Share Facebook LinkedIn Bluesky Threads Copy url Search results Search 24478 results Filters Content type Content type (-) Lessons (24248) News (1808) People (1402) Editions (369) Chair (360) (-) Page (230) Research (27) Library (14) Annual Chair (12) Award (6) Active filters Lessons Page Event Patrick Boucheron The nobility of feelings Lecture Abstract If love is the founding novel of the West, it expresses its political haunts far more than the assurance of its moral edification. This is the case not only in Albert Cohen's Belle du seigneur , but also, thirty years earlier, in Denis de … 30 Jan 2024 11:00 to 12:00 Event Stéphane Mallat Presentations of the 2023 challenge winners Seminar Awards ceremony for the 2023 season's data challenges , with presentation of results by the winners. Access the videos of the 2023 challenges Season 2023 challenge winners Learning radiological anatomy with few shots learning (by Raidium) 1. Jude … 31 Jan 2024 11:15 to 12:30 Series Some new papyri from school (or other) contexts Jean-Luc Fournet, chair Written Culture in Late Antiquity and Byzantine Papyrology Seminar 16 Feb 2023 → 20 Apr 2023 Event Stéphane Mallat Markov field models Lecture Markov fields make it possible to build data models with many variables and a reduced number of parameters, by imposing that the variables have only local interactions. These are defined on a non-directional graph, such as an image grid. A Markov field … 31 Jan 2024 09:30 to 11:00 Event Jennifer Tamas Reread Andromache : a heroine of refusal Seminar Abstract In the 17th century, " Andromaque " was used to describe a widow. This meaning, fixed in later texts and in the collective imagination, prevents us from seeing how an author like Racine was able to turn the figure of Andromaque, against the … 30 Jan 2024 18:00 to 19:00 Event William Marx If Peau d'Âne were told to me Lecture Documents and media Download support Abstract In classical antiquity, depictions of children reading are rare, as children were not considered as people in their own right. Indeed, children's reading did not always exist as we know it today. The history … 30 Jan 2024 17:00 to 18:00 Event Dominique Charpin The family (1) : marriages, divorces, widowhoods Lecture 29 Jan 2024 11:00 to 12:00 Series The calamus and the cross : the Christianization of writing and the fate of classical culture in Late Antiquity (4). Schools (1) Jean-Luc Fournet, chair Written Culture in Late Antiquity and Byzantine Papyrology Lecture Notes from an elementary school pupil (Roman period) and a lecture room in Alexandria (5th-6th centuries). What better observatory of a society's cultural options than its school ? It's the school that concentrates, schematizes and adapts them, while … 15 Feb 2023 → 12 Apr 2023 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 to 18:45 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 to 15:30 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 to 17:45 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 to 13:00 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 to 11:30 Series Thinking differently about life Virginie Courtier-Orgogozo, chair Biodiversity and ecosystems Seminar Seminars following the lectures will be given by researchers in biology, sociology of science and philosophy. They will focus on aspects of the living world not covered in detail during the lectures. While remaining accessible to the general public, they … 13 Feb 2023 → 03 Apr 2023 Series Thinking differently about life Virginie Courtier-Orgogozo, chair Biodiversity and ecosystems Lecture Mosquito , Olivier Leblois, watercolor, 2022. The living world is fascinating. Its complexity surpasses that of the most sophisticated machines invented by humans and that of physical material objects. Faced with the major challenges of the 21st century, … 13 Feb 2023 → 03 Apr 2023 Event François Déroche The Mecca Koran (8) Lecture 26 Jan 2024 10:00 to 11:00 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 to 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 to 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 to 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 to 15:15 Event Anne Cheng Readings from Ge Hong's Baopuzi (8) Seminar 25 Jan 2024 16:30 to 18:00 Event Elena Cabrio Automatic analysis of argumentation in political debates Seminar Abstract Political debates offer citizens a unique opportunity to appreciate the position of political representatives on the most controversial issues of the day. In view of the active expression of the various players in political life, these debates … 26 Jan 2024 11:00 to 12:00 Event Benoît Sagot Computational linguistics Lecture Abstract NLP for linguistics, with a brief detour into NLP applications for the humanities and social sciences. Linguistics as a field of application for NLP, in three examples : computational morphology and morphological complexity ; computational … 26 Jan 2024 10:00 to 11:00 Event Jean-Michel Coron Stabilization and controllability of hyperbolic systems in 1 dimensional space Seminar Abstract Hyperbolic systems in dimension 1 of space play a crucial role in various real-life domains such as navigable rivers, irrigation canals, heat exchangers, chemical reactors, gas pipelines, road traffic, chromatography, and many others. This talk … 26 Jan 2024 11:15 to 12:30 Pagination First page « First Previous page ‹‹ … Page 139 Page 140 Page 141 Page 142 Page 143 Page 144 Page 145 Page 146 Page 147 … Next page ›› Last page Last »
