Share Facebook X (ex-Twitter) Linkedin Copy url Search results Search 23016 results Filters Content type Close Content type Content type (-) Lessons (23016) News (1503) People (1300) Chair (351) Editions (326) Page (226) Research (26) Library (14) Annual Chair (12) Award (6) Active filters Lessons Event Heonik Kwon Individuality in the afterlife Seminar 14 Mar 2019 10:00 - 12:00 Series Political fiction Patrick Boucheron, chair History of Powers in Western Europe, 13th to 16th century Lecture Patrick Boucheron presents his lecture in the series les courTs du Collège de France. In tackling "The Long Middle Ages of Ambrose of Milan", the previous year's lecture was aimed at that ancient period (the Middle Ages) when an even older memory (Ambrose … 10 Jan 2017 → 21 Mar 2017 Event Carlo Ossola In praise of description (10) Lecture 13 Mar 2019 17:00 - 18:00 Event Dario Mantovani New Roman law documents. The circulation of works by Roman jurists after the end of legal literature (4th-6th c. AD) and the Redhis project Seminar Abstract After defining the method of the research in progress at Redhis and summarizing the main results, three texts chosen from unpublished papyri were presented : the Institutes of the jurist Marcianus (P.Vindob. L 59 + L 92, 4th-5th century copy ) ; … 13 Mar 2019 15:45 - 17:45 Event Theodora S. F. Jim "Soteria" and "Saviour" Gods in Ancient Greece Seminar Abstract From at least the Archaic period onwards, the cults of gods called "saviours" (Σωτήρ/Σώτειρα ) spread remarkably quickly across the Mediterranean, so that there was hardly any region where they were not attested. Approached with innumerable … 13 Mar 2019 14:30 - 15:30 Event Dario Mantovani History explains the present : Gaius reading Titus Livius Lecture Abstract Prefaces are the places where authors most directly express their aims and their relationship with other texts. However, prologues to legal works have come down to us in small numbers, again due to the choices made by the compilers of Justinian's … 13 Mar 2019 14:30 - 15:30 Event Philippe Descola What is ? (7) Lecture 13 Mar 2019 14:00 - 15:00 Event Jean-Luc Fournet I. Readings in Late Antiquity (continued) Lecture Abstract A few methodological caveats (continued) (geographical imbalance and the invisibility of Alexandria) the approximate nature of palaeographic dating and the tendency to backdate texts ; the fragmentary state of papyri, which makes it impossible to … 13 Mar 2019 11:00 - 12:00 Event Yann Ollivier Deep reinforcement learning Seminar Abstract This seminar presents the main approaches to reinforcement learning, focusing on effective algorithms, and comparing the advantages of different approaches (with world model, without model, etc.). Yann Olivier discusses the state of mathematical … 13 Mar 2019 11:15 - 12:30 Event Stéphane Mallat Maximum likelihood network optimization Lecture Abstract The optimization of a neural network consists in estimating a vector of theta parameters which minimizes a risk calculated on the training examples. This is done by gradient descent, so the risk must be differentiable. For classification, the … 13 Mar 2019 09:30 - 11:00 Series Nuclear receptors and oncogenesis Hugues de Thé, chair Cellular and Molecular Oncology Lecture Regulation of gene expression is an essential aspect of cancer transformation. Following on from last year's lectures on a key regulator of cellular stress (P53), this year's lectures focused on the historical case of nuclear receptors. Gene transcription … 09 Jan 2017 → 30 Jan 2017 Series The annals of Thutmosis III (continued) Nicolas Grimal, chair Pharaonic civilization : Archaeology, Philology, History Seminar 09 Jan 2017 → 27 Mar 2017 Series Le calame et la pierre. A critical history of ancient Egyptian literature (continued) Nicolas Grimal, chair Pharaonic civilization : Archaeology, Philology, History Lecture Although they can't be described as literary, the first inscribed documents, as we saw earlier, were intended to identify a person or a good. This is the approach we have chosen to take in the transition from enumeration to constructed forms, from the … 09 Jan 2017 → 27 Mar 2017 Series Stochastic particle models in non-equilibrium physics Bernard Derrida, chair Statistical physics Seminar Over the last twenty years or so, numerous microscopic models have been proposed to study the transport of heat or particles through extended systems. The aim of the 2016-2017 lecture was to take stock of several recent advances and of questions that have … 09 Jan 2017 → 13 Feb 2017 Event Évelyne Bloch-Dano Questionnaires as the genesis of the trial Seminar 12 Mar 2019 17:45 - 18:45 Series Stochastic particle models in non-equilibrium physics Bernard Derrida, chair Statistical physics Lecture Over the last twenty years or so, numerous microscopic models have been proposed to study the transport of heat or particles through extended systems. The aim of the 2016-2017 lecture was