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 Event Emma Haziza The challenges of water and water hygiene in the city of the future Special events 1 Dec 2023 09:45 - 10:15 Event Sylvain Chaty Binary stars X Seminar Abstract Most massive stars live in pairs. Often, since their birth, they have lived close to another star. During their life as a couple, certain events in the life of a star will bring them so close together that they will exchange matter, a phenomenon … 29 Jan 2024 17:45 - 18:45 Event Françoise Combes Neutron stars and pulsars Lecture Abstract After a supernova explosion, if the remaining core does not exceed 3 solar masses, it can remain in equilibrium as a neutron star. It is the Pauli pressure of the degenerated neutrons that compensates for gravity. The explosion of the Crab … 29 Jan 2024 16:45 - 17:45 Event Antoine Lilti Critical universalism : the pariah paradox Lecture Abstract La Chaumière indienne is a short philosophical tale by Bernardin de Saint-Pierre, published in 1791. It depicts the encounter between an English scholar and an Indian outcast, a face-off between the learned culture of the European Enlightenment … 29 Jan 2024 14:30 - 15:30 Event Michele Palmira The first person mind : epistemological perspectives Seminar Abstract First-person thoughts, i.e. thoughts one would express using the pronoun " I ", are reflexive : the thought I would express by saying " I'm hungry " is about myself as the thinker of that thought. In this seminar, I defend an introspectionist … 29 Jan 2024 11:30 - 13:00 Series Palaeo-Babylonian Archives : 140 years of publications and studies (1882-2022) Dominique Charpin, chair Mesopotamian Civilization Symposium In June 1882, the biblical scholar and Ethiopianist August Dillmann, professor at Berlin's Humboldt University, completed the foreword to the first part of the Proceedings of the Fifth Congress of Orientalists held in Berlin in September 1881 , which was … 25 May 2023 → 26 May 2023 Event François Recanati Thinking content Lecture Abstract A thought, in the sense of Descartes and the Cartesians, is a content of consciousness, whatever it may be. Some contents of consciousness are " representative " and have an object to which they relate. Among these, we distinguish between those … 29 Jan 2024 10:00 - 11:30 Series Nanofluidics at a crossroads Lydéric Bocquet, chair Technological innovation Liliane Bettencourt Symposium Presentation This symposium is a continuation of the lecture on nanofluidics offered as part of the Technological Innovation Liliane Bettencourt chair. This world of infinitely small fluidics is the frontier where the continuum of fluid mechanics meets … 25 May 2023 Event Philippe Clergeau From urban biodiversity to regenerative urbanism Special events Abstract Philippe Clergeau will present the concept of regenerative urbanism, after recalling the definitions of biodiversity and ecosystems, which are essential to a liveable, sustainable city. Nature-based solutions already permeate architecture, but we … 30 Nov 2023 15:50 - 16:30 Event Thomas Granier Thermal protection and vernacular materials in Africa Special events 30 Nov 2023 15:00 - 15:30 Event Magali Reghezza-Zitt From climate risk to urban resilience Special events Abstract Cities are particularly exposed to hydro-climatic hazards, now exacerbated by anthropogenic global warming. As both major sources of greenhouse gas emissions and vulnerable territories, cities are called upon to be drivers of mitigation and … 30 Nov 2023 14:30 - 15:00 Event Armelle Choplin Building and imagining the city of the future from Africa Special events Abstract This paper examines the future of cities by shifting the focus to the African continent. The aim is to consider African cities as places for exploring new imaginaries and new ways of inhabiting the world. This reflection comes at a crucial time … 30 Nov 2023 14:00 - 14:30 Event Jean-Baptiste Fressoz Matter, energy, urbanization: a story without transition Special events Abstract When it comes to building, as with energy, the new doesn't make the old disappear. The extraordinary rise of concrete between 1950 and 2000, far from eradicating other building materials, allowed them to grow : glass of course, steel, wood, but … 30 Nov 2023 11:30 - 12:00 Event Thomas Le Roux The emergence of urban environmental risk and its regulation in the 18th and 19th centuries Special events 30 Nov 2023 11:00 - 11:30 Event Emmanuelle Loyer Paris-New York as seen by Breton, Marx Ernst and Claude Lévi-Strauss: the time warp Special events Abstract New York, the city of exile for the Surrealists and ethnologist Claude Lévi-Strauss, is the capital of the modern, but also the refuge of the archaic. " Ali Baba's cave ", it provides backdoor exits and an escape from the