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Wednesday, July 9, 2008 | Reason : In the News | print version Print | Comments

Document The BBC announces a major season marking the life and work of Charles Darwin

by BBC

Thanks to Jonathan Smith for the link.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/pressoffice/pressreleases/stories/2008/07_july/03/darwin.shtml

The BBC announces a major season marking the life and work of Charles Darwin

The BBC today announces a season of landmark content to mark one of the most astonishing and influential scientific ideas ever conceived.

February 12 2009 is the 200th anniversary of the birth of Charles Darwin, and 24 November 2009 is the 150th of the publication of his book On the Origin of Species, which laid out the theory of evolution by natural selection.

David Attenborough, Andrew Marr and Jimmy Doherty are just some of the well-known names who will be helping the BBC and the nation to mark the life and work of Charles Darwin on the BBC Winter 08/09.

The BBC announcement dovetails with the anniversary of the first public reading of Darwin and Alfred Russel Wallace's papers on evolution to the Linnean Society on 1st July 1858.

The season sets out to explore evolution, regarded as one of the most far-reaching and influential scientific ideas ever.

It is an idea which has robustly stood the test of time.

George Entwistle, Controller Knowledge Commissioning, BBC Vision said: "The key Darwin anniversaries provide an excellent opportunity for the BBC to explore in real depth this revolutionary idea, and the man behind it.

"The season will stretch across the BBC landscape and we're delighted to have content from across television, radio and online.

"We hope it will connect our audiences to Darwin the man, as well as Darwin the scientific revolutionary.

"I hope this season will inspire our audiences and deliver real insight into his ideas and what they mean for contemporary society."

Andrew Caspari, Commissioning Editor, Radio 4 said: "Radio 4 is commissioning a range of documentaries and short features to mark the anniversaries of Charles Darwin.

"We will look at his work and his life and assess his significant legacy for science and for society."

John Lynch, Head of Science, BBC Vision said: "2009 and 2010 are years of great significance for science and will see a major push from the BBC in the public understanding of science.

"The BBC has commissioned some of the biggest science landmarks we have ever done, covering some of the most important fundamentals of scientific literacy.

"The Darwin Season is a good example of this focus on science."

A range of BBC content from BBC Science, Natural History Unit, Religion and Ethics and CBBC will deliver across television, radio and online an array of stories and voices about this mould-breaking scientific theory.

BBC Darwin Season highlights

BBC One kicks off the season with a one-off special from David Attenborough and the Natural History Unit (NHU) in Bristol.

Tree of Life (working title, 1 x 60-minute) explores the origin of Darwin's great idea. David Attenborough makes a powerful case for the importance of the science of evolution.

Andrew Marr On Darwin's Legacy (working title) is a landmark new 3 x 60-minute series for BBC Two.

Marr will explore the radical impact of Darwin's theory not only in science, but also society, political movements (capitalist, Marxist and fascist) and religion.

It will also show how that impact continues today, underpinning much of our modern understanding of human life. Co-funded by the Open University (OU).

BBC Four will present two specially commissioned one-off documentaries: What Darwin Didn't Know and Darwin: In His Own Words.

What Darwin Didn't know is a new 1 x 90-minute film exploring a new field of genetics, 'evo devo' – the combined study of evolution and development in the womb – which is allowing us to solve some of

Darwin's unanswered questions.

Darwin: In His Own Words will use newly-released documents from Cambridge University to chart Darwin's thoughts during the long period before he made his theory known to the public.

Entomologist and farmer Jimmy Doherty recreates many of Darwin's ground-breaking plant experiments at Down House, the Darwin family home in Kent, in Darwin's Garden (3 x 60-minute) for BBC Two. Co-funded by the OU.

BBC One has also commissioned Life (10 x 60-minute) from the NHU, a natural history spectacular which captures the most extraordinary and awe-inspiring animal survival behaviours ever shown on TV.

Four years in the making, Life is filmed in the most extreme environments across the globe. Co-funded by the OU. A co-production with BBC Worldwide and Discovery.

BBC Radio highlights

BBC Radio 4 will be marking the Darwin anniversaries next year with a range of features and programmes delving into the world before On the Origin of Species was published, as well as the legacy it left behind. More details to be announced.

