Share Facebook LinkedIn Bluesky Threads Copy url Search results Search 23335 results Filters Content type Content type (-) Lessons (23105) News (1608) People (1328) Chair (352) Editions (344) (-) Page (230) Research (27) Library (14) Annual Chair (12) Award (6) Active filters Lessons Page Event François Charton Can artificial intelligence model mathematical language ? Seminar Documents and media Download support … 6 Jan 2023 11:00 - 12:30 Event Yann Brenier Variational interpretation of Einstein's vacuum equations in terms of quadratic optimal transport Seminar Abstract The hydrodynamic reformulation of quadratic optimal transport extends quite naturally to Einstein's equations in vacuum, at the cost of matrix density and velocity fields and a multidimensional time variable. By adding the cosmological constant, … 6 Jan 2023 11:15 - 12:30 Event Stanislas Dehaene Neural vectors or grandmother cells : are mental representations localized or distributed ? Lecture In the space of a few decades, the recording of neurons in the animal and human brain has been revolutionized by the emergence of massively parallel electrophysiology and optical imaging techniques, which capture the responses of hundreds or even … 6 Jan 2023 09:30 - 11:00 Event Pierre-Louis Lions Large random matrices and PDEs (6) Lecture 6 Jan 2023 09:00 - 11:00 Event Anne Cheng Zhuangzi readings (continued) (6) Seminar 5 Jan 2023 16:30 - 18:00 Event François Déroche The Qur'an, time, history and chronology Lecture 5 Jan 2023 14:00 - 15:30 Event Anne Cheng China in Thucydides' trap Lecture 5 Jan 2023 11:00 - 12:00 Series In search of lost works William Marx, chair Comparative Literatures Seminar More works are lost than exist. In other words, and against all expectations, the loss of works is the general case, not their preservation. The metaphysical and Leibnizian question is: why are there works rather than nothing? To answer this question, we … 04 Jan 2022 → 05 Apr 2022 Series In search of lost works William Marx, chair Comparative Literatures Lecture More works are lost than exist. In other words, and against all expectations, the loss of works is the general case, not their preservation. The metaphysical and Leibnizian question therefore arises: why are there works rather than nothing ? To answer … 04 Jan 2022 → 05 Apr 2022 Series Reading texts related to the course topic Jean-Noël Robert, chair Philology of Japanese civilization Seminar 04 Jan 2022 → 22 Feb 2022 Series After the Black Death Patrick Boucheron, chair History of Powers in Western Europe, 13th to 16th century Lecture Little Oxendon, abandoned medieval village Following on from last year's lecture (" La peste noire "), and the three study days that accompanied it (" Nouvelles recherches sur la peste noire "), this year's lectures will attempt to draw out all the … 04 Jan 2022 → 12 Apr 2022 Series The departure of Buddhism : the anti-Buddhist turn in Edo thought Jean-Noël Robert, chair Philology of Japanese civilization Lecture 04 Jan 2022 → 05 Apr 2022 Event François Héran Discrimination law Lecture 4 Jan 2023 10:30 - 12:30 Event Esther Duflo Labour market and migration Lecture 4 Jan 2023 14:00 - 16:00 Event Hans Kamp MSDRT and the Semantics of Fiction. More Philosophical Puzzles about Fictional and Other Empty and Non-empty Names Guest lecturer Download support … 8 Dec 2022 11:00 - 12:00 Event Nalini Anantharaman Entropic and fractal uncertainty principles: application to quantum ergodicity I (2) Lecture 3 Jan 2023 15:30 - 16:30 Event Amine Marrakchi Type III von Neumann algebras (3) Guest lecturer 24 Nov 2022 10:00 - 12:00 Event Nalini Anantharaman Entropic and fractal uncertainty principles : application to quantum ergodicity I (1) Lecture 3 Jan 2023 14:00 - 15:15 Series Mazur's Eisenstein ideal Pierre-Louis Lions, chair Partial Differential Equations and Applications Guest lecturer These lectures, scheduled for 2020-2021, have been postponed due to Covid-19-related containment measures. Emmanuel Lecouturier … 22 Feb 2022 → 04 Mar 2022 Event Frédéric Bournaud Galaxies in pieces Seminar Abstract Today's galaxies have regular, symmetrical morphologies, " spirals " or " ellipticals ". The latest generations of telescopes have shown that primordial galaxies in the distant, young Universe have very different, irregular shapes, most often … 23 Jan 2023 17:45 - 18:45 Event Françoise Combes The birth of the Hubble sequence Lecture Abstract For century, the galaxies that surround us have been classified by the Hubble tuning fork or sequence, from elliptical, lenticular, to spiral and irregular galaxies, the latter being in the minority. This sequence may not have been present at … 23 Jan 2023 16:45 - 17:45 Series Biology by the Numbers Thomas Lecuit, chair Dynamics of Living Systems Guest lecturer Presentation My plan for the great privilege of teaching at the College de France is to develop several key themes in Physical Biology. Specifically, 1 plan to have an opening lecture on biology by the numbers, followed in turn by three lectures showing … 09 May 2022 → 30 May 2022 Event Hans Kamp MSDRT as the Foundation of a General Communication-Theoretic Approach to Natural Language Semantics Guest lecturer Download support … 1 Dec 2022 11:00 - 12:00 Event Amine Marrakchi Type III von Neumann algebras (2) Guest lecturer 17 Nov 2022 10:00 - 12:00 Pagination First page Previous page … Page 160 Page 161 Page 162 Page 163 Current page 164 Page 165 Page 166 Page 167 Page 168 … Next page Last page
