Share Facebook LinkedIn Bluesky Threads Copy url Search results Search 25410 results Filters Content type Content type (-) Lessons (24021) News (1749) (-) People (1389) Editions (362) Chair (360) Page (231) Research (27) Library (14) Annual Chair (12) Award (6) Active filters Lessons People Event Thomas Lecuit Cell volume : physico-chemical determinants and regulation Lecture Documents and media Download support … 24 Nov 2020 10:00 to 11:30 Series Examples of renormalization Bernard Derrida, chair Statistical physics Seminar For more than half a century, the renormalization group has been one of the most widely used approaches in statistical physics for trying to link the microscopic world to the macroscopic world. It provides a means of explaining the universality of … 14 Jan 2019 → 18 Feb 2019 Series Examples of renormalization Bernard Derrida, chair Statistical physics Lecture For more than half a century, the renormalization group has been one of the most widely used approaches in statistical physics for trying to link the microscopic world to the macroscopic world. It provides a means of explaining the universality of … 14 Jan 2019 → 18 Feb 2019 Event Anne Cheng Introduction : why such a question ? Lecture 19 Nov 2020 11:00 to 12:00 Event Henry Laurens Crises in the East : the failure of Arab unity from 1956 onwards (3) Lecture 18 Nov 2020 16:30 to 17:30 Event Henry Laurens Crises in the East : the failure of Arab unity from 1956 onwards (2) Lecture 18 Nov 2020 15:00 to 16:00 Event Henry Laurens Crises in the East : the failure of Arab unity from 1956 onwards (1) Lecture 18 Nov 2020 11:30 to 12:30 Series The European Central Bank and the euro crisis Lucrezia Reichlin, chair European Chair Lecture My current research focuses on a critical assessment of the challenges faced by the European Central Bank (ECB) during the period 2007-2015, when the worst recession and financial crisis in the post-war era were unfolding, and the ECB was facing the first … 11 Jan 2019 → 01 Mar 2019 Series The Ottoman Empire and Turkey facing the West (II) Edhem Eldem, chair Turkish and Ottoman history Lecture The Turkish past is not only Ottoman, and Ottoman history is not only Turkish. In other words, the title of this new Chair covers a vast, complex and even ambiguous field. We will, however, focus our attention on a more targeted context which, while … 11 Jan 2019 → 15 Feb 2019 Event Sylvain Laurens "Bringing the State Back In... The State as a site for objectifying displacement and migration Seminar Can the State control migration ? "Bringing the State Back In... The State as a locus of objectification of displacement and migration … 16 Nov 2020 14:00 to 15:00 Event Pierre-Louis Lions First eigenvalues and eigenfunctions (3) Lecture 20 Nov 2020 09:00 to 11:00 Series Bactria and Sogdiana on both sides of the Arab conquest (7th-9th century) : a shift in civilization ? Frantz Grenet, chair History and Cultures of Pre-Islamic Central Asia Lecture 10 Jan 2019 → 28 Mar 2019 Series Why migrate ? François Héran, chair Migrations and Societies Lecture The 14 lecture hours in 2019, grouped into 7 sessions running from the beginning of January to the end of February, will be devoted primarily to elucidating the determinants of migration. Their consequences for societies of origin and destination will be … 10 Jan 2019 → 21 Feb 2019 Series In praise of description Carlo Ossola, chair Modern literature of Neolatin Europe Lecture 09 Jan 2019 → 20 Mar 2019 Series Readings of texts related to the course topic Jean-Noël Robert, chair Philology of Japanese civilization Seminar A good knowledge of Sino-Japanese or Japanese is required for the seminar. … 08 Jan 2019 → 19 Feb 2019 Series Proust the essayist Antoine Compagnon, chair Modern and contemporary French literature : history, criticism, theory Lecture À la recherche du temps perdu is a novel, that seems to be understood, but Proust asked himself in 1908, as he held his master idea : " Should it be a novel, a philosophical study, am I a novelist ? " And he doubted. Could La Recherche have taken the form … 08 Jan 2019 → 02 Apr 2019 Series The inventions of politics : medieval experiments Patrick Boucheron, chair History of power in Western Europe, XIIIth-XVIth century Lecture Still aiming for a genealogy of modern government, this year's lecture attempted a history - itself experimental - of