How Did We (Homo Sapiens) Get Here?

With Jonathan Kingdon, Robert Martin, Maeve Leakey

The African origin of our species was scientifically established by Louis Leakey and his family, which is represented in this vigorous conversation by his daughter-in-law, paleo-anthropologist Maeve Leakey. Two other distinguished researchers on the evolutionary emergence of the “talking, walking, thinking” relative of the higher apes join us in this 2003 conversation. Jonathan Kingdon is from Oxford University and Robert Martin is from the Field Museum.

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Will Shakespeare As Genius And Actor-Director

With Steven Greenblatt

Drawing upon all the available evidence Steven Greenblatt, professor of English at Harvard and Shakespeare scholar, paints a vivid picture of “Will in his world” and provides revealing commentary on the nature of his genius. We also present many recorded scenes from some of the great plays.

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All The Presidents Did It

With James Doyle

That is, they secretly recorded conversations with friends, staff, advisors and unsuspecting political visitors. Doyle achieved access to a great, hitherto-unheard archive of such tapes. And here they are, from FDR to LBJ. Some of the content of these conversations is amusing – but more of it is revealing and one or two items generate astonishment.

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A Good Man To Have On Your Side

With Alan Dershowitz

That can easily be said of the most actively litigious member of the Harvard Law faculty. Though as an old friend – we came from the same Brooklyn neighborhood – I can fault him for his participation in the defense of O.J. Simpson, he is always worth close attention. Whether telling tales from the courtroom or clarifying the politics of the Middle East or the U.S., his presentation is inevitably fascinating. Here he is in full form in a 2000 conversation.

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The Most Dangerous “Friend:” Pakistan

With Akbad Ahmed

Their former ambassador to the U.K. is now ensconced in a professorship in Washington and quite busy explaining his country – and the rest of the Muslim Middle East – to the west. Here, in a conversation from 2007, Akbad Ahmed sheds revealing light on the most unstable of all the nuclear powers and who in Pakistan is trying to do what, with which, and to whom.

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The Ghastly Week That Was

The Ghastly Week That Was

With Chris Robling, Charles Lipson

Was it the worst week since 2009? Chris Robling and Charles Lipson do so aver as they examine:

  • the new civil war in Iraq and how we helped bring it on;
  • the flooding of the border with some 60,000 Latin American children;
  • the dysfunctionality of Obamacare;
  • the edging toward crime by the IRS;
  • and the many other crises and regressions of prior weeks that are now obscured by those that hit the air-circulator this last week.
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At The Heights Of Political Oratory

With David Zarefsky

From Pericles and Cicero to Churchill and Roosevelt, David Zarefsky, a specialist in the oratorical dimension of historical process, examines the nature of the art. We listen to and analyze sections of speeches as recorded or – for the older great figures – as read by us from the available annals. This program was done on the eve of the mid-term elections of 2006.

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D-Day Closely Remembered And Commemorated

With Flint Whitelock and Col. John Votaw

The First Division was one of the two that landed at Omaha Beach on D-Day. Here, from the 60th anniversary in June, 2004, is an information-rich discussion of the action that began the western invasion of Germany. Col. John Votaw held a high command in the postwar First Division and Flint Whitelock had just authored “The Untold Story of the Big Red One on D-Day.”

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Darwin And “Darwinism”

With E.O. Wilson and Robert Richards

n 2005 the “father” of modern sociobiology, E.O. Wilson of Harvard, joins with Robert Richards, historian of Biological Science at the University of Chicago, in a masterly overview of Darwin’s four great books and of the current status of evolutionary theory and research.

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