Share Facebook LinkedIn Bluesky Threads Copy url Search results Search 25771 results Filters Content type Content type (-) Lessons (24021) (-) News (1750) People (1389) Editions (362) Chair (360) Page (228) Research (27) Library (14) Annual Chair (12) Award (6) Active filters Lessons News Event Mathieu Lewin New Results on the Lieb-Thirring Inequality Seminar 11 Feb 2022 11:15 to 12:30 Event Ann Jefferson The decline of genius Guest lecturer The mistrust of genius, which is gradually falling into disrepute under the influence of scientific positivism, or of models of artistic creativity that dispense with any notion of inspiration, often targets child prodigies: for example, the exceptional … 31 May 2022 17:00 to 18:00 Event Emmanuel Lecouturier Mazur's Eisenstein ideal (2) Guest lecturer 23 Feb 2022 10:00 to 12:00 Event Alain Supiot The retreat of heteronomy (continued) Lecture 10 Apr 2014 15:30 to 16:30 Event Dominique Charpin Reading texts related to the course (5) Seminar 10 Feb 2022 14:00 to 16:00 Event Vinciane Pirenne-Delforge Eunomia - nomos and norms Lecture Abstract Continuing the investigation into archaic eunomia , this lesson looks first at the scope of the term nomos in the work of Hesiod. On the divine level, in the Theogony , the goddess Eunomia is the daughter of Themis and Zeus. As for the nomoi that … 10 Feb 2022 11:00 to 12:00 News Human populations and climate change during the last deglaciation Edouard Bard, chair Climate and Ocean Evolution Horse panel in the Cosquer cave (replica). The populations of the Upper Paleolithic witnessed major climatic changes at the end of the last glaciation and during the deglaciation phase. Rapid changes in sea level and temperature disrupted marine and … Published on 19 April 2024 Event Emmanuel Lecouturier Mazur's Eisenstein ideal (1) Guest lecturer 22 Feb 2022 10:00 to 12:00 Event Brice Ménard Cosmology and complexity Seminar Abstract I'll start by presenting an overview of how to test models and estimate their parameters. I will then show how these concepts are used to analyze data at different levels of complexity. Finally, I will present applications in astrophysics and … 9 Feb 2022 11:15 to 12:15 Event Stéphane Mallat Fisher information Lecture Abstract Under regularity assumptions, the maximum likelihood estimator is shown to be consistent. Fisher information is defined as the variance of the score, which is the gradient of the log likelihood. It is also shown to be the Hessian of the negative … 9 Feb 2022 09:30 to 11:00 News Audiovisual treasures from the Collège de France : opening lectures to rediscover (3) Alain Connes, chair Analysis and geometry The Collège de France has a long tradition of broadcasting lectures given by its professors. Audiovisual recordings of lectures, seminars and colloquia are regularly published on the official website and themed YouTube channels. Some valuable archives … Published on 19 April 2024 Event Claire Paulhan The tip of the iceberg Literature Seminar Abstract Memoirs, diaries and other forms of autobiographical non-fiction make up the submerged part of interwar literature. French diaries, which fill meters of shelves in many French institutions and libraries, represent a field of research that has … 8 Feb 2022 17:30 to 18:30 Event William Marx Metaphysics of loss Lecture Abstract Paul Valéry's " Nous autres, civilisations, nous savons maintenant que nous sommes mortelles " is an almost exact echo of Bernard de Cluny's few verses quoted in the previous lesson, if only for the somewhat derisory power accorded to names, … 8 Feb 2022 16:30 to 17:30 Event Jean-Noël Robert Reading texts related to the course topic (5) Seminar 8 Feb 2022 16:00 to 18:00 Event Josine Blok What Has Citizenship to Do With the Gods? Reflections on the Religious Foundations of Ancient Greek Citizenship Seminar Abstract Citizenship has two components: membership of the group of citizens (the citizen body) and the rights, duties, and obligations the citizens have towards the community and the state. Each of these components, as well as the connection between … 8 Feb 2022 14:30 to 15:30 Event Paul Égré Two Kinds of