medieval experimentation, i.e. of the social capacity to invent the political. It continued and formalized the two previous years … 08 Jan 2019 → 02 Apr 2019 Series Le Roman du Genji : poetry, language and Buddhism Jean-Noël Robert, chair Philology of Japanese civilization Lecture 08 Jan 2019 → 02 Apr 2019 Event Jean-Jacques Hublin Paranthropus Lecture 17 Nov 2020 17:00 to 18:30 Series Differentiation therapy Hugues de Thé, chair Cellular and Molecular Oncology Lecture A significant part of the lectures given at the Collège within the framework of the Chair seek to highlight the links that exist between the pathogenesis of different forms of cancer and different treatment modalities. For example, we presented the links … 07 Jan 2019 → 28 Jan 2019 Series The oldest book in the world Nicolas Grimal, chair Pharaonic civilization : Archaeology, Philology, History Seminar The Prisse papyrus comes from West Thebes, more precisely from the necropolis of Dra Abou'l Naga, and even more precisely from the excavations commissioned by Prisse d'Avennes in the mid-19th century, during which it was discovered, then stolen and sold … 07 Jan 2019 → 15 Apr 2019 Series Calamus and stone (continued) Nicolas Grimal, chair Pharaonic civilization : Archaeology, Philology, History Lecture This year's lecture was devoted to the character of the Pharaoh and his literary staging, deliberately excluding what comes under the heading of the official " royal narrative " : relations of military campaigns presenting the king in the guise of the … 07 Jan 2019 → 15 Apr 2019 Series Brain development and the emergence of cognitive functions Stanislas Dehaene, chair Experimental Cognitive Psychology Seminar In 2018-2019, we have welcomed six guests who specialize in brain development and the assessment of cognitive abilities in very young children. Indeed, babies display unsuspected skills that can be highlighted by behavioral or imaging methods. We have … 07 Jan 2019 → 11 Feb 2019 Series Recent advances in brain imaging and decoding mental representations Stanislas Dehaene, chair Experimental Cognitive Psychology Lecture Brain imaging has become an indispensable ingredient of experimental psychology. Until the 1970s or 1980s, it was fashionable to defend the functionalist thesis that psychology and neurobiology were autonomous disciplines, occupying watertight … 07 Jan 2019 → 11 Feb 2019 Pagination First page « First Previous page ‹‹ … Page 363 Page 364 Page 365 Page 366 Page 367 Page 368 Page 369 Page 370 Page 371 … Next page ›› Last page Last »
Event Thomas Lecuit Cell volume : physico-chemical determinants and regulation Lecture Documents and media Download support … 24 Nov 2020 10:00 to 11:30
Series Examples of renormalization Bernard Derrida, chair Statistical physics Seminar For more than half a century, the renormalization group has been one of the most widely used approaches in statistical physics for trying to link the microscopic world to the macroscopic world. It provides a means of explaining the universality of … 14 Jan 2019 → 18 Feb 2019
Series Examples of renormalization Bernard Derrida, chair Statistical physics Lecture For more than half a century, the renormalization group has been one of the most widely used approaches in statistical physics for trying to link the microscopic world to the macroscopic world. It provides a means of explaining the universality of … 14 Jan 2019 → 18 Feb 2019
Event Henry Laurens Crises in the East : the failure of Arab unity from 1956 onwards (3) Lecture 18 Nov 2020 16:30 to 17:30
Event Henry Laurens Crises in the East : the failure of Arab unity from 1956 onwards (2) Lecture 18 Nov 2020 15:00 to 16:00
Event Henry Laurens Crises in the East : the failure of Arab unity from 1956 onwards (1) Lecture 18 Nov 2020 11:30 to 12:30
Series The European Central Bank and the euro crisis Lucrezia Reichlin, chair European Chair Lecture My current research focuses on a critical assessment of the challenges faced by the European Central Bank (ECB) during the period 2007-2015, when the worst recession and financial crisis in the post-war era were unfolding, and the ECB was facing the first … 11 Jan 2019 → 01 Mar 2019
Series The Ottoman Empire and Turkey facing the West (II) Edhem Eldem, chair Turkish and Ottoman history Lecture The Turkish past is not only Ottoman, and Ottoman history is not only Turkish. In other words, the title of this new Chair covers a vast, complex and even ambiguous field. We will, however, focus our attention on a more targeted context which, while … 11 Jan 2019 → 15 Feb 2019
