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All Seasons

Season 1

  • S01E01 Lower Than the Angels

    • May 5, 1973
    • BBC Two

    The following episodes examine intellectual, cultural, and scientific breakthroughs in man's four-million-year evolution. Shows importance of new ideas and how they transcend other historical events in their cumulative, irreversible effects. Written-narrated by Jacob Bronowski.

  • S01E02 The Harvest of the Seasons

    • May 12, 1973
    • BBC Two

    In the long spring following the Ice Ages man develops agriculture and domesticates animals, imposing his will on wild wheat and horses. With the Neolithic cultivators come the mounted Nomads, the predators, and the roots of human warfare. Shot largely in central Iran.

  • S01E03 The Grain in the Stone

    • May 19, 1973
    • BBC Two

    Man splits a stone and reassembles the pieces to build a wall, a cathedral, a city. This program is about man, the architect, builder, and sculptor. Shots of Greek temples of Paestum, cathedrals of medieval France, Inca cities of Peru juxtaposed with shots of modern cities.

  • S01E04 The Hidden Structure

    • May 26, 1973
    • BBC Two

    From ancient Oriental metallurgy, through mystical alchemy this program traces the roots of chemistry. Shang bronze craftsmen and Samurai sword smiths are the starting point for a journey leading from medieval Europe to Dalton's atomic theory and our modern knowledge of the elements.

  • S01E05 Music of the Spheres

    • June 2, 1973
    • BBC Two

    Program covers the evolution of math. Pythagoras, father of Greek math, considered numbers the language of nature. Follows spread of Greek ideas through the Islamic Empire to Moorish Spain and Renaissance Europe. Explores the alliance of math to music, astronomy, and painting.

  • S01E06 The Starry Messenger

    • June 9, 1973
    • BBC Two

    Studies man's attempts to map the forces which move the planets. The static nature of South American astronomy is contrasted with ideas of Renaissance Europe. Traces the origins of the scientific revolution in the conflict between truth and dogma, symbolized by the trial of Galileo.

  • S01E07 The Majestic Clockwork

    • June 16, 1973
    • BBC Two

    Newton and Einstein, the two giants of physics, imposed great systems of order on the world. This production illustrates the revolution that occurred when Einstein's theory of relativity turned Newton's elegant description of the universe inside out.

  • S01E08 The Drive for Power

    • June 23, 1973
    • BBC Two

    Program covers the industrial and political revolutions of the 18th century. Forces of nature were harnessed and the basics of political power shifted. Bronowski argues that in man's progress, the Industrial Revolution was a step forward as significant as the Renaissance.

  • S01E09 The Ladder of Creation

    • June 30, 1973
    • BBC Two

    From the countryside of Wales to the jungles of the Amazon, follows the stories of Alfred Russell Wallace and Charles Darwin who had the same idea simultaneously - evolution by natural selection. Their ideas helped others to probe the nature and origins of life.

  • S01E10 World Within World

    • July 7, 1973
    • BBC Two

    In the vaults of ancient Polish salt mines Bronowski embarks on a journey to the hidden world inside the atom. He traces the history of the men and the ideas that made 20th century physics the greatest achievement of the human imagination.

  • S01E11 Knowledge or Certainty

    • July 14, 1973
    • BBC Two

    Bronowski's statement on information and responsibility's a moral dilemma to scientists. Principle of certainty in physics applies to all knowledge. Examines implications of bombing Japan. Contrasts humanist tradition of Gottingen University with the inhumanities of Auschwitz.

  • S01E12 Generation Upon Generation

    • July 21, 1973
    • BBC Two

    Math and physics brought revolution to man's ideas of life. From Mendel's work to discoveries of today, Bronowski unravels complex code of human inheritance. Sees sex as an instrument of evolution that makes every human unique yet breeds care between individuals.

  • S01E13 The Long Childhood

    • July 28, 1973
    • BBC Two

    In this final program Bronowski - poet, playwright, mathematician, philosopher - draws together many threads of the series. He takes stock of man's complex, sometimes precarious, ascent. Argues that man's growth to self-knowledge is the longest childhood of all.

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