Share Facebook X (ex-Twitter) Linkedin Copy url Search results Search 22987 results Filters Content type Close Content type Content type (-) Lessons (22987) News (1490) People (1297) Chair (351) Editions (325) Page (226) Research (26) Library (14) Annual Chair (12) Award (6) Active filters Lessons Event Jean Dalibard Magnetic condensate at equilibrium Lecture 8 Mar 2024 09:30 - 11:00 Series AI and its challenges Philippe Aghion, chair Economics of Institutions, Innovation and Growth Symposium Access the live stream on the Campus de l'innovation pour les lycées YouTube channel Jointly organized by the Campus de l'Innovation pour les Lycées and Sciences Po, this symposium invites us to reflect on artificial intelligence and the many challenges … 28 Sep 2023 Event Helen Keller Scientific experts and judges - Not a dream team, more like a mismatch Seminar Abstract Most judges on international tribunals lack scientific expertise. In response, commentators have implored international tribunals to use their power to appoint independent experts. The rules of procedure of international human rights tribunals … 7 Mar 2024 14:30 - 16:00 Event Samantha Besson The human right to science (2) : scope, content and limits Lecture 7 Mar 2024 10:00 - 11:30 Event Frantz Grenet Non-Buddhist temples in Bactria and Sogdiana (continued). 2) New archaeological data on Sogdian oases (6) Lecture 7 Mar 2024 15:30 - 16:30 Event Laura Battini The origins of the world : theomachy as a cosmogonic phase in Mesopotamian thought Seminar Documents and media Download support … 7 Mar 2024 15:30 - 16:30 Event Louis Fensterbank Activations in Molecular Chemistry, an introduction Opening lecture Abstract Chemistry goes beyond simply observing and understanding nature. Through chemical synthesis, and using natural resources such as oil, coal and biomass, we can create valuable, unnatural organic molecules. Made up of a finite number of atoms … 7 Mar 2024 18:00 - 19:00 Event Thomas Römer " Their eyes were opened and they knew they were naked... " - Expulsion from the garden (Gn 3) Lecture Abstract Gn 3 contains the famous story of Adam and Eve's original sin in the Garden of Eden. Why are man and woman condemned, and what does this condemnation consist of ? Documents and media Download … 7 Mar 2024 14:00 - 15:00 Event Benoît Rossignol Climate change in Roman history Seminar Abstract Since 2000, advances in the natural sciences have led to increasingly precise knowledge of the climate and its spatial and temporal variations in Roman times. The question of the role of these variations in Roman history was quickly raised in … 7 Mar 2024 11:15 - 12:15 Event Kyle Harper Medieval climate Lecture Abstract The Middle Ages witnessed several distinct climatic cycles. Slow technological progress and population growth paved the way for a complex crisis at the end of the Middle Ages, in which climate and pandemics played a major … 7 Mar 2024 10:00 - 11:00 Event Matija Pretnar Effect Handlers and Mathematically Inspired Language Constructs Seminar Abstract Effect handlers are a programming language construct able to express and combine diverse computational features such as backtracking, stream redirection, multiple scheduling strategies, or continuations. This flexibility comes as no surprise … 7 Mar 2024 11:15 - 12:15 Event Xavier Leroy Typing and static analysis of effects Lecture Abstract Many programming languages use static typing to guarantee runtime safety properties such as the integrity of data structures prior to program execution. At the start of this seventh lecture, we showed how well-known type systems (simple types and … 7 Mar 2024 09:30 - 11:00 Event Jean-Luc Fournet Schools in monasteries (5) Lecture Lecture plan 2.2. Funny lecture rooms ! Or the empire of the school tag (continued) 2.2.1. Béni Hassan : a classroom among the dead... (continued) 2.2.2. An open-air classroom … 6 Mar 2024 11:00 - 12:00 Event Dario Mantovani Reading the works of jurists : Ulpian's De officio proconsulis (On the duties of the proconsul) (1) Seminar 6 Mar 2024 16:00 - 18:00 Event Dario Mantovani Saying something else to say law. Introduction to metaphors as a tool of thought in ancient Rome Lecture Abstract Metaphor is the transport of a word from its proper meaning to another meaning. It's a way of expressing one idea using a term that would normally refer to another. Sometimes it's a way of making speech more elegant. At other times, it's a … 6 Mar 2024 14:30 - 15:30 Event Anselme Cormier Pompeii : archaeology of ivory and bone Guest lecturer This conference is only available in audio. Abstract In Roman times, ivory was