Event Sylvain Laurens "Bringing the State Back In... The State as a site for objectifying displacement and migration Seminar Can the State control migration ? "Bringing the State Back In... The State as a locus of objectification of displacement and migration … 16 Nov 2020 14:00 to 15:00
Series Bactria and Sogdiana on both sides of the Arab conquest (7th-9th century) : a shift in civilization ? Frantz Grenet, chair History and Cultures of Pre-Islamic Central Asia Lecture 10 Jan 2019 → 28 Mar 2019
Series Why migrate ? François Héran, chair Migrations and Societies Lecture The 14 lecture hours in 2019, grouped into 7 sessions running from the beginning of January to the end of February, will be devoted primarily to elucidating the determinants of migration. Their consequences for societies of origin and destination will be … 10 Jan 2019 → 21 Feb 2019
Series In praise of description Carlo Ossola, chair Modern literature of Neolatin Europe Lecture 09 Jan 2019 → 20 Mar 2019
Series Readings of texts related to the course topic Jean-Noël Robert, chair Philology of Japanese civilization Seminar A good knowledge of Sino-Japanese or Japanese is required for the seminar. … 08 Jan 2019 → 19 Feb 2019
Series Proust the essayist Antoine Compagnon, chair Modern and contemporary French literature : history, criticism, theory Lecture À la recherche du temps perdu is a novel, that seems to be understood, but Proust asked himself in 1908, as he held his master idea : " Should it be a novel, a philosophical study, am I a novelist ? " And he doubted. Could La Recherche have taken the form … 08 Jan 2019 → 02 Apr 2019
Series The inventions of politics : medieval experiments Patrick Boucheron, chair History of power in Western Europe, XIIIth-XVIth century Lecture Still aiming for a genealogy of modern government, this year's lecture attempted a history - itself experimental - of medieval experimentation, i.e. of the social capacity to invent the political. It continued and formalized the two previous years … 08 Jan 2019 → 02 Apr 2019
Series Le Roman du Genji : poetry, language and Buddhism Jean-Noël Robert, chair Philology of Japanese civilization Lecture 08 Jan 2019 → 02 Apr 2019
Series Differentiation therapy Hugues de Thé, chair Cellular and Molecular Oncology Lecture A significant part of the lectures given at the Collège within the framework of the Chair seek to highlight the links that exist between the pathogenesis of different forms of cancer and different treatment modalities. For example, we presented the links … 07 Jan 2019 → 28 Jan 2019
Series The oldest book in the world Nicolas Grimal, chair Pharaonic civilization : Archaeology, Philology, History Seminar The Prisse papyrus comes from West Thebes, more precisely from the necropolis of Dra Abou'l Naga, and even more precisely from the excavations commissioned by Prisse d'Avennes in the mid-19th century, during which it was discovered, then stolen and sold … 07 Jan 2019 → 15 Apr 2019
Series Calamus and stone (continued) Nicolas Grimal, chair Pharaonic civilization : Archaeology, Philology, History Lecture This year's lecture was devoted to the character of the Pharaoh and his literary staging, deliberately excluding what comes under the heading of the official " royal narrative " : relations of military campaigns presenting the king in the guise of the … 07 Jan 2019 → 15 Apr 2019
Series Brain development and the emergence of cognitive functions Stanislas Dehaene, chair Experimental Cognitive Psychology Seminar In 2018-2019, we have welcomed six guests who specialize in brain development and the assessment of cognitive abilities in very young children. Indeed, babies display unsuspected skills that can be highlighted by behavioral or imaging methods. We have … 07 Jan 2019 → 11 Feb 2019
Series Recent advances in brain imaging and decoding mental representations Stanislas Dehaene, chair Experimental Cognitive Psychology Lecture Brain imaging has become an indispensable ingredient of experimental psychology. Until the 1970s or 1980s, it was fashionable to defend the functionalist thesis that psychology and neurobiology were autonomous disciplines, occupying watertight … 07 Jan 2019 → 11 Feb 2019