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jumpy
09-17-09, 12:26 AM
A personal view - Jacob Bronowski

I had not thought to see this again without having to spend money on a dvd set (though this is not as expensive as I thought on amazon).

I have two transcripts of the series, hardback and a paperback edition (with some editing).
There are few documentaries that come close to having the sincerity and gravitas and sheer dignity contained within this series. As a child I was spellbound by the program.

There are no flashy graphics or cgi, no banal platitudes so common in some of the discovery/national geographic/history channel programming today.

There are only two others who hold such a place of respect for me: David Attenborough (who incidentally had a hand in commissioning The Ascent Of Man as the then controller of bbc2) and Carl Sagan.

Bronowski has a clear and engaging charisma that guides the watcher, without ever leaving you feeling like a mere passenger throughout.

Serialised in its entirety. (all 13 episodes)
If you're old enough to remember it, indulge yourself once again with a masterful study of humanity.
And if you're still a young'un; settle down and forget about your playstation or nintendo ds for a moment and consider something so much more worthwhile -

The Ascent of Man: A Personal View - Jacob Bronowski (http://www.youtube.com/view_play_list?p=A3FC4D7ED67F4B1A&page=1)

Fish
09-17-09, 04:38 PM
Thanks!:up:

Arclight
09-18-09, 05:08 PM
Much appreciated. :salute:

Bit before my time, so didn't know it yet. Always glad to see a good documentary. :yep:

porphy
09-21-09, 11:35 AM
Thanks Jumpy. Haven't seen that one. I recognized the title from Henry Drummond's book "The Ascent of Man" from late nineteenth century though. A Scottish man of science and a religious evangelist who wrote a few books on evolution and Christianity. His Natural Law in the Spiritual World is a fascinating read if one wants to study a case of how religion and nineteenth century science might get mixed up.:yep:

cheers porphy

jumpy
09-24-09, 08:07 AM
^^
funnily enough, the title of the series/book is somewhat derived from Darwin's 'Descent of Man' and commissioned as a compliment to 'Civilisation' by Kenneth Clark (1969).