to take stock of several recent advances and of questions that have … 09 Jan 2017 → 13 Feb 2017 Event Antoine Compagnon " Aimer Sainte-Beuve " Lecture Abstract When he began work on Sainte-Beuve, Proust adopted a more scholarly approach to reading. Having always spoken ill of philologists, he adopted a classic research approach, combing the bibliography, taking precisely paginated notes, noting … 12 Mar 2019 16:30 - 17:30 Event Patrick Boucheron Les échappées belles : political adventure in the distance Lecture Abstract The space of the square (not just the public square, but the political location) is the place where we expose ourselves to visibility, to mixing, to a mixture that is not a mêlée. Drawing on theoretical reflections on dislocation in architecture … 12 Mar 2019 11:00 - 12:00 Event Claudine Tiercelin The various " linguistic " and " cognitive " turning points in the twentieth century, their impasses, and the outline of a response in the terms of Peircian ontological and realist semiotics Lecture Abstract In the first lecture, we reminded you of the impasse reached in the 20th century by certain " tournants ", particularly in linguistics (semiology, structuralism, philosophy of language, phenomenology) and cognition, before indicating the three … 12 Mar 2019 10:00 - 12:00 Event Jean-Noël Robert The Auguste Loi Lecture Documents and media Download support … 12 Mar 2019 10:30 - 11:30 Event Jacques Prost Active Aspects of Membrane Physics Seminar Abstract J. Prost's seminar presented a general theory of the hydrodynamics of active membranes, with a view to their application in biology. The applications of these theories are very varied, ranging from the properties of cell membranes containing … 11 Mar 2019 17:15 - 18:15 Event Arnaud Fontanet Zika : the pact between mosquito and virus Lecture Abstract The Zika virus, named after the Ugandan forest where it was first identified in 1947, has long remained an exotic curiosity. Transmitted by Aedes mosquitoes, it circulates endemically in sub-Saharan Africa and Southeast Asia, and appears to be … 11 Mar 2019 17:00 - 18:00 Event Alexander Kuhn Wireless electrochemistry for micro- and nanotechnology applications Seminar Abstract In most cases, electrochemical conversion takes place in the conventional way, i.e. on the surface of electrodes that are connected to a source of electricity. However, there is an alternative way of triggering electrochemical processes remotely … 11 Mar 2019 17:30 - 18:30 Event Alain de Libera Deconstruction and reconstruction (end). Rewriting the history of medieval philosophy (6) Lecture Documents and media Download support … 11 Mar 2019 17:00 - 19:00 Pagination First page Previous page … Page 334 Page 335 Page 336 Page 337 Current page 338 Page 339 Page 340 Page 341 Page 342 … Next page Last page
Series Political fiction Patrick Boucheron, chair History of Powers in Western Europe, 13th to 16th century Lecture Patrick Boucheron presents his lecture in the series les courTs du Collège de France. In tackling "The Long Middle Ages of Ambrose of Milan", the previous year's lecture was aimed at that ancient period (the Middle Ages) when an even older memory (Ambrose … 10 Jan 2017 → 21 Mar 2017
Event Dario Mantovani New Roman law documents. The circulation of works by Roman jurists after the end of legal literature (4th-6th c. AD) and the Redhis project Seminar Abstract After defining the method of the research in progress at Redhis and summarizing the main results, three texts chosen from unpublished papyri were presented : the Institutes of the jurist Marcianus (P.Vindob. L 59 + L 92, 4th-5th century copy ) ; … 13 Mar 2019 15:45 - 17:45
Event Theodora S. F. Jim "Soteria" and "Saviour" Gods in Ancient Greece Seminar Abstract From at least the Archaic period onwards, the cults of gods called "saviours" (Σωτήρ/Σώτειρα ) spread remarkably quickly across the Mediterranean, so that there was hardly any region where they were not attested. Approached with innumerable … 13 Mar 2019 14:30 - 15:30
Event Dario Mantovani History explains the present : Gaius reading Titus Livius Lecture Abstract Prefaces are the places where authors most directly express their aims and their relationship with other texts. However, prologues to legal works have come down to us in small numbers, again due to the choices made by the compilers of Justinian's … 13 Mar 2019 14:30 - 15:30
Event Jean-Luc Fournet I. Readings in Late Antiquity (continued) Lecture Abstract A few methodological caveats (continued) (geographical imbalance and the invisibility of Alexandria) the approximate nature of palaeographic dating and the tendency to backdate texts ; the fragmentary state of papyri, which makes it impossible to … 13 Mar 2019 11:00 - 12:00
Event Yann Ollivier Deep reinforcement learning Seminar Abstract This seminar presents the main approaches to reinforcement learning, focusing on effective algorithms, and comparing the advantages of different approaches (with world model, without model, etc.). Yann Olivier discusses the state of mathematical … 13 Mar 2019 11:15 - 12:30
