Share Facebook LinkedIn Bluesky Threads Copy url Search results Search 26067 results Filters Content type Content type (-) Lessons (24419) (-) News (1648) People (1341) Chair (359) Editions (351) Page (230) Research (27) Library (14) Annual Chair (12) Award (6) Active filters Lessons News Our website is being updated and some of the contents might still be missing.Please wait for a few minutes before resuming your browsing session. Series How the Immune System Dialogues with the Brain Sonia Garel, chair Neurobiology and the Immune System Symposium Dendrite forest. Documents and media Download program … 27 Jun 2023 Series The birth of scholarship in Mesopotamia Dominique Charpin, chair Mesopotamian Civilization Guest lecturer British Museum (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0). In recent years, I have been intensely involved in the study of the development of Mesopotamian scholarly texts from the 2nd and 1st millennia BC. Several Assyriologists and I have published new metatexts containing … 09 May 2023 → 30 May 2023 Event Jonathan Lenoir Species and community responses to global warming Seminar Abstract In response to anthropogenic climate change, species migrate towards the poles and summits, while communities are enriched with more thermophilic species or become poorer in cryophilic species (cf. community thermophilization process). In my … 23 Feb 2024 15:30 - 16:30 Event Emmanuelle Porcher What changes are underway in plants and their interactions with pollinators ? Lecture Abstract Alongside pollinators, plant communities are also changing, in response to a variety of human-induced pressures : changes in land use causing the local disappearance of species specializing in certain habitats, nitrate and biocide pollution … 23 Feb 2024 14:30 - 15:30 Series The Paradox of the Novelist William Marx, chair Comparative Literatures Guest lecturer "Self-portrait, Orhan Pamuk. Orhan Pamuk, world-renowned writer and essayist, winner of the 2006 Nobel Prize for Literature, is invited by the Collège de France assembly at the suggestion of Prof. William Marx . Orhan Pamuk In this series of … 09 May 2023 → 30 May 2023 Event Lisa Feigenson How do Infants Learn? The Role of Surprise, Curiosity, and Active Experimentation Seminar Abstract The origins of our minds are an enduring puzzle-- what parts of what we know require learning, and what emerges in the absence of specific experience? Questions about how nature and nurture contribute to human knowledge have been productive in … 23 Feb 2024 11:00 - 12:30 Event Stanislas Dehaene Perception of quadrilaterals and the uniqueness of the human species in geometry Lecture Perception of Quadrilaterals: A Human Singularity for Geometry Abstract How can we experimentally test the hypothesis of a language of geometry and its specificity to the human species ? A series of experiments, the subject of Mathias Sablé-Meyer's … 23 Feb 2024 09:30 - 11:00 Event Gabriel Nocchi Macedo The childhood of Christ on papyrus : a new discovery Seminar Abstract The Infancy Gospel according to Thomas is an early Christian apocryphal text that recounts the miracles of Jesus as a child, in the style of biblical fan fiction . A best-seller in late antiquity and the Middle Ages, the story was transmitted in … 22 Feb 2024 15:30 - 17:00 Event Benoît Frydman The interweaving of legal and scientific norms and procedures from medieval scholasticism to artificial intelligence Seminar Abstract Contrary to popular opinion, the norms, procedures and models of science and law have long maintained a close and intertwined, albeit changing, relationship. While the more juridico procedure imposed itself on all academic disciplines in the … 22 Feb 2024 14:30 - 16:00 Event Dominique Charpin Mari's legal texts (7) Seminar 22 Feb 2024 14:00 - 16:00 Event Samantha Besson The relationship between international law and science : a story of endless ends Lecture Documents and media Download reference list … 22 Feb 2024 10:00 - 11:30 Event Hélène Bouillon Egyptian creation myths : from the one to the many Seminar Documents and media Download support Download bibliography … 22 Feb 2024 15:30 - 16:30 Event Thomas Römer " Let there be light... " - The creation of the world and human beings (Gn 1,1-2,3) Lecture Abstract In the first creation story in Gn 1 ,1-2,3, heaven, sea and earth are perfectly ordered by Yhwh. Why is this story referred to as priestly ? Documents and media Download … 22 Feb 2024 14:00 - 15:00 Event Sam White Bridging Current and Historical Perspectives on Climate and Conflict Seminar Abstract Global warming has heightened concerns over links between climate change and conflict. This concern has encouraged current social science research on possible links as well as historical studies examining statistical associations or case studies … 22 Feb 2024 11:15 - 12:15 Event Kyle Harper The unknown : climate and infectious diseases Lecture Abstract Climate change and pandemics have always been linked. To better understand current and future risks, we need to take stock of what we know and don't know about the complex links between climate change, infectious diseases and social systems in … 22 Feb 2024 10:00 - 11:00 Event Andrew Kennedy Compiling and Typing with Continuations Seminar Abstract There is a long history of implementing functional languages, particularly those with first-class control operators, using the CPS (Continuation Passing Style) transformation. In this talk I will show how continuations can be used to model … 22 Feb 2024 11:15 - 12:15 Event Jean-Luc Fournet Schools in monasteries ? (3) Lecture Lecture plan 1. Monasticism and lectures (continued) 1.3. monasteries and children : a difficult relationship (continued) 1.3.3. Pedophilia 1.4. yet children are everywhere ! 