Partial Truth Symposium Session chaired by : Jean-Baptise Rauzy (Sorbonne University) Abstract In "Aboutness", Yablo writes that "a statement S is partly true insofar as it has wholly true parts". Thus, to be partly true is to have some part that is wholly true . Call this an … 9 Dec 2021 10:15 to 11:00 Event Patrick Boucheron Scarcity and high salaries : moral economy Lecture Do epidemic crises promote social equality? If this idea is resurfacing today, it's thanks to a renewed confidence in historians' ability to handle and compare prices and wages over the long term, in order to identify "small" and "large" divergences, … 8 Feb 2022 11:00 to 12:00 Event Jean-Noël Robert Guilty predilections Lecture 8 Feb 2022 10:30 to 11:30 Event Aude Pommeret Long-term discounting, reflections in France Seminar Aude Pommeret Aude Pommeret, PhD from Paris I, is Professor of Economics at Savoie-Mont-Blanc University. She previously held positions at HEC Lausanne and the City University of Hong Kong. Her research focuses on the incorporation of uncertainty into … 2 Feb 2022 11:15 to 12:15 Event Christian Gollier Elements of a history of long-term capitalism Lecture The division of value creation between consumption and investment is determined by expected rates of return, as set by financial markets. In other words, financial markets and the economic agents who interact with them determine the overall level of … 2 Feb 2022 10:00 to 11:00 Event Susanna Vergani GRB : multi-wavelengths Seminar Abstract Gamma-ray bursts, which sometimes last only a fraction of a second, are the most energetic events in the Universe. Their radiation is continued in the host galaxy by afterglows , at different wavelengths, which help identify their origin, and … 7 Feb 2022 17:45 to 18:45 Event David Portehault From minerals to nanomaterials : geologically inspired syntheses for new functional solids Seminar 7 Feb 2022 17:00 to 18:00 Event Françoise Combes Gamma-ray bursts (GRB) : observations Lecture Abstract Gamma-ray bursts can last only a fraction of a second. They are the most energetic events in the Universe. For a long time, they were the most distant stars observed, close to the Big Bang. They make it possible to explore the intergalactic … 7 Feb 2022 16:45 to 17:45 Event Jean-Marie Tarascon Li-metal to Li-ion batteries associated with the transition from sulfides to lamellar oxides Lecture 7 Feb 2022 16:00 to 17:00 Pagination First page « First Previous page ‹‹ … Page 269 Page 270 Page 271 Page 272 Page 273 Page 274 Page 275 Page 276 Page 277 … Next page ›› Last page Last »
Event Ann Jefferson The decline of genius Guest lecturer The mistrust of genius, which is gradually falling into disrepute under the influence of scientific positivism, or of models of artistic creativity that dispense with any notion of inspiration, often targets child prodigies: for example, the exceptional … 31 May 2022 17:00 to 18:00
Event Vinciane Pirenne-Delforge Eunomia - nomos and norms Lecture Abstract Continuing the investigation into archaic eunomia , this lesson looks first at the scope of the term nomos in the work of Hesiod. On the divine level, in the Theogony , the goddess Eunomia is the daughter of Themis and Zeus. As for the nomoi that … 10 Feb 2022 11:00 to 12:00
News Human populations and climate change during the last deglaciation Edouard Bard, chair Climate and Ocean Evolution Horse panel in the Cosquer cave (replica). The populations of the Upper Paleolithic witnessed major climatic changes at the end of the last glaciation and during the deglaciation phase. Rapid changes in sea level and temperature disrupted marine and … Published on 19 April 2024
Event Brice Ménard Cosmology and complexity Seminar Abstract I'll start by presenting an overview of how to test models and estimate their parameters. I will then show how these concepts are used to analyze data at different levels of complexity. Finally, I will present applications in astrophysics and … 9 Feb 2022 11:15 to 12:15
