Share Facebook LinkedIn Bluesky Threads Copy url Search results Search 24518 results Filters Content type Content type (-) Lessons (23187) News (1634) (-) People (1331) Chair (352) Editions (348) Page (229) Research (27) Library (14) Annual Chair (12) Award (6) Active filters Lessons People Event Thomas Römer The formation of the Pentateuch : old and new hypotheses Lecture Documents and media Download support … 4 Apr 2019 14:00 - 15:00 Event Luc H. Arnal Acoustic determinants and brain processing of auditory salience Seminar 4 Apr 2019 11:30 - 13:00 Event Sanjay Subrahmanyam Autobiographical narratives and ego-documents in the modern age (4) Lecture 4 Apr 2019 10:00 - 11:00 Event Vinciane Pirenne-Delforge Daimôn and tragic daimones Lecture Abstract The tragic material of the daimōn survey is certainly abundant. The identification of various semantic orientations of the term makes it possible to order and analyze it. The first is that of the synonymy between theos and daimōn , well attested … 4 Apr 2019 11:00 - 12:00 Event Christine Petit The role of multimodal information in speech perception Lecture Abstract The second lecture was devoted to multisensory integration, and in particular the integration of auditory and visual signals, which is both a condition for survival in the environment and a prerequisite for speech perception. The notion of … 4 Apr 2019 10:00 - 11:30 Event Dario Mantovani The dual origins of law in Rome and history reduced to terminology in Pomponius' manual Lecture Abstract In the first of the three sections making up the central part of his textbook, the Enchiridion (written in the 2nd century AD), Pomponius sets out to present the birth (origo ), then the progress (processus) of law (D. , 1, 2, 2). In the … 3 Apr 2019 14:30 - 15:30 Event Jean-Luc Fournet 1. Christian literature (continued) Lecture Abstract 1. Christian literature (continued) 1.2. The Apostolic Fathers The works of the Apostolic Fathers, which immediately follow the writings of the Apostles, are relatively poorly represented in the papyri. In particular, there is no Greek witness to … 3 Apr 2019 11:00 - 12:00 Event Molly Przeworski In search of the molecular basis of adaptations Lecture Abstract Humans differ from other primates in many ways, not least in their extensive linguistic and cognitive abilities. These phenotypic differences provide prima facie evidence of adaptation in the human lineage. However, little is known about the … 3 Apr 2019 10:00 - 11:00 Event Antoine Compagnon " At my age we reread " Lecture Abstract To speak of " Proust essayiste " implies, as we have seen, exploring Proust's complex relationship with knowledge, tracing the difficult path he seeks between the position of the philologist, whom he distances, and that of the journalist, whom he … 2 Apr 2019 16:30 - 18:45 Event Jean-Noël Robert By way of Chinese - Conclusion Lecture Documents and media Download support … 2 Apr 2019 10:30 - 11:30 Event Patrick Boucheron Back to the city Lecture Abstract The last session of the lecture offers a provisional assessment of an investigation that resembles the search for a generative grammar of political possibilities in medieval societies, aiming, on the linguistic model, at a transformational theory … 2 Apr 2019 11:00 - 12:00 Event Claudine Tiercelin The medieval antecedents of semiotics (2) : Is thought structured like a language ? From verbum mentis tooratio mentalis Lecture Abstract At the end of the previous lecture, we showed how, among the scholastics, Peirce hesitated (which is not without its problems), in his analysis of the best model for signs, between the terminists and the modists : yet this is not, at least at … 2 Apr 2019 10:00 - 12:00 Event Yanick Lahens The 19th century, the great unknown Lecture Abstract Initially, nineteenth-century literature was driven by the need for a double affirmation : that of victory over colonialism and slavery, and that of Black people's belonging to humanity. But by the end of the nineteenth century, poets were … 1 Apr 2019 17:00 - 18:00 Event Michael Sieweke The Macrophage and Cellular Harmony Seminar Abstract Michael Sieweke describes his work on the homeostasis of activation states of various monocyte and macrophage populations. … 1 Apr 2019 16:30 - 18:00 