Share Facebook LinkedIn Bluesky Threads Copy url Search results Search 24491 results Filters Content type Content type (-) Lessons (24464) News (1669) People (1350) Chair (359) Editions (351) Page (230) (-) Research (27) Library (14) Annual Chair (12) Award (6) Active filters Lessons Research 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 Series Seismic anisotropy and flow in the earth's mantle Barbara Romanowicz, chair Physics of the Earth's interior Lecture Seismic anisotropy is found in various parts of the Earth's crust and mantle. This manifests itself in elastic wave propagation velocities that depend on their polarization and/or direction of propagation. The presence of anisotropy in the crust has been … 04 Oct 2016 → 29 Nov 2016 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 Series No lectures this year Marc Fontecave, chair Chemistry of Biological Processes Lecture 03 Oct 2016 Series Migration, refugees, exile Opening symposia Symposium Opening symposium 2016-2017 Since summer 2015, the massive influx of refugees leaving the Middle East has generally been presented in public debate as a "migrant crisis" that would test Europe's security defenses. On the other hand, it could be argued … 12 Oct 2016 → 14 Oct 2016 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 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 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 The credit link : law, community and market under the Ancien Régime Patrick Boucheron, chair History of Powers in Western Europe, 13th to 16th century Guest lecturer 06 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 Event Jean Dolbeault Magnetic fields, interpolation and symmetry Seminar 29 Mar 2019 11:15 - 12:45 Event Pierre-Michel Menger Accounting for a groping process : propulsion, finalism, intentionality: theory and exemplification Lecture 29 Mar 2019 10:00 - 12:00 Event Frantz Grenet Bactria and Sogdiana on both sides of the Arab conquest (7th-9th century) : a civilizational shift ? (9) Lecture 28 Mar 2019 15:30 - 16:30 Event Jean-Luc Fournet Study of Byzantine papyri in relation to the lecture topic Seminar 28 Mar 2019 15:30 - 17:00 Event Thomas Römer The history of the tripartite canon and the biblical text (part 2) Lecture Documents and media Download support … 28 Mar 2019 14:00 - 15:00 Event Vinciane Pirenne-Delforge Eudaimôn : the key to understanding daimôn Lecture Abstract A human eudaimōn is " loved by the immortal gods ", as Theognis states (v. 653). In his Elegies , which feature a succession of gnomic and moralizing sentences in which the term daimōn has its place, we clearly perceive the distributive value of … 28 Mar 2019 11:00 - 12:00 Pagination First page « First Previous page ‹‹ … Page 400 Page 401 Page 402 Page 403 Page 404 Page 405 Page 406 Page 407 Page 408 … Next page ›› Last page Last »
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
Series Seismic anisotropy and flow in the earth's mantle Barbara Romanowicz, chair Physics of the Earth's interior Lecture Seismic anisotropy is found in various parts of the Earth's crust and mantle. This manifests itself in elastic wave propagation velocities that depend on their polarization and/or direction of propagation. The presence of anisotropy in the crust has been … 04 Oct 2016 → 29 Nov 2016
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
Series No lectures this year Marc Fontecave, chair Chemistry of Biological Processes Lecture 03 Oct 2016
Series Migration, refugees, exile Opening symposia Symposium Opening symposium 2016-2017 Since summer 2015, the massive influx of refugees leaving the Middle East has generally been presented in public debate as a "migrant crisis" that would test Europe's security defenses. On the other hand, it could be argued … 12 Oct 2016 → 14 Oct 2016
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 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 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 The credit link : law, community and market under the Ancien Régime Patrick Boucheron, chair History of Powers in Western Europe, 13th to 16th century Guest lecturer 06 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
Event Pierre-Michel Menger Accounting for a groping process : propulsion, finalism, intentionality: theory and exemplification Lecture 29 Mar 2019 10:00 - 12:00
Event Frantz Grenet Bactria and Sogdiana on both sides of the Arab conquest (7th-9th century) : a civilizational shift ? (9) Lecture 28 Mar 2019 15:30 - 16:30
Event Jean-Luc Fournet Study of Byzantine papyri in relation to the lecture topic Seminar 28 Mar 2019 15:30 - 17:00
Event Thomas Römer The history of the tripartite canon and the biblical text (part 2) Lecture Documents and media Download support … 28 Mar 2019 14:00 - 15:00
Event Vinciane Pirenne-Delforge Eudaimôn : the key to understanding daimôn Lecture Abstract A human eudaimōn is " loved by the immortal gods ", as Theognis states (v. 653). In his Elegies , which feature a succession of gnomic and moralizing sentences in which the term daimōn has its place, we clearly perceive the distributive value of … 28 Mar 2019 11:00 - 12:00