Event Patrick Boucheron The nobility of feelings Lecture Abstract If love is the founding novel of the West, it expresses its political haunts far more than the assurance of its moral edification. This is the case not only in Albert Cohen's Belle du seigneur , but also, thirty years earlier, in Denis de … 30 Jan 2024 11:00 to 12:00
Event Stéphane Mallat Presentations of the 2023 challenge winners Seminar Awards ceremony for the 2023 season's data challenges , with presentation of results by the winners. Access the videos of the 2023 challenges Season 2023 challenge winners Learning radiological anatomy with few shots learning (by Raidium) 1. Jude … 31 Jan 2024 11:15 to 12:30
Series Some new papyri from school (or other) contexts Jean-Luc Fournet, chair Written Culture in Late Antiquity and Byzantine Papyrology Seminar 16 Feb 2023 → 20 Apr 2023
Event Stéphane Mallat Markov field models Lecture Markov fields make it possible to build data models with many variables and a reduced number of parameters, by imposing that the variables have only local interactions. These are defined on a non-directional graph, such as an image grid. A Markov field … 31 Jan 2024 09:30 to 11:00
Event Jennifer Tamas Reread Andromache : a heroine of refusal Seminar Abstract In the 17th century, " Andromaque " was used to describe a widow. This meaning, fixed in later texts and in the collective imagination, prevents us from seeing how an author like Racine was able to turn the figure of Andromaque, against the … 30 Jan 2024 18:00 to 19:00
Event William Marx If Peau d'Âne were told to me Lecture Documents and media Download support Abstract In classical antiquity, depictions of children reading are rare, as children were not considered as people in their own right. Indeed, children's reading did not always exist as we know it today. The history … 30 Jan 2024 17:00 to 18:00
Event Dominique Charpin The family (1) : marriages, divorces, widowhoods Lecture 29 Jan 2024 11:00 to 12:00
Series The calamus and the cross : the Christianization of writing and the fate of classical culture in Late Antiquity (4). Schools (1) Jean-Luc Fournet, chair Written Culture in Late Antiquity and Byzantine Papyrology Lecture Notes from an elementary school pupil (Roman period) and a lecture room in Alexandria (5th-6th centuries). What better observatory of a society's cultural options than its school ? It's the school that concentrates, schematizes and adapts them, while … 15 Feb 2023 → 12 Apr 2023
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 to 18:45
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 to 15:30
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 to 17:45
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 to 13:00
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 to 11:30
Series Thinking differently about life Virginie Courtier-Orgogozo, chair Biodiversity and ecosystems Seminar Seminars following the lectures will be given by researchers in biology, sociology of science and philosophy. They will focus on aspects of the living world not covered in detail during the lectures. While remaining accessible to the general public, they … 13 Feb 2023 → 03 Apr 2023
Series Thinking differently about life Virginie Courtier-Orgogozo, chair Biodiversity and ecosystems Lecture Mosquito , Olivier Leblois, watercolor, 2022. The living world is fascinating. Its complexity surpasses that of the most sophisticated machines invented by humans and that of physical material objects. Faced with the major challenges of the 21st century, … 13 Feb 2023 → 03 Apr 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 to 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 to 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 to 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 to 15:15
Event Elena Cabrio Automatic analysis of argumentation in political debates Seminar Abstract Political debates offer citizens a unique opportunity to appreciate the position of political representatives on the most controversial issues of the day. In view of the active expression of the various players in political life, these debates … 26 Jan 2024 11:00 to 12:00
Event Benoît Sagot Computational linguistics Lecture Abstract NLP for linguistics, with a brief detour into NLP applications for the humanities and social sciences. Linguistics as a field of application for NLP, in three examples : computational morphology and morphological complexity ; computational … 26 Jan 2024 10:00 to 11:00
Event Jean-Michel Coron Stabilization and controllability of hyperbolic systems in 1 dimensional space Seminar Abstract Hyperbolic systems in dimension 1 of space play a crucial role in various real-life domains such as navigable rivers, irrigation canals, heat exchangers, chemical reactors, gas pipelines, road traffic, chromatography, and many others. This talk … 26 Jan 2024 11:15 to 12:30