BBC Radio 3 is presenting a series of programmes which explore the roots of Darwin's ideas and their subsequent influence across the intellectual spectrum, in the sciences, arts and philosophy.

In The Origins of the Origins, historian Andrew Cunningham investigates how Darwin's thinking was a product of the scientific ideas of his time.

And in Darwin's Conundrum, the Reverend Angela Tilby looks at how Darwin wrestled with religion through his letters to scientists, clergy, friends and family.

Five essays from a wide range of different contemporary professions, from psychologists to economists, explore the unexpected – and often still growing – impact of Darwinism on their subject.

BBC Multiplatform

bbc.co.uk will be a key destination for a wealth of content about Darwin – his life and work. More details to be announced at a later date.

The BBC Darwin season will transmit from Winter 2008/09.

All titles may be subject to change.

Notes to Editors

Science programming continues to be at the heart of the BBC schedule and 2008-09 will see landmark, challenging and expert science programmes from the BBC.

Highlights include a new series for BBC One presented by Professor Robert Winston, Medical Frontiers (working title). This series will explore the life and death decisions which are every day events on the edge of medicine.

Horizon, BBC Two's flagship science documentary strand, also returns to screens in Autumn 2008 with a new series of cutting-edge films.

BBC Four will bring in-depth science alive this summer with Blood and Guts: The History of Surgery. Michael Mosley (multi-award winning journalist and science reporter on BBC's The One Show), gives a powerful insight into the way mistakes – sometimes humorous, often tragic – have shaped the evolution of modern medicine.

Science will have a strong presence multiplatform presence – helping to inspire, inform and promote wider understanding about modern science to a mass audience.

Oceans (BBC Two, autumn 2008) presented by explorer Paul Rose and environmentalist Philippe Cousteau Jr, has already gone live online with some of its adventures at www.bbc.co.uk/oceans.

And the BBC will again focus on science in 2010 (a year that marks the anniversary of the founding of The Royal Society), with programmes including a landmark series unfolding The History of Science (BBC Two).

LG

Comments 1 - 32 of 32 |

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1. Comment #207253 by Am I Evil? on July 9, 2008 at 11:51 am

 avatarExcellent! Now to source a new DVD recorder...

Other Comments by Am I Evil?

2. Comment #207255 by randumbness47 on July 9, 2008 at 11:55 am

I look forward to seeing this. Will Dawkins be appearing in any of these programs?

Other Comments by randumbness47

3. Comment #207259 by Ian Bamlett on July 9, 2008 at 11:59 am

 avatarFantastic!

Let's hope they don't go soft and allow any input from the 'other side'. You can bet that when 'they' see this line up they will be on the phone to the beeb asking for the right to respond me thinks.

I hope I am wrong.

Other Comments by Ian Bamlett

4. Comment #207266 by alexmzk on July 9, 2008 at 12:14 pm

o god i hope they get Dembski on board, it'd be hilarious. maybe Behe if they were really desperate for some light relief.

Other Comments by alexmzk

5. Comment #207275 by Barry Pearson on July 9, 2008 at 12:35 pm

 avatarThis sounds like the sort of programming that justifies the licence fee. (Along with Doctor Who).

Presumably the BBC will sell a lot of this worldwide, and it will keep getting repeated over the next decade or two.

I hope it becomes readily available for use in all venues where high quality arguments for evolution is needed.

Other Comments by Barry Pearson

6. Comment #207280 by HourglassMemory on July 9, 2008 at 12:42 pm

I wonder if I'll be able to catch it in my television here in Portugal.
I can only watch one BBC.
We don't have stuff like BBC 4 and 2 here.
I don't even know if the BBC here has a number.

I hope something big is released on DVD so it is then sold here in Portugal and I can buy it.

Richard Dawkins' new series "Dawkins on Darwin"(I think that's the title) should also appear in this period.

For people to watch these programmes there has to be some major marketing tactics, like...publicity for them everywhere.