Event Stéphane Mallat Fisher information Lecture Abstract Under regularity assumptions, the maximum likelihood estimator is shown to be consistent. Fisher information is defined as the variance of the score, which is the gradient of the log likelihood. It is also shown to be the Hessian of the negative … 9 Feb 2022 09:30 to 11:00
News Audiovisual treasures from the Collège de France : opening lectures to rediscover (3) Alain Connes, chair Analysis and geometry The Collège de France has a long tradition of broadcasting lectures given by its professors. Audiovisual recordings of lectures, seminars and colloquia are regularly published on the official website and themed YouTube channels. Some valuable archives … Published on 19 April 2024
Event Claire Paulhan The tip of the iceberg Literature Seminar Abstract Memoirs, diaries and other forms of autobiographical non-fiction make up the submerged part of interwar literature. French diaries, which fill meters of shelves in many French institutions and libraries, represent a field of research that has … 8 Feb 2022 17:30 to 18:30
Event William Marx Metaphysics of loss Lecture Abstract Paul Valéry's " Nous autres, civilisations, nous savons maintenant que nous sommes mortelles " is an almost exact echo of Bernard de Cluny's few verses quoted in the previous lesson, if only for the somewhat derisory power accorded to names, … 8 Feb 2022 16:30 to 17:30
Event Jean-Noël Robert Reading texts related to the course topic (5) Seminar 8 Feb 2022 16:00 to 18:00
Event Josine Blok What Has Citizenship to Do With the Gods? Reflections on the Religious Foundations of Ancient Greek Citizenship Seminar Abstract Citizenship has two components: membership of the group of citizens (the citizen body) and the rights, duties, and obligations the citizens have towards the community and the state. Each of these components, as well as the connection between … 8 Feb 2022 14:30 to 15:30
Event Paul Égré Two Kinds of Partial Truth Symposium Session chaired by : Jean-Baptise Rauzy (Sorbonne University) Abstract In "Aboutness", Yablo writes that "a statement S is partly true insofar as it has wholly true parts". Thus, to be partly true is to have some part that is wholly true . Call this an … 9 Dec 2021 10:15 to 11:00
Event Patrick Boucheron Scarcity and high salaries : moral economy Lecture Do epidemic crises promote social equality? If this idea is resurfacing today, it's thanks to a renewed confidence in historians' ability to handle and compare prices and wages over the long term, in order to identify "small" and "large" divergences, … 8 Feb 2022 11:00 to 12:00
Event Aude Pommeret Long-term discounting, reflections in France Seminar Aude Pommeret Aude Pommeret, PhD from Paris I, is Professor of Economics at Savoie-Mont-Blanc University. She previously held positions at HEC Lausanne and the City University of Hong Kong. Her research focuses on the incorporation of uncertainty into … 2 Feb 2022 11:15 to 12:15
Event Christian Gollier Elements of a history of long-term capitalism Lecture The division of value creation between consumption and investment is determined by expected rates of return, as set by financial markets. In other words, financial markets and the economic agents who interact with them determine the overall level of … 2 Feb 2022 10:00 to 11:00
Event Susanna Vergani GRB : multi-wavelengths Seminar Abstract Gamma-ray bursts, which sometimes last only a fraction of a second, are the most energetic events in the Universe. Their radiation is continued in the host galaxy by afterglows , at different wavelengths, which help identify their origin, and … 7 Feb 2022 17:45 to 18:45
Event David Portehault From minerals to nanomaterials : geologically inspired syntheses for new functional solids Seminar 7 Feb 2022 17:00 to 18:00
Event Françoise Combes Gamma-ray bursts (GRB) : observations Lecture Abstract Gamma-ray bursts can last only a fraction of a second. They are the most energetic events in the Universe. For a long time, they were the most distant stars observed, close to the Big Bang. They make it possible to explore the intergalactic … 7 Feb 2022 16:45 to 17:45
Event Jean-Marie Tarascon Li-metal to Li-ion batteries associated with the transition from sulfides to lamellar oxides Lecture 7 Feb 2022 16:00 to 17:00