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The Mysteries of the Brain

Professor Barry Smith examines the link between language and the senses. How do our senses affect our ability to communicate and respond to the world around us?

How do our brains work in everyday life?

The experiences that we take for granted – talking to a friend, listening to a piece of music, lifting a cup of coffee, tasting a peach – depend for their existence on the intricate and silent workings of several cooperative regions of the brain.

Why do some people see numbers as coloured? Do we have five or twenty-five senses? How much of the brain do we need to understand language? Can we cure chronic pain or depression at the flick of an electrical switch? Do we decide how to act before we know about it?

For this four-part series, Professor Barry Smith from the Institute of Philosophy, explores the way neuroscience is addressing the ultimate scientific challenge: namely, how our brain makes us the conscious creatures we are – capable of language, thinking and feeling.

Available now

25 minutes

Last on

Mon 27 Sep 201002:05GMT

Broadcasts

  • Mon 20 Sep 201008:05GMT
  • Mon 20 Sep 201011:05GMT
  • Mon 20 Sep 201014:05GMT
  • Mon 20 Sep 201019:05GMT
  • Tue 21 Sep 201000:05GMT
  • Sat 25 Sep 201010:05GMT
  • Sun 26 Sep 201013:05GMT
  • Mon 27 Sep 201002:05GMT