a highly prized luxury material. Its uses ranged from small, everyday instruments to decorations and even furniture and votive objects. The same was true of bone, a material … 18 Jan 2024 09:00 - 11:00 Event Christian Robert Approximate Bayesian calculation methods (ABC) Seminar Abstract Bayesian statistical inference generally requires simulations of the statistical model parameter from its posterior distribution , in order to approximate the integrals of interest by Monte Carlo. These simulations become tricky when the density … 6 Mar 2024 11:15 - 12:30 Event Stéphane Mallat Metropolis-Hasting algorithm Lecture The Metropolis-Hasting algorithm samples a probability distribution, defining an ergodic Markov chain, of which it is the only invariant measure. We begin by introducing the main properties of the transition probabilities of a Markov chain, which define a … 6 Mar 2024 09:30 - 11:00 Event Patrick Boucheron Decoding courtly love (12th-13th centuries) Lecture Abstract Written in the last quarter of the twelfth century, André le Chapelain's De amore was long considered the code of courtly love. Questioning the very notion of a love code to characterize a literary movement and a lifestyle, we undertake to … 5 Mar 2024 11:00 - 12:00 Event Maxime Decout How and why do you misread ? Seminar Abstract To study misreading is to understand a deviation from the norms of reading generally described in literary studies. It's about what the reader does or can do with the text. Bad reading is not the same as failed reading : dysfunctions can be … 5 Mar 2024 18:00 - 19:00 Event William Marx Proust and disappointing reading Lecture Documents and media Download support Abstract Even if John Ruskin wanted to find in works of art a moral and spiritual value capable of elevating the soul, there is in him a valorization of sensation as such, which explains Marcel Proust's interest in his … 5 Mar 2024 17:00 - 18:00 Event Claudine Tiercelin Skepticism and knowledge (continued) (3) Lecture 5 Mar 2024 14:00 - 16:00 Event Dominique Charpin Evidence (1) : written and testimonial evidence Lecture 4 Mar 2024 11:00 - 12:00 Event Gabriel Neurohr Regulation and Relevance of Cytoplasm Density Seminar Abstract The overall concentration of macromolecules tightly regulated but can change between cell types and environmental conditions. I will talk about, or efforts to elucidate, how cytoplasm density is controlled and alterations in overall macromolecule … 4 Mar 2024 16:15 - 17:15 Pagination First page Previous page … Page 65 Page 66 Page 67 Page 68 Current page 69 Page 70 Page 71 Page 72 Page 73 … Next page Last page
Series AI and its challenges Philippe Aghion, chair Economics of Institutions, Innovation and Growth Symposium Access the live stream on the Campus de l'innovation pour les lycées YouTube channel Jointly organized by the Campus de l'Innovation pour les Lycées and Sciences Po, this symposium invites us to reflect on artificial intelligence and the many challenges … 28 Sep 2023
Event Helen Keller Scientific experts and judges - Not a dream team, more like a mismatch Seminar Abstract Most judges on international tribunals lack scientific expertise. In response, commentators have implored international tribunals to use their power to appoint independent experts. The rules of procedure of international human rights tribunals … 7 Mar 2024 14:30 - 16:00
Event Samantha Besson The human right to science (2) : scope, content and limits Lecture 7 Mar 2024 10:00 - 11:30
Event Frantz Grenet Non-Buddhist temples in Bactria and Sogdiana (continued). 2) New archaeological data on Sogdian oases (6) Lecture 7 Mar 2024 15:30 - 16:30
Event Laura Battini The origins of the world : theomachy as a cosmogonic phase in Mesopotamian thought Seminar Documents and media Download support … 7 Mar 2024 15:30 - 16:30
Event Louis Fensterbank Activations in Molecular Chemistry, an introduction Opening lecture Abstract Chemistry goes beyond simply observing and understanding nature. Through chemical synthesis, and using natural resources such as oil, coal and biomass, we can create valuable, unnatural organic molecules. Made up of a finite number of atoms … 7 Mar 2024 18:00 - 19:00
Event Thomas Römer " Their eyes were opened and they knew they were naked... " - Expulsion from the garden (Gn 3) Lecture Abstract Gn 3 contains the famous story of Adam and Eve's original sin in the Garden of Eden. Why are man and woman condemned, and what does this condemnation consist of ? Documents and media Download … 7 Mar 2024 14:00 - 15:00