1.5. Primae cœnobii scolae (" the elementary school of the monastery ", Jean … 21 Feb 2024 11:00 - 12:00 Event Xavier Leroy Effects practice : from exceptions to effects managers Lecture Abstract The fifth lecture began with an in-depth look at the notions of exceptions and exception handlers introduced in the second lecture. We showed how to introduce exception handling into a functional language, in which cases it can be useful, and … 22 Feb 2024 09:30 - 11:00 Event Geoffrey Hill A reading and discussion of my own writings in the context of contemporary british philosophy and poetry Guest lecturer The great English poet Geoffrey Hill gave a lecture in English in the form of an annotated reading of his poems. Professor Hill, who is also the author of major books on poetry, has taught at Cambridge and Boston universities. His books of poems … 18 Mar 2008 18:00 - 19:00 Series Democratic Representation in and by International Organizations Samantha Besson, chair International Law of Institutions Symposium Human Rights and Alliance of Civilizations Room of the Palace of Nations, Geneva (Switzerland). It is the meeting room of the United Nations Human Rights Council. International organizations (IOs) play a central role in the development of contemporary … 22 Jun 2023 → 23 Jun 2023 Series Science and the Fight against Poverty: How Far Have We Come in 20 Years and What's Next? Esther Duflo, chair Poverty and Public Policy Symposium Presentation This colloquium serves as the culmination of the first year of J-PAL co-founder and director Esther Duflo's chair position in "Poverty and Public Policy" at the Collège de France, which she has used to explore the progression of the global … 22 Jun 2023 → 23 Jun 2023 Event Claudine Tiercelin Skepticism and knowledge (continued) (1) Lecture 20 Feb 2024 14:00 - 16:00 Series Borges and China Anne Cheng, chair Chinese Intellectual History Symposium Colloquium organized by Anne Cheng, Chinese Intellectual History chair, on June 21 2023 at the Collège de France in the Guillaume Budé … 21 Jun 2023 Event Yann Scioldo-Zurcher & Paola Rebughini Colonization and decolonization in lived experience Seminar Yann Scioldo-Zurcher : " Turning the French of Algeria into repatriated Frenchmen. How did the French state think about its migrant nationals ? " Paola Rebughini : " Colonial references in the lived experience of immigrants and their … 20 Feb 2024 10:00 - 12:00 Pagination First page « First Previous page ‹‹ … Page 143 Page 144 Page 145 Page 146 Page 147 Page 148 Page 149 Page 150 Page 151 … Next page ›› Last page Last »
Series How the Immune System Dialogues with the Brain Sonia Garel, chair Neurobiology and the Immune System Symposium Dendrite forest. Documents and media Download program … 27 Jun 2023
Series The birth of scholarship in Mesopotamia Dominique Charpin, chair Mesopotamian Civilization Guest lecturer British Museum (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0). In recent years, I have been intensely involved in the study of the development of Mesopotamian scholarly texts from the 2nd and 1st millennia BC. Several Assyriologists and I have published new metatexts containing … 09 May 2023 → 30 May 2023
Event Jonathan Lenoir Species and community responses to global warming Seminar Abstract In response to anthropogenic climate change, species migrate towards the poles and summits, while communities are enriched with more thermophilic species or become poorer in cryophilic species (cf. community thermophilization process). In my … 23 Feb 2024 15:30 - 16:30
Event Emmanuelle Porcher What changes are underway in plants and their interactions with pollinators ? Lecture Abstract Alongside pollinators, plant communities are also changing, in response to a variety of human-induced pressures : changes in land use causing the local disappearance of species specializing in certain habitats, nitrate and biocide pollution … 23 Feb 2024 14:30 - 15:30
Series The Paradox of the Novelist William Marx, chair Comparative Literatures Guest lecturer "Self-portrait, Orhan Pamuk. Orhan Pamuk, world-renowned writer and essayist, winner of the 2006 Nobel Prize for Literature, is invited by the Collège de France assembly at the suggestion of Prof. William Marx . Orhan Pamuk In this series of … 09 May 2023 → 30 May 2023
Event Lisa Feigenson How do Infants Learn? The Role of Surprise, Curiosity, and Active Experimentation Seminar Abstract The origins of our minds are an enduring puzzle-- what parts of what we know require learning, and what emerges in the absence of specific experience? Questions about how nature and nurture contribute to human knowledge have been productive in … 23 Feb 2024 11:00 - 12:30