Other Comments by HourglassMemory

7. Comment #207284 by D'Arcy on July 9, 2008 at 12:52 pm

 avatarBring on the Darwin programmes! It should provide some counterbalance to the daily, mainly, Christian religious broadcasts. Most CoE believers accept Darwin's ideas because they have become "sophisticated" and look for metaphors rather than literal truth in the Bible. The fact that Darwin's own observations gradually turned him away from his religion must be a clarion call for everyone to investigate nature more.

Other Comments by D'Arcy

8. Comment #207290 by Big City on July 9, 2008 at 12:57 pm

 avatarIf they didn't interview (or at least consult) Dawkins, something is seriously wrong.

I wish this would happen in America. I just watched a crazy video of Ken Ham preaching to children that really illustrated how absurd the stories in the Bible are.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mWJQ6vlzEts&feature=user

Other Comments by Big City

9. Comment #207306 by JammyB on July 9, 2008 at 1:32 pm

"Science programming continues to be at the heart of the BBC schedule"

Err.. yeah.. ok, whatever you say. Better late than never Beeb, great to see such a U-turn in their largely negative attitude towards science - these programmes sound like essential viewing. Hopefully the Large Hadron Collider will get plenty of coverage too. 2009 is shaping up to be a great year for science.

Other Comments by JammyB

10. Comment #207323 by Haymoon on July 9, 2008 at 2:01 pm

 avatarMay I ask again about the BBC Mini series
"The Voyage of Charles Darwin" made in 1978 ?

This was an excellent docu drama centered around the Voyage of the Beagle. Some info on it here
http://www.aboutdarwin.com/literature/Video.html

Anyone out there who might make it available to this web site - or would there be a copyright issue in doing this ?

Could BBC be persuaded to re screen it as part of their "Darwin Tribute"

Anyone got a contact emil address where one could send such a request ?

Other Comments by Haymoon

11. Comment #207326 by Border Collie on July 9, 2008 at 2:05 pm

If any of you Brits have information on how we Yanks can see this on satellite, Internet, DVD, etc., here in the US, please post it on this site. Thanks.

Other Comments by Border Collie

12. Comment #207329 by phatbat on July 9, 2008 at 2:07 pm

 avatarThis sounds fantastic - can't wait. Love Attenborough and will be interesting to see Jimmy Doherty not farming.

Good work Auntie.

Other Comments by phatbat

13. Comment #207341 by jaytee_555 on July 9, 2008 at 2:37 pm

Look out for the theologians and religious moderates scrambling to get their noses in the BBC trough! Watch them try to twist everything to make it appear as if everything Darwin said is what they were saying all along.

Am I being unecessarily cynical? Anyone wanna bet?

Other Comments by jaytee_555

14. Comment #207353 by BryanEvans on July 9, 2008 at 3:02 pm

This BBC endeavour will not be complete without a significant contribution from Richard Dawkins, with all due respect to David Attenborough, whom, it goes without saying, we all admire.

Other Comments by BryanEvans

15. Comment #207362 by GregPhillips on July 9, 2008 at 3:15 pm

 avatarGo Beeb!

This is great news, really great news - it is about time we got some decent scientific content to really kick the Xtian IDiots in the nuts. Hopefully these Beeb programmes and Dawkins new series which I hadnt heard of either will give many people a serious challenge.

If they can be arsed to watch it and not throw vegetables at the TV.

No doubt there will also be a series of fools parading across the discussion programmes nay saying thumping their scriptures and running down Darwin, making themselves look extremely stupid, which is a bonus :)

What we really NEED is for the scientific community to formalise Darwins great ideas into a biological Law - surely we are due a gestalt shift? Isnt it the nature of science to test hypotheses, refine, test and test again then formalise a Law?

Its been 150 years and nobody has proved Darwins 'theory' wrong, every scrap of scientifically gathered evidence has backed Darwins proposal so it is time to stop fannying around, grow some testicles and turn Evolution by Natural Selection into a fully fledged scientific Law.

Its my opinion Darwin is the UKs number one national treasure.

