The truth is like a vegetable your mother makes you eat, nourishing but it tastes terrible
Neurobiologist Colin Blakemore explains how the mind creates sight and perception.
Michael Blastland look at facts and the EU referendum.
Ben Kingsley talks to Joan Bakewell about the beliefs that underpin his life and work.
Sarah Dunant looks through history to understand apparently irrational behaviour.
Jo Brand joins Brian Cox and Robin Ince for witty, irreverent science chat.
How can we nurture critical thinking skills in children and young people?
Architectural writer Shumi Bose explores whether we can trust what we see.
How do our senses work together to shape the experience of eating? Barry Smith explores.
Michael Blastland invites us to discover the way people think, behave and make decisions.
Michael Blastland invites us to discover the way we think, behave and make decisions.
Nikolaus Pevsner considers the 'Englishness' of the artist William Hogarth.
What exactly is intuition? Dr Mark Lythgoe investigates 'gut feelings'. From 2007.
Actor and impressionist Jan Ravens talks to Germaine Greer, about her public image.
Actor and comedienne Jan Ravens talks to BBC correspondent Lyse Doucet.
The Australian artist and director pushes the boundaries of immersive film
Barry Smith presents a journey into the human multi-sensory experience.
Are we really living in a post-truth world? Jo Fidgen investigates.
Melvyn Bragg examines perception: how the brain reacts to the mass of data crowding it.
Clare Carlisle grapples with Bishop Berkley's idea that objects only exist in our minds.
David Wootton, professor of history at York University, considers the story of fact.
Reality itself is changing, so how will we experience and understand reality in future?
Edward Said asks the basic question for the intellectual: how does one speak the truth?
Timandra Harkness explores technologies that help humans perceive the world in novel ways.
The history of cultural, medical, artistic and philosophical ideas about the human brain.
Neurobiologist Colin Blakemore explores the historic concepts of the brain.
Melvyn Bragg examines the role of British thinkers in the 18th century Enlightenment.
Melvyn Bragg examines the emergence and impact of the Scottish Enlightenment.
Brian Cox and Robin Ince explore the fundamentals of reality.
Brian Cox and Robin Ince look at our minds and brains, with special guest Katy Brand.