Event Alain de Libera et Irène Rosier-Catach Philosophy of language and theology in the Middle Ages : Philosophy and theology in language Seminar Abstract The first session addressed " the question of universals " (ADL-IRC), " the problem of empty reference " (ADL), the " speculative grammar " and " modism " (IRC), " the language of angels " … 1 Apr 2019 16:00 - 19:00 Event Alain Fischer Inflammation Lecture Abstract The lecture presented the beneficial intervention of inflammatory processes in response to infectious or other types of aggression. The main families of molecules (" sensors ") capable of inducing such responses were recalled. The respective … 1 Apr 2019 15:00 - 16:30 Event Nicolas Grimal The oldest book in the world (12) Seminar 1 Apr 2019 15:00 - 16:00 Event Nicolas Grimal Calamus and stone (continued) (12) Lecture 1 Apr 2019 14:00 - 15:00 Event Gérard Berry A plea for non-linear trajectories Lecture Abstract The more festive closing lecture of my chair was an opportunity to recall the main milestones of my research career since 1970 : tIF language for processing and querying files (1970-1973), inversion of recursive program computations (1973-1976), … 26 Feb 2019 16:00 - 17:30 Series Sorin Popa Alain Connes, chair Analysis and geometry Guest lecturer 10 Nov 2016 → 24 Nov 2016 Series Bernard Frank twenty years on. A new look at Japanese civilization Jean-Noël Robert, chair Philology of Japanese civilization Symposium The symposium continues on Friday October 21 at the Académie des Inscriptions et Belles Lettres. … 20 Oct 2016 Event Edouard Bard Extreme climates and current analogues : from the last millennia to the Holocene optimum (5) Lecture Abstract Mesopotamia is considered the cradle of civilization, with cuneiform writing dating back to more than 3 000 years BC. Around 2300 BC, Sargon forcibly united Upper and Lower Mesopotamia, founding the Akkad Empire. This brilliant civilization … 29 Mar 2019 15:00 - 16:00 Event Jean Dolbeault Magnetic fields, interpolation and symmetry Seminar 29 Mar 2019 11:15 - 12:45 Event Bénédicte Savoy The return of the same different Lecture Abstract Intertemporality affects not only borders, regimes, the map of Europe and host structures, but also the objects themselves. During their absence - and the phenomenon increases with the duration of this absence - objects are transformed, seen … 29 Mar 2019 11:00 - 12:00 Pagination First page Previous page … Page 401 Page 402 Page 403 Page 404 Current page 405 Page 406 Page 407 Page 408 Page 409 … Next page Last page
Event Thomas Römer The formation of the Pentateuch : old and new hypotheses Lecture Documents and media Download support … 4 Apr 2019 14:00 - 15:00
Event Luc H. Arnal Acoustic determinants and brain processing of auditory salience Seminar 4 Apr 2019 11:30 - 13:00
Event Sanjay Subrahmanyam Autobiographical narratives and ego-documents in the modern age (4) Lecture 4 Apr 2019 10:00 - 11:00
Event Vinciane Pirenne-Delforge Daimôn and tragic daimones Lecture Abstract The tragic material of the daimōn survey is certainly abundant. The identification of various semantic orientations of the term makes it possible to order and analyze it. The first is that of the synonymy between theos and daimōn , well attested … 4 Apr 2019 11:00 - 12:00
Event Christine Petit The role of multimodal information in speech perception Lecture Abstract The second lecture was devoted to multisensory integration, and in particular the integration of auditory and visual signals, which is both a condition for survival in the environment and a prerequisite for speech perception. The notion of … 4 Apr 2019 10:00 - 11:30
Event Dario Mantovani The dual origins of law in Rome and history reduced to terminology in Pomponius' manual Lecture Abstract In the first of the three sections making up the central part of his textbook, the Enchiridion (written in the 2nd century AD), Pomponius sets out to present the birth (origo ), then the progress (processus) of law (D. , 1, 2, 2). In the … 3 Apr 2019 14:30 - 15:30
Event Jean-Luc Fournet 1. Christian literature (continued) Lecture Abstract 1. Christian literature (continued) 1.2. The Apostolic Fathers The works of the Apostolic Fathers, which immediately follow the writings of the Apostles, are relatively poorly represented in the papyri. In particular, there is no Greek witness to … 3 Apr 2019 11:00 - 12:00
