Jacob Bronowski (1908-1974) lived through what he described as 'the two
great catastrophes of the twentieth century: the rise of Hitler in 1933
and the dropping of the atomic bombs in 1945', and yet the keynote of
his astonishingly rich and varied life and work was an enduring
optimism. Bronowski was a professional scientist, scientific
administrator, poet, philosopher, dramatist and television and radio
personality, possessing an energy and versatility that make him a rare
figure in our cultural history. His final achievement, the
groundbreaking television series The Ascent of Man, first shown in
1973, influenced and inspired millions of ordinary people by bringing an
awareness of human evolution and the adventure of science into their
homes. Anthony James describes his own journeys to key locations in
Bronowski's television series The Ascent of Man, from Auschwitz, a
monument to human depravity that has haunted the conscience of
contemporary society, to Iceland, where democracy in northern Europe was
born more than a thousand years ago. Bronowski would not have been
surprised by our dilemmas today, but he would have insisted that
confidence in our ascent as a species is a far greater force than the
cynical destructiveness of politicians. Although human beings are
inevitably fallible, the pursuit of knowledge is, in Bronowski's
philosophy, an adventure: in his own words a 'happy passion'.