that the ancients 'knew' that the earth was the center of the cosmos and was stationary and everything revolved around our earth? How can they be so wrong, yet at the same time be able to be considered virtually as advanced in the area of astronomy with navigation, and how most all of the massive monuments and calendar were so accurate? Just a question that 'came' to me a few minutes ago.

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  4. This was good, but very eurocentric. It narrowly focused almost exclusively on the major scientific discoveries of the last 500 years and ignored the scientific discoveries of Africa and Asia, which formed the basis for Western Europe's scientific revolution. This series should be watched in conjunction with documentaries that show the history of science before Western Europe. Other than that, good.

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  5. I would suggests another source of science, which came to us much earlier than what has been explained here about the expansion of the universe and basically the whole content. The Qur'an explains all this facts close to 1500 years ago, thus much earlier than Kepler, Einstein or any one else even had the idea to think about the black wholes or the nature of the space.

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  6. What a well-made series.

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  7. I do see it there now....thanks :)

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  8. where is the documentary at? when i click, there is just a white space where the video should be...was it removed?

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  9. anyone know where I can see trancendant man?

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  10. anyone know where I can see trancendant man?

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  11. I have only just watched the "What is Out There", the first episode so far. As an astronomy teacher and lecturer for years, I found this very well done and would at least endorse this one episode wholeheartedly. I especially enjoyed the dramatic recreations of history in the beautiful and actual on site locations in Prague Czechoslovakia and Venice Italy. It makes me want to travel there now and continue my award winning astronomy art. - Mark Seibold, Portland Oregon

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  12. I cannot explain how deeply grateful I am to have access to this website. I read, and only watch the science channel, pbs, and occasionally a decent DOC ( which sadly is no longer the case) on national geographic or history on television. Now I can watch a plethora of DOCS (not saying all of them are the greatest) that coincides with my studies as well as it being interesting and thought provoking as a whole. Thank you topdocs, I'm so glad I found you! P.S. Great series =] for any science lover like myself.

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  13. great series in every way, cant believe i havent watched this one yet even though its been on the recommended list, a must for every science lover.

    Love some of the old demonstrations/experiments/machines, they still dazzle and amaze today.
    also cool that it started with the antikythera mechanism seeing that was the last doco i watched before this.

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  14. think i'll start on these tomorrow. can't wait!

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  15. worth it
    uncovers the lost geniuses
    glad i saw it

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  16. worth spending 6 hours?

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  17. heh.

    I was taken a little aback with Wegener's (responsible for continental drift theory) fate (in episode 3).

    When the narrator said that he died on an expedition and was buried under the ice, and started out "he died on expedition to greenland", and continued "Because of continental drift.. " I guess I was expecting something like that he got a posthumous prize, or was reburied in a prestigious cememtary..

    When he said, instead, that "because of continental drift, his body is now 2 meters further from his homeland", well, I guess I got a perverse kick out of it.

    Man.. I've got a sick sense of humor.

    Ed

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  18. Jesus Arnie... don't need a review...

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  19. Overall a good series. Britain centric of course. Heaven forbid that other inventors like Nikola Tesla be introduced. If only Nikola Tesla had been British and not from in Smiljan, Croatia.

    Editing was good. Story line was good. The narrator did a wonderful job. I wasn't too crazy about his pink shirt at first (or maybe its mauve) however as the series went on, I completely lost notice of it. Interesting because he wears it throught the whole series for color consistency.

    No revolutionary ground breaking ideas just a good summation of science discoveries to date from a British centric perspective. And since this is a BBC program you really cannot knock them for that.

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  20. Episode 5 - What is life?

    Here the BBC does a great documentary on the mechanics of the human body and the discoveries over time that revealed how the human body works. The title of this episode should be "What is the human body?"

    Because when it comes to discussing "What is life?" the BBC is afraid to talk openly about the new discoveries that have been emerging over the past few years that clearly show that the human life has two distinct parts.

    The first part is the biology and mechanics of the human body. Here the DNA sequence tweaked over the past 300 million years creates an incredibly complex biological machine. The human body is the hardware part of the human equation. It is born, reproduces itself, and then dies.

    The second part of the human equation is the software / consciousness that runs the human body. This is the spirit part of the human body that makes us individuals. The spirit part of consciousness is fused with the human brain at the quantum level. This process happens after the brain has been developed and can occur before birth or shortly after birth.

    The spirit in this case is NOT to be confused with religion. The spirit is a part of the life force that resides in a spirit dimension at the quantum level of the universe. This spirit dimension can be thought of as the accumulated life force and knowledge of the universe.

    When people experience an NDE, Near Death Experience, there is a common story of their spirit essence leaving their body and heading back to the spiritual dimension. The person's spirit is aware of their body and the fact that it is no longer functioning.

    What makes the NDE, Near Death Experience, unique is that the person's spirit is able to reenter and revive the brain bringing the body back to life. This seems to occur at the quantum level of the human brain. There is a fusion between the physical world and spiritual dimension at the quantum level.

    Memories obtained in the physical world are able to be transferred and stored via pure energy in the quantum spiritual dimension. The life force of the universe.

    Two documentaries that talk about NDE, Near Death Experiences.

    BBC - The Day I Died (available at this site)

    Life After Life - 6 true stories of NDE experiences (available at this site)

    After a human dies the person's spirit leaves the biological body and returns to the spirit dimension = Life force of the universe and all accumulated knowledge.

    After a period of time the person's spirit returns to the Earth to live in another human baby of its choice. Recent evidence suggests that spirit groups live several lives together taking on different roles. ie One life time a boy, a father and grandfather, another lifetime a girl, a mother and grandmother. It varies.

    A recent public example is the story of James, a World War II pilot who died in combat over Japanese waters and died in the 1940's. In the 1990's his spirit was reborn in a new baby boy in the United States. Early childhood memories were able to rebuild his past life as the US World War II pilot.

    This only has to happen once to prove the concept that a person's consciousness / spirit is separate from his physical body, but that in order to experience life they MUST work together.

    The web site "Past Children's Lives" has many more examples of young children 3 to 5 years old remembering past lives on Earth.

    It is very interesting and fundamentally answers the question, "What is life?"

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  21. i was a bit put out when they mentioned AC and didnt mention Tesla, but what ya gonna do hey? all in all, a good series

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  22. i know why mars goes backwards in the sky but, he doesnt explain it does he?

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  23. 35 years ago-I read psychology. I 'thought' BF Skinner was slightly odd-or rather that his theories were. Perhaps it was because I liked birds (UK slang version particularly)...
    and I thought it was not right to treat pidgeons that way; re-episode 5/6.

    Now -with PR; TV -and their servings of propanganda and consumer products-to an imcreasingly susceptible society (the adjective was the kindest one -replacing sheepish)-
    I see behaviourisn as valid -though not the greatest method to treat conditions such as PTSD (trauma anxieties) and depression. I know-c 1981.

    Besides, birds deserve more respect

    Maurice in Ireland

    aka Liebwitz

    addendum----Presenter a bit too cloyingly off-putting. Bring on Dr. Jan Garavaglia (notwithstanding slightly different discipline)

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  24. My favourites were that valuable contributions made by the woman and the black man

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  25. Michael Mosley has been in some very interesting sciences documentary recently and this it one of them. More history then science but totally amazing.

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