Reality
What is the nature of reality and are there ways of gaining a new perspective of it?
It is easy to be hoodwinked into thinking the world you immediately see and experience is the most important part of reality. So this week you are invited to join us in leaving Earth and zooming up into space to discover what we can see when we are thousands of miles away. Joining Bridget Kendall for this journey are space archaeologist Sarah Parcak, artist Mishka Henner, and cosmologist Max Tegmark.
(Photo: Planet Earth from space courtesy of Nasa/ Getty images)
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Think Bigger
Duration: 00:47
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Cosmologist Max Tegmark
Mathematics doesn鈥檛 just describe reality, it IS reality
Duration: 14:02
Artist Mishka Henner
The solar system in book-form; and US feed-lot images
Duration: 08:58
60 Second Idea: It鈥檚 Your Round!
Ensuring that no-one ever misses their round in the pub again
Duration: 03:27
Satellite archaeologist Sarah Parcak
Detecting looters in Egypt from 700km above the earth
Duration: 14:03
Max Tegmark
Max Tegmark is Professor of Theoretical Physics at MIT in Boston in the US, and one of the world鈥檚 leading cosmologists.聽 In his new book , Max argues that the reason mathematics describes reality so perfectly, is because it IS reality.
Mishka Henner
Award-winning photographic artist Mishka Henner zooms out from the particular to the astronomical in his work.聽 He has created a scale model of our solar system in book form, and also stitches together freely available satellite images to create his own aerial perspectives; for example on controversial intensive cattle feedlots in the Midwest of the US.聽 (see our Gallery for examples of Mishka鈥檚 work)
Sarah Parcak
Dr Sarah Parcak is Associate Professor of Archaeology at the University of Alabama at Birmingham in the US, and a .聽 Her specialism is in remote sensing - satellite archaeology, or as she puts it 鈥楽pace archaeology鈥.聽 She tells how this emerging field is not only uncovering ancient Egyptian lost cities, but also the looting of artefacts from archaeological sites, a crime that has increased by 1000% since the Arab Spring in 2011.
60 Second Idea to Change the World: It鈥檚 Your Round
Do you know someone who always manages to avoid buying a round in the pub, even when it's definitely their turn? Sarah Parcak proposes a novel solution to this problem.聽 Her idea is an automatic round tracking light system for each group in a pub.聽 It would detect when glasses at a table were nearly empty, and who had been at the cash register (by facial recognition of course).聽 A gentle 鈥測ou鈥檙e up next mate鈥 would appear before the individuals at the table who had not yet bought their rounds. The order of who buys does not matter- just that everyone contributes fairly.
In Next Week鈥檚 Programme:
The power of expectation; with a focus on wine, music and medical treatment.
Broadcasts
- Sat 22 Feb 2014 22:06GMT91热爆 World Service Online
- Sun 23 Feb 2014 10:06GMT91热爆 World Service Online
- Mon 24 Feb 2014 03:06GMT91热爆 World Service Online
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The Forum
The programme that explains the present by exploring the past