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Скачать или смотреть The sixth sense - and the rest - Colin Blakemore's 1982 Christmas Lectures 3/6

  • The Royal Institution
  • 2025-08-20
  • 2855
The sixth sense - and the rest - Colin Blakemore's 1982 Christmas Lectures 3/6
RiRoyal Institutionroyal institute
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Описание к видео The sixth sense - and the rest - Colin Blakemore's 1982 Christmas Lectures 3/6

Colin Blakemore moves onto explaining the internal sensory systems in our bodies in his third CHRISTMAS LECTURE of his 1982 series.

Watch all the lectures in this series here:    • Colin Blakemore's 1982 CHRISTMAS LECTURES  
Watch our newest Christmas lectures here:    • Royal Institution Christmas Lectures  

This lecture was recorded at the Ri on 21 December 1982.

Find out more about the CHRISTMAS LECTURES here: https://www.rigb.org/christmas-lectures

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Lecture 3: The sixth sense...and the rest

We all know about just five of the senses: we know about them because the messages from them produce conscious perceptions. Those five senses rule our lives: they tell us everything that we need to know about the world around us, with a richness of description that has inspired famous painters to entertain our eyes, composers to excite our ears and great chefs and wine-makers to stimulate our noses and our palates! Yet our five senses, which give us all the wonderful variety of our sensory experiences, depend on just four types of detector cells - sensitive to chemical substances, to light, to temperature change and to mechanical distortion. Our sensory systems, using these four types of receptor cells, provide information about only a tiny fraction of all the forms of energy and chemical events around us. Other animals enjoy sensory experiences that we can glimpse only through physical instrumen ts of detection and measurement. For instance, our eyes are sensitive to only a narrow range within the whole spectrum of electromagnetic radiation; but many species can detect and make use of ultraviolet light; rattlesnakes have infrared detector organs to sense the position of their warm prey; and many insects can sense the plane of polarisation of light. Similarly, our hearing is limited to a band of about ten octaves, but many animals can detect very high-frequency sound and bats use ultrasound echo-location for guiding their flight. We now know that certain birds and fish can sense extremely low frequencies of sound vibration and again may use the information in navigation. Even more amazing are the senses that are completely different from ours - the electric field organs of many fishes and the magnetic sense of bacteria and birds. Animals have the senses that they need to have; each species lives in a sensory world of its own.

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About the 1982 CHRISTMAS LECTURES: Common Sense

Our sense organs are windows on the world. But just like windows, as well as giving us a view of the physical world, the senses also restrict our outlook on the things around us. Philosophers have worried for centuries about the reliability of the human senses and about the relationship between the real world and the world as we see, hear and feel it. Is the world only a creation of our minds? I am no philosopher, so I am happy to accept that there is a real world out there and that our sense organs simply describe it to our brains. But this means that the world we know through our perceptions is created by processes in our brains and the validity of this imagined world depends crucially on the way that our sense organs and our brains work together to perform the magic of perception. My aim in these lectures is to describe the way that the sense organs act as biological instruments of detection, measurement and analysis.

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About Colin Blakemore:

Sir Colin Blakemore (1 June 1944 – 27 June 2022) was a British neurobiologist, specialising in vision and the development of the brain. His own research work was mainly concerned with the mechanisms in the brain for the interpretation of signals from the eyes, and especially in the early development of vision during the first few days and weeks of an animal's life. He was well known for his work in communicating science to the public and published many popular books.

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