Event François Charton Can artificial intelligence model mathematical language ? Seminar Documents and media Download support … 6 Jan 2023 11:00 - 12:30
Event Yann Brenier Variational interpretation of Einstein's vacuum equations in terms of quadratic optimal transport Seminar Abstract The hydrodynamic reformulation of quadratic optimal transport extends quite naturally to Einstein's equations in vacuum, at the cost of matrix density and velocity fields and a multidimensional time variable. By adding the cosmological constant, … 6 Jan 2023 11:15 - 12:30
Event Stanislas Dehaene Neural vectors or grandmother cells : are mental representations localized or distributed ? Lecture In the space of a few decades, the recording of neurons in the animal and human brain has been revolutionized by the emergence of massively parallel electrophysiology and optical imaging techniques, which capture the responses of hundreds or even … 6 Jan 2023 09:30 - 11:00
Series In search of lost works William Marx, chair Comparative Literatures Seminar More works are lost than exist. In other words, and against all expectations, the loss of works is the general case, not their preservation. The metaphysical and Leibnizian question is: why are there works rather than nothing? To answer this question, we … 04 Jan 2022 → 05 Apr 2022
Series In search of lost works William Marx, chair Comparative Literatures Lecture More works are lost than exist. In other words, and against all expectations, the loss of works is the general case, not their preservation. The metaphysical and Leibnizian question therefore arises: why are there works rather than nothing ? To answer … 04 Jan 2022 → 05 Apr 2022
Series Reading texts related to the course topic Jean-Noël Robert, chair Philology of Japanese civilization Seminar 04 Jan 2022 → 22 Feb 2022
Series After the Black Death Patrick Boucheron, chair History of Powers in Western Europe, 13th to 16th century Lecture Little Oxendon, abandoned medieval village Following on from last year's lecture (" La peste noire "), and the three study days that accompanied it (" Nouvelles recherches sur la peste noire "), this year's lectures will attempt to draw out all the … 04 Jan 2022 → 12 Apr 2022
Series The departure of Buddhism : the anti-Buddhist turn in Edo thought Jean-Noël Robert, chair Philology of Japanese civilization Lecture 04 Jan 2022 → 05 Apr 2022
Event Hans Kamp MSDRT and the Semantics of Fiction. More Philosophical Puzzles about Fictional and Other Empty and Non-empty Names Guest lecturer Download support … 8 Dec 2022 11:00 - 12:00
Event Nalini Anantharaman Entropic and fractal uncertainty principles: application to quantum ergodicity I (2) Lecture 3 Jan 2023 15:30 - 16:30
Event Nalini Anantharaman Entropic and fractal uncertainty principles : application to quantum ergodicity I (1) Lecture 3 Jan 2023 14:00 - 15:15
Series Mazur's Eisenstein ideal Pierre-Louis Lions, chair Partial Differential Equations and Applications Guest lecturer These lectures, scheduled for 2020-2021, have been postponed due to Covid-19-related containment measures. Emmanuel Lecouturier … 22 Feb 2022 → 04 Mar 2022
Event Frédéric Bournaud Galaxies in pieces Seminar Abstract Today's galaxies have regular, symmetrical morphologies, " spirals " or " ellipticals ". The latest generations of telescopes have shown that primordial galaxies in the distant, young Universe have very different, irregular shapes, most often … 23 Jan 2023 17:45 - 18:45
Event Françoise Combes The birth of the Hubble sequence Lecture Abstract For century, the galaxies that surround us have been classified by the Hubble tuning fork or sequence, from elliptical, lenticular, to spiral and irregular galaxies, the latter being in the minority. This sequence may not have been present at … 23 Jan 2023 16:45 - 17:45
Series Biology by the Numbers Thomas Lecuit, chair Dynamics of Living Systems Guest lecturer Presentation My plan for the great privilege of teaching at the College de France is to develop several key themes in Physical Biology. Specifically, 1 plan to have an opening lecture on biology by the numbers, followed in turn by three lectures showing … 09 May 2022 → 30 May 2022
Event Hans Kamp MSDRT as the Foundation of a General Communication-Theoretic Approach to Natural Language Semantics Guest lecturer Download support … 1 Dec 2022 11:00 - 12:00