Greg

PS I will definately be watching the CBBC series :)

Other Comments by GregPhillips

16. Comment #207377 by ingodwerust on July 9, 2008 at 3:34 pm

 avatarJust what we need. 2009 should be a great year, not just from the bbc. The whole country should be celebrating Darwin's legacy. I look foward to a cacophany of real science discussion and great media - i also look forward to the religious nuts going wild.

Other Comments by ingodwerust

17. Comment #207396 by julianstirling on July 9, 2008 at 4:30 pm

Wow. I am almost tempted to buy a TV and a licence!

Other Comments by julianstirling

18. Comment #207530 by V'Ger on July 10, 2008 at 2:06 am

 avatarCome on BBC... time to get back to what your good at. I'm sick to death of all the 'celebrity' dancing, or singing shite you've lowered yourself to lately.

I heard a while ago about Attenboroughs next project being on Darwin... so I guess it must be part of this.

And as to giving the 'other side' a voice... I can't see that happening. Attenborough is already pissed of at the beeb for cutting funds to science programmes, and even suggesting an ID topic might just push him too far. Unless, of course, he and Dawkins are in need of a punch bag ;-)

Other Comments by V'Ger

19. Comment #207596 by irate_atheist on July 10, 2008 at 3:32 am

 avatarSplendid news, splendid indeed.

Other Comments by irate_atheist

20. Comment #207607 by Apathy personified on July 10, 2008 at 3:50 am

 avatarShame they recently cut the funding for science programs - although anything with David Attenborough is always good.
To my american brethren who are worried about not being able to watch the stuff - can you use the bbc iplayer on the bbc website, or do you need a brit IP?

Other Comments by Apathy personified

21. Comment #207610 by sheepscarer on July 10, 2008 at 3:51 am

 avatarGreat news - just hope Horizon returns to the scientific fold - the last few years it's been so dumbed down I thought I was watching a graphic designers promtional video. Cut the geewizardry and give us the benefit of an attention span of more then 10 seconds.

Other Comments by sheepscarer

22. Comment #207611 by bugaboo on July 10, 2008 at 3:53 am

Should be good
Remember early 80's Docudramas shown in the UK. There was a TV drama called "The Forgotten Voyage" about Alfred Russel Wallace. Also one on Mendel called "The Garden Of Inheritance" These were great as I remember but never to be seen again on the beeb. They really should dig them out and show them. Some of the older Horizons were also great.

Other Comments by bugaboo

23. Comment #207616 by j.mills on July 10, 2008 at 4:00 am

 avatarSome people above asked how they could see this stuff outside the UK. Lots of BBC programmes are now made available online for a week(?) after broadcast, through their iPlayer facility. You don't even need a TV! (Much less a licence...) And you can listen to the radio stuff live over the net or (for the following week) on their Listen Again facility. All hail Auntie Beeb!

(They're doing a natural history show called 'Life'? One of these days they're gonna run out of titles.)

Other Comments by j.mills

24. Comment #207662 by GodMyArse on July 10, 2008 at 5:00 am

Can't wait for this. I only yesterday rang my daughter's school's Head to ask what he was planning to mark these anniversaries, as we live only 20 miles from Darwin's place of birth (Shrewsbury, Shropshire in case you wondered). But I strongly suspect, and have done for some time, that the guy is a freakin cretinist and he virtually confirmed this by stating that even though the school isn't a church school they always like to give the children every side of a story so they can make up their own minds in life, and Evolution is another way of 'looking at creation' whether you're xtian, muslim or whatever. I am now very pissed off. This is 'teach the controversy' in the UK and we don't have any first amendment with which to fight back. A head teacher in this country can put any spin on any subject and imply whatever he likes as long as he disguises it as 'fair and balanced'. I think he plans to suggest quietly that there is 'no proof' of Evolution and other 'theories' are out there. Sorry for the long post about my own personal situation. If anyone's still reading have you got any suggestions?

Other Comments by GodMyArse

25. Comment #207684 by Roger Stanyard on July 10, 2008 at 5:36 am

What's the betting that the creationists and the Democratic Unionist Party in Northern Ireland will be pressuring the BBC on this? Either to pull it or include disclaimers or transmit a creationist programme at the same time.