time of … 30 Nov 2023 10:00 - 10:30 Event Patrick Boucheron Metropolization: how great cities have thought of and built their future Special events 30 Nov 2023 09:30 - 10:00 Series Revisited Chemotherapy Hugues de Thé, chair Cellular and Molecular Oncology Symposium 22 May 2023 Event François Déroche The Mecca Koran (8) Lecture 26 Jan 2024 10:00 - 11:00 Series " Meritocracy " - a comparative perspective Pierre-Michel Menger, chair Sociology of Creative Work Symposium 22 May 2023 Series Integrating Evolutionary Genetics and Ecology Virginie Courtier-Orgogozo, chair Biodiversity and ecosystems Symposium International symposium in English. May 22 at the Collège de France and May 23 at the Institut Jacques-Monod. The study of phenotypic diversity, adaptation and evolution in living organisms is currently undergoing a major boom, thanks to the combination … 22 May 2023 → 23 May 2023 Event Mathilde Dufaÿ How pollinators influence flower evolution : an experimental approach Seminar Abstract The immense diversity of floral characteristics (flower shape, size and color, floral odors) is commonly explained by the shared evolutionary history between plants and pollinators. The many species of pollinator are thought to have played a … 26 Jan 2024 15:30 - 16:30 Event Emmanuelle Porcher Coevolution between flowering plants and their pollinators Lecture Abstract In the history of life, the first interactions between plants and pollinators were almost concomitant with the appearance of flowering plants, or even preceded it. Through natural selection mechanisms, they led to the evolution of traits that … 26 Jan 2024 14:30 - 15:30 Event Silvia Pappalardi Low-Temperature Quantum Bounds on Curved Manifolds Seminar Abstract In the past few years, there has been considerable activity around a set of quantum bounds on transport coefficients (viscosity, conductivity) and chaos (Lyapunov exponents), relevant at low temperatures. The interest comes from the fact that … 26 Jan 2024 15:30 - 16:30 Event Nalini Anantharaman Optimal spectral hole for random regular graphs, after J. Friedman (I) Lecture Abstract In these last two lectures, we are interested in models of random (q+1)-regular graphs with N vertices. We study the spectral hole of the adjacency matrix, in the limit where N tends to infinity. We present a result by Joel Friedman, and several … 26 Jan 2024 14:00 - 15:15 Pagination First page « First Previous page ‹‹ … Page 149 Page 150 Page 151 Page 152 Page 153 Page 154 Page 155 Page 156 Page 157 … Next page ›› Last page Last »
Event Emma Haziza The challenges of water and water hygiene in the city of the future Special events 1 Dec 2023 09:45 - 10:15
Event Sylvain Chaty Binary stars X Seminar Abstract Most massive stars live in pairs. Often, since their birth, they have lived close to another star. During their life as a couple, certain events in the life of a star will bring them so close together that they will exchange matter, a phenomenon … 29 Jan 2024 17:45 - 18:45
Event Françoise Combes Neutron stars and pulsars Lecture Abstract After a supernova explosion, if the remaining core does not exceed 3 solar masses, it can remain in equilibrium as a neutron star. It is the Pauli pressure of the degenerated neutrons that compensates for gravity. The explosion of the Crab … 29 Jan 2024 16:45 - 17:45
Event Antoine Lilti Critical universalism : the pariah paradox Lecture Abstract La Chaumière indienne is a short philosophical tale by Bernardin de Saint-Pierre, published in 1791. It depicts the encounter between an English scholar and an Indian outcast, a face-off between the learned culture of the European Enlightenment … 29 Jan 2024 14:30 - 15:30
Event Michele Palmira The first person mind : epistemological perspectives Seminar Abstract First-person thoughts, i.e. thoughts one would express using the pronoun " I ", are reflexive : the thought I would express by saying " I'm hungry " is about myself as the thinker of that thought. In this seminar, I defend an introspectionist … 29 Jan 2024 11:30 - 13:00
Series Palaeo-Babylonian Archives : 140 years of publications and studies (1882-2022) Dominique Charpin, chair Mesopotamian Civilization Symposium In June 1882, the biblical scholar and Ethiopianist August Dillmann, professor at Berlin's Humboldt University, completed the foreword to the first part of the Proceedings of the Fifth Congress of Orientalists held in Berlin in September 1881 , which was … 25 May 2023 → 26 May 2023
Event François Recanati Thinking content Lecture Abstract A thought, in the sense of Descartes and the Cartesians, is a content of consciousness, whatever it may be. Some contents of consciousness are " representative " and have an object to which they relate. Among these, we distinguish between those … 29 Jan 2024 10:00 - 11:30
