Two Cultures
Melvyn Bragg looks back at 150 years of dialogue between the arts and sciences, and the flashpoint known as the Two Cultures debate.
Melvyn Bragg considers the 150-year history of the Two Cultures debate. In 1959 the novelist C.P. Snow delivered a lecture in Cambridge suggesting that intellectual life had become divided into two separate cultures: the sciences and the humanities. The lecture is still celebrated for the furore it provoked - but Snow was returning to a battleground almost a century old. Melvyn Bragg visits the old Cavendish Laboratory in Cambridge, scene of many of modern science's greatest triumphs, to put the Two Cultures debate in its historical context - and Paul Nurse, President of the Royal Society, reveals the influence the Two Cultures debate had on his development as a scientist.
Producer: Thomas Morris.
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- Wed 2 Jan 2013 09:00成人快手 Radio 4
- Wed 2 Jan 2013 21:30成人快手 Radio 4
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The Value of Culture
Melvyn Bragg explores the history of the idea of culture, and its value today.