I dunno if everyone is aware but the DUP is pressurising local science firms in the province not to support celebrations of Darwin's 200/150 anniversary.

Expect also Truth in Science, if it is still in existance by then, to foam at the mouth about it.

Other Comments by Roger Stanyard

26. Comment #207924 by errm... on July 10, 2008 at 10:02 am

Good! we're just getting a new aerial system, including satellite dish, installed.
Re Comment #207266 by alexmzk. Or perhaps they could get professional (as distinct from amateur) comedians to play these parts? Who would you cast as "Te-he and Dumbski"?

Other Comments by errm...

27. Comment #207996 by Miss Harry on July 10, 2008 at 12:25 pm

Only UK residents can use the iPlayer facility for TV programmes, since it's paid for by the license fee and it would use too much bandwidth, or something like that to offer it abroad. You can use iPlayer to access BBC radio programmes online, though.

These BBC programmes seem to be tied in to a new science short course on Darwin and Evolution by the Open University, which I plan to do when it's available next year. Maybe I'll get all the vids with the course materials, since I also live outside the UK so won't see them all.

As I understand it, Richard Dawkins is involved in a separate project on Darwin with Channel 4 in the UK, so not sure if he'll be involved in the BBC one. If so, I'm sure they would have mentioned it in their promos.

Other Comments by Miss Harry

28. Comment #208012 by PaulJ on July 10, 2008 at 1:32 pm

 avatarComment #207996 by Miss Harry:
Only UK residents can use the iPlayer facility for TV programmes, since it's paid for by the license fee and it would use too much bandwidth, or something like that to offer it abroad.
It seems likely, based on what's happened with other popular TV documentaries, that these programmes will become available via bittorrent fairly quickly.

Not that such a thing would be at all legal, of course....

Other Comments by PaulJ

29. Comment #208209 by ghuckin on July 10, 2008 at 5:47 pm

 avatarThis is great, but I hope the scheduling of the programs here in Canada doesn't conflict with the inevitable Bill O'Reilly and Pat Robertson tributes to Darwin.
Come to think of it, I wonder what network TV in the US has planned.

Other Comments by ghuckin

30. Comment #208834 by Vendetta on July 11, 2008 at 9:40 am

 avatarOne of the worst things about living in the US is that we don't get all of these BBC channels and programs. Are there any fellow Americans here who know where/how to catch these programs? Or are we stuck waiting for it to come out on dvd and buying it?

We might not get BBC, but we do get Fox News, so that's a comfort. laksjdfl;kjaweifjaowiefnmaweflkn

Other Comments by Vendetta

31. Comment #209408 by Dinah on July 12, 2008 at 6:21 am

Comment #207662 by GodMyArse
I've only just read this comment, which is why my reply is rather late, but I think the attitude of your daughter's headmaster is a disgrace. It seems every bigot seeking something extra to be bigoted about is now jumping on the creationist bandwagon: I don't think this would have happened even ten years ago. Your daughter has a right to a proper science education, and religious myths are not science. Would it be worth bringing the matter to the attention of the school's Governors?

Other Comments by Dinah

32. Comment #209704 by Gene Machine on July 13, 2008 at 4:17 am

Re: GodMyArse "even though the school isn't a church school they always like to give the children every side of a story so they can make up their own minds in life, and Evolution is another way of 'looking at creation' If anyone's still reading have you got any suggestions?

My suggestion is to do the following:

Put your question is writing in an official letter and expect a response back in writing. This then forms the basis of any complaint or the basis of something to use to monitor the school by.

Ensure that the school is clear in understanding the difference between religious beliefs and scientific facts. If they are using evolution as another way of 'looking at creation' then they are clearly misrepresenting science for two reasons. The Theory of Evolution is a fact and the Theory of Evolution does not explain creation (it explains the diversity of living things).

Speaking to the Head of Science may also be a possible move. What is important is that if the school is trying to push an unsupported belief system on students then it should get a very rocky ride from parents.

Incidentally, if they try to push ID or Creation Science at the students you can pin them down on the fact that there is no scientific theory behind either and therefore are not competing theories but belief systems.

Anyway. let us all know how you get on.

Other Comments by Gene Machine
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