Series Nanofluidics at a crossroads Lydéric Bocquet, chair Technological innovation Liliane Bettencourt Symposium Presentation This symposium is a continuation of the lecture on nanofluidics offered as part of the Technological Innovation Liliane Bettencourt chair. This world of infinitely small fluidics is the frontier where the continuum of fluid mechanics meets … 25 May 2023
Event Philippe Clergeau From urban biodiversity to regenerative urbanism Special events Abstract Philippe Clergeau will present the concept of regenerative urbanism, after recalling the definitions of biodiversity and ecosystems, which are essential to a liveable, sustainable city. Nature-based solutions already permeate architecture, but we … 30 Nov 2023 15:50 - 16:30
Event Thomas Granier Thermal protection and vernacular materials in Africa Special events 30 Nov 2023 15:00 - 15:30
Event Magali Reghezza-Zitt From climate risk to urban resilience Special events Abstract Cities are particularly exposed to hydro-climatic hazards, now exacerbated by anthropogenic global warming. As both major sources of greenhouse gas emissions and vulnerable territories, cities are called upon to be drivers of mitigation and … 30 Nov 2023 14:30 - 15:00
Event Armelle Choplin Building and imagining the city of the future from Africa Special events Abstract This paper examines the future of cities by shifting the focus to the African continent. The aim is to consider African cities as places for exploring new imaginaries and new ways of inhabiting the world. This reflection comes at a crucial time … 30 Nov 2023 14:00 - 14:30
Event Jean-Baptiste Fressoz Matter, energy, urbanization: a story without transition Special events Abstract When it comes to building, as with energy, the new doesn't make the old disappear. The extraordinary rise of concrete between 1950 and 2000, far from eradicating other building materials, allowed them to grow : glass of course, steel, wood, but … 30 Nov 2023 11:30 - 12:00
Event Thomas Le Roux The emergence of urban environmental risk and its regulation in the 18th and 19th centuries Special events 30 Nov 2023 11:00 - 11:30
Event Emmanuelle Loyer Paris-New York as seen by Breton, Marx Ernst and Claude Lévi-Strauss: the time warp Special events Abstract New York, the city of exile for the Surrealists and ethnologist Claude Lévi-Strauss, is the capital of the modern, but also the refuge of the archaic. " Ali Baba's cave ", it provides backdoor exits and an escape from the time of … 30 Nov 2023 10:00 - 10:30
Event Patrick Boucheron Metropolization: how great cities have thought of and built their future Special events 30 Nov 2023 09:30 - 10:00
Series Revisited Chemotherapy Hugues de Thé, chair Cellular and Molecular Oncology Symposium 22 May 2023
Series " Meritocracy " - a comparative perspective Pierre-Michel Menger, chair Sociology of Creative Work Symposium 22 May 2023
Series Integrating Evolutionary Genetics and Ecology Virginie Courtier-Orgogozo, chair Biodiversity and ecosystems Symposium International symposium in English. May 22 at the Collège de France and May 23 at the Institut Jacques-Monod. The study of phenotypic diversity, adaptation and evolution in living organisms is currently undergoing a major boom, thanks to the combination … 22 May 2023 → 23 May 2023
Event Mathilde Dufaÿ How pollinators influence flower evolution : an experimental approach Seminar Abstract The immense diversity of floral characteristics (flower shape, size and color, floral odors) is commonly explained by the shared evolutionary history between plants and pollinators. The many species of pollinator are thought to have played a … 26 Jan 2024 15:30 - 16:30
Event Emmanuelle Porcher Coevolution between flowering plants and their pollinators Lecture Abstract In the history of life, the first interactions between plants and pollinators were almost concomitant with the appearance of flowering plants, or even preceded it. Through natural selection mechanisms, they led to the evolution of traits that … 26 Jan 2024 14:30 - 15:30
Event Silvia Pappalardi Low-Temperature Quantum Bounds on Curved Manifolds Seminar Abstract In the past few years, there has been considerable activity around a set of quantum bounds on transport coefficients (viscosity, conductivity) and chaos (Lyapunov exponents), relevant at low temperatures. The interest comes from the fact that … 26 Jan 2024 15:30 - 16:30
Event Nalini Anantharaman Optimal spectral hole for random regular graphs, after J. Friedman (I) Lecture Abstract In these last two lectures, we are interested in models of random (q+1)-regular graphs with N vertices. We study the spectral hole of the adjacency matrix, in the limit where N tends to infinity. We present a result by Joel Friedman, and several … 26 Jan 2024 14:00 - 15:15