
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Tom Sutcliffe is joined in the studio by Daniel Levitin, author of New York Times bestseller 'The Organized Mind'. Levitin dismisses the idea of multi-tasking and explores how we can counter information overload. But the poet Frances Leviston with her latest collection, Disinformation, believes her best work is conceived in disorganisation. The cognitive scientist Maggie Boden puts forward the idea that computers can be highly creative, and the conductor Ian Page celebrates the genius of Mozart who wrote his first symphony in London at the age of eight.
Producer: Katy Hickman.
By BBC Radio 44.7
154154 ratings
Tom Sutcliffe is joined in the studio by Daniel Levitin, author of New York Times bestseller 'The Organized Mind'. Levitin dismisses the idea of multi-tasking and explores how we can counter information overload. But the poet Frances Leviston with her latest collection, Disinformation, believes her best work is conceived in disorganisation. The cognitive scientist Maggie Boden puts forward the idea that computers can be highly creative, and the conductor Ian Page celebrates the genius of Mozart who wrote his first symphony in London at the age of eight.
Producer: Katy Hickman.

7,707 Listeners

315 Listeners

1,077 Listeners

376 Listeners

885 Listeners

1,067 Listeners

152 Listeners

5,546 Listeners

1,794 Listeners

305 Listeners

1,758 Listeners

1,041 Listeners

1,925 Listeners

500 Listeners

110 Listeners

64 Listeners

130 Listeners

133 Listeners

52 Listeners

68 Listeners

3,167 Listeners

1,003 Listeners

118 Listeners

3,371 Listeners