Event Stéphane Mallat Maximum likelihood network optimization Lecture Abstract The optimization of a neural network consists in estimating a vector of theta parameters which minimizes a risk calculated on the training examples. This is done by gradient descent, so the risk must be differentiable. For classification, the … 13 Mar 2019 09:30 - 11:00
Series Nuclear receptors and oncogenesis Hugues de Thé, chair Cellular and Molecular Oncology Lecture Regulation of gene expression is an essential aspect of cancer transformation. Following on from last year's lectures on a key regulator of cellular stress (P53), this year's lectures focused on the historical case of nuclear receptors. Gene transcription … 09 Jan 2017 → 30 Jan 2017
Series The annals of Thutmosis III (continued) Nicolas Grimal, chair Pharaonic civilization : Archaeology, Philology, History Seminar 09 Jan 2017 → 27 Mar 2017
Series Le calame et la pierre. A critical history of ancient Egyptian literature (continued) Nicolas Grimal, chair Pharaonic civilization : Archaeology, Philology, History Lecture Although they can't be described as literary, the first inscribed documents, as we saw earlier, were intended to identify a person or a good. This is the approach we have chosen to take in the transition from enumeration to constructed forms, from the … 09 Jan 2017 → 27 Mar 2017
Series Stochastic particle models in non-equilibrium physics Bernard Derrida, chair Statistical physics Seminar Over the last twenty years or so, numerous microscopic models have been proposed to study the transport of heat or particles through extended systems. The aim of the 2016-2017 lecture was to take stock of several recent advances and of questions that have … 09 Jan 2017 → 13 Feb 2017
Event Évelyne Bloch-Dano Questionnaires as the genesis of the trial Seminar 12 Mar 2019 17:45 - 18:45
Series Stochastic particle models in non-equilibrium physics Bernard Derrida, chair Statistical physics Lecture Over the last twenty years or so, numerous microscopic models have been proposed to study the transport of heat or particles through extended systems. The aim of the 2016-2017 lecture was to take stock of several recent advances and of questions that have … 09 Jan 2017 → 13 Feb 2017
Event Antoine Compagnon " Aimer Sainte-Beuve " Lecture Abstract When he began work on Sainte-Beuve, Proust adopted a more scholarly approach to reading. Having always spoken ill of philologists, he adopted a classic research approach, combing the bibliography, taking precisely paginated notes, noting … 12 Mar 2019 16:30 - 17:30
Event Patrick Boucheron Les échappées belles : political adventure in the distance Lecture Abstract The space of the square (not just the public square, but the political location) is the place where we expose ourselves to visibility, to mixing, to a mixture that is not a mêlée. Drawing on theoretical reflections on dislocation in architecture … 12 Mar 2019 11:00 - 12:00
Event Claudine Tiercelin The various " linguistic " and " cognitive " turning points in the twentieth century, their impasses, and the outline of a response in the terms of Peircian ontological and realist semiotics Lecture Abstract In the first lecture, we reminded you of the impasse reached in the 20th century by certain " tournants ", particularly in linguistics (semiology, structuralism, philosophy of language, phenomenology) and cognition, before indicating the three … 12 Mar 2019 10:00 - 12:00
Event Jean-Noël Robert The Auguste Loi Lecture Documents and media Download support … 12 Mar 2019 10:30 - 11:30
Event Jacques Prost Active Aspects of Membrane Physics Seminar Abstract J. Prost's seminar presented a general theory of the hydrodynamics of active membranes, with a view to their application in biology. The applications of these theories are very varied, ranging from the properties of cell membranes containing … 11 Mar 2019 17:15 - 18:15
Event Arnaud Fontanet Zika : the pact between mosquito and virus Lecture Abstract The Zika virus, named after the Ugandan forest where it was first identified in 1947, has long remained an exotic curiosity. Transmitted by Aedes mosquitoes, it circulates endemically in sub-Saharan Africa and Southeast Asia, and appears to be … 11 Mar 2019 17:00 - 18:00
Event Alexander Kuhn Wireless electrochemistry for micro- and nanotechnology applications Seminar Abstract In most cases, electrochemical conversion takes place in the conventional way, i.e. on the surface of electrodes that are connected to a source of electricity. However, there is an alternative way of triggering electrochemical processes remotely … 11 Mar 2019 17:30 - 18:30
Event Alain de Libera Deconstruction and reconstruction (end). Rewriting the history of medieval philosophy (6) Lecture Documents and media Download support … 11 Mar 2019 17:00 - 19:00