Event Stanislas Dehaene Perception of quadrilaterals and the uniqueness of the human species in geometry Lecture Perception of Quadrilaterals: A Human Singularity for Geometry Abstract How can we experimentally test the hypothesis of a language of geometry and its specificity to the human species ? A series of experiments, the subject of Mathias Sablé-Meyer's … 23 Feb 2024 09:30 - 11:00
Event Gabriel Nocchi Macedo The childhood of Christ on papyrus : a new discovery Seminar Abstract The Infancy Gospel according to Thomas is an early Christian apocryphal text that recounts the miracles of Jesus as a child, in the style of biblical fan fiction . A best-seller in late antiquity and the Middle Ages, the story was transmitted in … 22 Feb 2024 15:30 - 17:00
Event Benoît Frydman The interweaving of legal and scientific norms and procedures from medieval scholasticism to artificial intelligence Seminar Abstract Contrary to popular opinion, the norms, procedures and models of science and law have long maintained a close and intertwined, albeit changing, relationship. While the more juridico procedure imposed itself on all academic disciplines in the … 22 Feb 2024 14:30 - 16:00
Event Samantha Besson The relationship between international law and science : a story of endless ends Lecture Documents and media Download reference list … 22 Feb 2024 10:00 - 11:30
Event Hélène Bouillon Egyptian creation myths : from the one to the many Seminar Documents and media Download support Download bibliography … 22 Feb 2024 15:30 - 16:30
Event Thomas Römer " Let there be light... " - The creation of the world and human beings (Gn 1,1-2,3) Lecture Abstract In the first creation story in Gn 1 ,1-2,3, heaven, sea and earth are perfectly ordered by Yhwh. Why is this story referred to as priestly ? Documents and media Download … 22 Feb 2024 14:00 - 15:00
Event Sam White Bridging Current and Historical Perspectives on Climate and Conflict Seminar Abstract Global warming has heightened concerns over links between climate change and conflict. This concern has encouraged current social science research on possible links as well as historical studies examining statistical associations or case studies … 22 Feb 2024 11:15 - 12:15
Event Kyle Harper The unknown : climate and infectious diseases Lecture Abstract Climate change and pandemics have always been linked. To better understand current and future risks, we need to take stock of what we know and don't know about the complex links between climate change, infectious diseases and social systems in … 22 Feb 2024 10:00 - 11:00
Event Andrew Kennedy Compiling and Typing with Continuations Seminar Abstract There is a long history of implementing functional languages, particularly those with first-class control operators, using the CPS (Continuation Passing Style) transformation. In this talk I will show how continuations can be used to model … 22 Feb 2024 11:15 - 12:15
Event Jean-Luc Fournet Schools in monasteries ? (3) Lecture Lecture plan 1. Monasticism and lectures (continued) 1.3. monasteries and children : a difficult relationship (continued) 1.3.3. Pedophilia 1.4. yet children are everywhere ! 1.5. Primae cœnobii scolae (" the elementary school of the monastery ", Jean … 21 Feb 2024 11:00 - 12:00
Event Xavier Leroy Effects practice : from exceptions to effects managers Lecture Abstract The fifth lecture began with an in-depth look at the notions of exceptions and exception handlers introduced in the second lecture. We showed how to introduce exception handling into a functional language, in which cases it can be useful, and … 22 Feb 2024 09:30 - 11:00
Event Geoffrey Hill A reading and discussion of my own writings in the context of contemporary british philosophy and poetry Guest lecturer The great English poet Geoffrey Hill gave a lecture in English in the form of an annotated reading of his poems. Professor Hill, who is also the author of major books on poetry, has taught at Cambridge and Boston universities. His books of poems … 18 Mar 2008 18:00 - 19:00
Series Democratic Representation in and by International Organizations Samantha Besson, chair International Law of Institutions Symposium Human Rights and Alliance of Civilizations Room of the Palace of Nations, Geneva (Switzerland). It is the meeting room of the United Nations Human Rights Council. International organizations (IOs) play a central role in the development of contemporary … 22 Jun 2023 → 23 Jun 2023
Series Science and the Fight against Poverty: How Far Have We Come in 20 Years and What's Next? Esther Duflo, chair Poverty and Public Policy Symposium Presentation This colloquium serves as the culmination of the first year of J-PAL co-founder and director Esther Duflo's chair position in "Poverty and Public Policy" at the Collège de France, which she has used to explore the progression of the global … 22 Jun 2023 → 23 Jun 2023
Series Borges and China Anne Cheng, chair Chinese Intellectual History Symposium Colloquium organized by Anne Cheng, Chinese Intellectual History chair, on June 21 2023 at the Collège de France in the Guillaume Budé … 21 Jun 2023
Event Yann Scioldo-Zurcher & Paola Rebughini Colonization and decolonization in lived experience Seminar Yann Scioldo-Zurcher : " Turning the French of Algeria into repatriated Frenchmen. How did the French state think about its migrant nationals ? " Paola Rebughini : " Colonial references in the lived experience of immigrants and their … 20 Feb 2024 10:00 - 12:00