Event Benoît Rossignol Climate change in Roman history Seminar Abstract Since 2000, advances in the natural sciences have led to increasingly precise knowledge of the climate and its spatial and temporal variations in Roman times. The question of the role of these variations in Roman history was quickly raised in … 7 Mar 2024 11:15 - 12:15
Event Kyle Harper Medieval climate Lecture Abstract The Middle Ages witnessed several distinct climatic cycles. Slow technological progress and population growth paved the way for a complex crisis at the end of the Middle Ages, in which climate and pandemics played a major … 7 Mar 2024 10:00 - 11:00
Event Matija Pretnar Effect Handlers and Mathematically Inspired Language Constructs Seminar Abstract Effect handlers are a programming language construct able to express and combine diverse computational features such as backtracking, stream redirection, multiple scheduling strategies, or continuations. This flexibility comes as no surprise … 7 Mar 2024 11:15 - 12:15
Event Xavier Leroy Typing and static analysis of effects Lecture Abstract Many programming languages use static typing to guarantee runtime safety properties such as the integrity of data structures prior to program execution. At the start of this seventh lecture, we showed how well-known type systems (simple types and … 7 Mar 2024 09:30 - 11:00
Event Jean-Luc Fournet Schools in monasteries (5) Lecture Lecture plan 2.2. Funny lecture rooms ! Or the empire of the school tag (continued) 2.2.1. Béni Hassan : a classroom among the dead... (continued) 2.2.2. An open-air classroom … 6 Mar 2024 11:00 - 12:00
Event Dario Mantovani Reading the works of jurists : Ulpian's De officio proconsulis (On the duties of the proconsul) (1) Seminar 6 Mar 2024 16:00 - 18:00
Event Dario Mantovani Saying something else to say law. Introduction to metaphors as a tool of thought in ancient Rome Lecture Abstract Metaphor is the transport of a word from its proper meaning to another meaning. It's a way of expressing one idea using a term that would normally refer to another. Sometimes it's a way of making speech more elegant. At other times, it's a … 6 Mar 2024 14:30 - 15:30
Event Anselme Cormier Pompeii : archaeology of ivory and bone Guest lecturer This conference is only available in audio. Abstract In Roman times, ivory was a highly prized luxury material. Its uses ranged from small, everyday instruments to decorations and even furniture and votive objects. The same was true of bone, a material … 18 Jan 2024 09:00 - 11:00
Event Christian Robert Approximate Bayesian calculation methods (ABC) Seminar Abstract Bayesian statistical inference generally requires simulations of the statistical model parameter from its posterior distribution , in order to approximate the integrals of interest by Monte Carlo. These simulations become tricky when the density … 6 Mar 2024 11:15 - 12:30
Event Stéphane Mallat Metropolis-Hasting algorithm Lecture The Metropolis-Hasting algorithm samples a probability distribution, defining an ergodic Markov chain, of which it is the only invariant measure. We begin by introducing the main properties of the transition probabilities of a Markov chain, which define a … 6 Mar 2024 09:30 - 11:00
Event Patrick Boucheron Decoding courtly love (12th-13th centuries) Lecture Abstract Written in the last quarter of the twelfth century, André le Chapelain's De amore was long considered the code of courtly love. Questioning the very notion of a love code to characterize a literary movement and a lifestyle, we undertake to … 5 Mar 2024 11:00 - 12:00
Event Maxime Decout How and why do you misread ? Seminar Abstract To study misreading is to understand a deviation from the norms of reading generally described in literary studies. It's about what the reader does or can do with the text. Bad reading is not the same as failed reading : dysfunctions can be … 5 Mar 2024 18:00 - 19:00
Event William Marx Proust and disappointing reading Lecture Documents and media Download support Abstract Even if John Ruskin wanted to find in works of art a moral and spiritual value capable of elevating the soul, there is in him a valorization of sensation as such, which explains Marcel Proust's interest in his … 5 Mar 2024 17:00 - 18:00
Event Dominique Charpin Evidence (1) : written and testimonial evidence Lecture 4 Mar 2024 11:00 - 12:00
Event Gabriel Neurohr Regulation and Relevance of Cytoplasm Density Seminar Abstract The overall concentration of macromolecules tightly regulated but can change between cell types and environmental conditions. I will talk about, or efforts to elucidate, how cytoplasm density is controlled and alterations in overall macromolecule … 4 Mar 2024 16:15 - 17:15