Event Molly Przeworski In search of the molecular basis of adaptations Lecture Abstract Humans differ from other primates in many ways, not least in their extensive linguistic and cognitive abilities. These phenotypic differences provide prima facie evidence of adaptation in the human lineage. However, little is known about the … 3 Apr 2019 10:00 - 11:00
Event Antoine Compagnon " At my age we reread " Lecture Abstract To speak of " Proust essayiste " implies, as we have seen, exploring Proust's complex relationship with knowledge, tracing the difficult path he seeks between the position of the philologist, whom he distances, and that of the journalist, whom he … 2 Apr 2019 16:30 - 18:45
Event Jean-Noël Robert By way of Chinese - Conclusion Lecture Documents and media Download support … 2 Apr 2019 10:30 - 11:30
Event Patrick Boucheron Back to the city Lecture Abstract The last session of the lecture offers a provisional assessment of an investigation that resembles the search for a generative grammar of political possibilities in medieval societies, aiming, on the linguistic model, at a transformational theory … 2 Apr 2019 11:00 - 12:00
Event Claudine Tiercelin The medieval antecedents of semiotics (2) : Is thought structured like a language ? From verbum mentis tooratio mentalis Lecture Abstract At the end of the previous lecture, we showed how, among the scholastics, Peirce hesitated (which is not without its problems), in his analysis of the best model for signs, between the terminists and the modists : yet this is not, at least at … 2 Apr 2019 10:00 - 12:00
Event Yanick Lahens The 19th century, the great unknown Lecture Abstract Initially, nineteenth-century literature was driven by the need for a double affirmation : that of victory over colonialism and slavery, and that of Black people's belonging to humanity. But by the end of the nineteenth century, poets were … 1 Apr 2019 17:00 - 18:00
Event Michael Sieweke The Macrophage and Cellular Harmony Seminar Abstract Michael Sieweke describes his work on the homeostasis of activation states of various monocyte and macrophage populations. … 1 Apr 2019 16:30 - 18:00
Event Alain de Libera et Irène Rosier-Catach Philosophy of language and theology in the Middle Ages : Philosophy and theology in language Seminar Abstract The first session addressed " the question of universals " (ADL-IRC), " the problem of empty reference " (ADL), the " speculative grammar " and " modism " (IRC), " the language of angels " … 1 Apr 2019 16:00 - 19:00
Event Alain Fischer Inflammation Lecture Abstract The lecture presented the beneficial intervention of inflammatory processes in response to infectious or other types of aggression. The main families of molecules (" sensors ") capable of inducing such responses were recalled. The respective … 1 Apr 2019 15:00 - 16:30
Event Gérard Berry A plea for non-linear trajectories Lecture Abstract The more festive closing lecture of my chair was an opportunity to recall the main milestones of my research career since 1970 : tIF language for processing and querying files (1970-1973), inversion of recursive program computations (1973-1976), … 26 Feb 2019 16:00 - 17:30
Series Bernard Frank twenty years on. A new look at Japanese civilization Jean-Noël Robert, chair Philology of Japanese civilization Symposium The symposium continues on Friday October 21 at the Académie des Inscriptions et Belles Lettres. … 20 Oct 2016
Event Edouard Bard Extreme climates and current analogues : from the last millennia to the Holocene optimum (5) Lecture Abstract Mesopotamia is considered the cradle of civilization, with cuneiform writing dating back to more than 3 000 years BC. Around 2300 BC, Sargon forcibly united Upper and Lower Mesopotamia, founding the Akkad Empire. This brilliant civilization … 29 Mar 2019 15:00 - 16:00
Event Bénédicte Savoy The return of the same different Lecture Abstract Intertemporality affects not only borders, regimes, the map of Europe and host structures, but also the objects themselves. During their absence - and the phenomenon increases with the duration of this absence - objects are transformed, seen … 29 Mar 2019 11:00 - 12:00