To The Best Of Our Knowledge show

To The Best Of Our Knowledge

Summary: To The Best Of Our Knowledge is a nationally-syndicated, Peabody award-winning public radio show that dives headlong into the deeper end of ideas. We have conversations with novelists and poets, scientists and software engineers, journalists and historians, filmmakers and philosophers, artists and activists — people with big ideas and a passion to share them. For more from the TTBOOK team, visit us at ttbook.org.

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  • Artist: Wisconsin Public Radio
  • Copyright: Copyright 2021 by Wisconsin Public Radio

Podcasts:

 Privacy | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: Unknown

What kinds of personal information have you posted online recently?  Your credit card number?   Your mother’s maiden name?   A photo of yourself drinking a beer?   Whatever it is, these details could ruin your career, your marriage, or even your entire future.  We’ll explore social networks and the death of privacy.

 Questioning Democracy | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: Unknown

“Whose democracy is it?”  Fair question? Or, an unpatriotic one? This hour, we’ll wrestle with democracy by questioning it. 

 But Is It Science? | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: Unknown

We explore the edges of science, and hear about the hippie scientists who saved physics, or at least made it fun again, and even got the CIA to pay for their research on ESP.  Also, the troubled history of blood transfusions and the birth of forensic medicine.

 Cross Talk | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: Unknown

There’s no English translation for the Dutch word “Gezellig."Are there things that can never be understood, expressed or experienced outside their home culture?We’re wandering the unmarked maps of cultural translation!

 Living Democracy | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: Unknown

Ward Cunningham invented the wiki.  But he didn't patent it.  Why?  Because he believed the internet needed to be more democratic. How do you live your democratic ideals?

 Alan Turing | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: Unknown

The driving force behind modern computers, Alan Turing was born a hundred years ago.  In this hour, we celebrate his centennial with conversations about his brilliant mind and tragic life.  Turing committed suicide at age 41, after being persecuted by British authorities for the crime of homosexuality.  But he's with us every time we turn on a computer.    

 Writing Democracy | File Type: audio/mpeg | Duration: Unknown

Some people put their bodies on the line for democracy.  Some pick up weapons.  And some put pen to paper.

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