Showing posts with label BBC World Service. Show all posts
Showing posts with label BBC World Service. Show all posts

Monday, May 24, 2010

Wellcome Library gets a Healthcheck


The most recent web edition of the BBC's Healthcheck series aired last week, discussing Professor Gareth Williams's new book The Angel of Death, on the history and eradication of Smallpox.

The feature is illustrated by an oil painting from our collections ('Edward Jenner vaccinating a boy' by Eugène-Ernest Hillemacher. Wellcome Library, no. 45436i) and is available to watch through the BBC website.

Sunday, April 26, 2009

The Secret Scientists - Ibn al-Haytham

Episode two of The Secret Scientists aired last week on the BBC World Service.

Just as in the first episode, the documentary used the resources of the Wellcome Library to illuminate figures from the History of Science.

In this second episode, Prof Jim al-Khalili and Dr Nader el-Bizri, visit the Library to investigate the work and legacy of Ibn al-Haytham.

In particular they discuss his groundbreaking research into light and optics and also the claims that al-Haytham was the instigator of what we now call the scientific method.

More details on how to listen again to the series are available on the World Service website.

Wednesday, April 15, 2009

The Secret Scientists

The BBC World Service today aired the first part of a new series, The Secret Scientists.

Details:

"According to the popular notion of science history, the period between the ninth and 13th centuries was what has come to be called the Dark Ages. Scientific advance ground to a halt and the world languished in an intellectual backwater. Then the Renaissance happened, the world woke up and great science got going again – picking up where the ancient Greeks and Romans had left off.

But, as Professor Jim Al-Khalili shows listeners in this new, three-part series, that simply isn't true. While Europe may have been less productive during this period, elsewhere in the world a vast Islamic empire was buzzing with intellectual activity. A massive movement to translate the work of other cultures allowed scholars working in Arabic to understand, build on and then surpass the scientific achievements of the past – leaving a valuable legacy to the scientists of the European Renaissance. Today, however, these men are hardly household names. They are "the Secret Scientists".

In today's opener, Jim meets Professor Peter Pormann, a specialist in the history of medicine, at the great library of the medical charity the Wellcome Trust in London. He introduces listeners to the great physician, Mohammed Ibn Zakariya ar-Razi, whose ground-breaking work on differential diagnosis, specifically with measles and smallpox, was still being quoted in English and French texts hundreds of years after his death.

Jim also goes to the chemistry laboratory of chemist Dr Andrea Sella, who talks about Jabir ibn Hayyan. Jim believes that Jabir was the true father of chemistry – responsible for elevating previous work to the status of a science. Andrea talks about the process of sublimation, which was invented during this period and is still in use today – for example, in the production of freeze-dried food".


Whilst in the Wellcome Library, Profs Al-Khalili and Pormann examine copies we hold of works by ar-Razi (or Rhases), including a 19th century English translation of ar-Razi's Treatise on Smallpox and Measles and also works by Ibn Sina (or Avicenna), such as his famous Canon of Medicine.

The documentary is available through the BBC’s iPlayer for the next 7 days.