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Professor Karl Friston is one of the most highly cited living neuroscientists in history. He is Professor of Neuroscience at King's College London and holds Honorary Doctorates from the University of Zurich, University of York and Radboud University. He is the world expert on brain imaging, neuroscience, and theoretical neurobiology, and pioneers the Free-Energy Principle for action and perception, with well-over 300,000 citations. Friston was elected a Fellow of the Academy of Medical Sciences (1999). In 2000 he was President of the international Organization of Human Brain Mapping. He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 2006. He became a Fellow of the Royal Society of Biology in 2012 and was elected as a member of EMBO (excellence in the life sciences) in 2014 and the Academia Europaea in (2015). Lecture Title: "Emotions and the Free Energy Principle of Brain Function." EPISODE LINKS: - Karl's Round 1: https://youtu.be/Kb5X8xOWgpc - Karl's Round 2: https://youtu.be/mqzyKs2Qvug - Karl's Lecture 1: https://youtu.be/Gp9Sqvx4H7w - Karl's Website: https://www.fil.ion.ucl.ac.uk/~karl/ - Karl's Books: https://tinyurl.com/2s4e9rsk - Karl's Publications: https://tinyurl.com/y3jw534u - Karl's Wiki: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Karl_J._Friston CONNECT:- Website: https://tevinnaidu.com - Podcast: https://creators.spotify.com/pod/show/mindbodysolution- YouTube: https://youtube.com/mindbodysolution- Twitter: https://twitter.com/drtevinnaidu- Facebook: https://facebook.com/drtevinnaidu - Instagram: https://instagram.com/drtevinnaidu- LinkedIn: https://linkedin.com/in/drtevinnaidu ============================= Disclaimer: The information provided on this channel is for educational purposes only. The content is shared in the spirit of open discourse and does not constitute, nor does it substitute, professional or medical advice. We do not accept any liability for any loss or damage incurred from you acting or not acting as a result of listening/watching any of our contents. You acknowledge that you use the information provided at your own risk. Listeners/viewers are advised to conduct their own research and consult with their own experts in the respective fields. Special thanks to Karl for allowing me to share this lecture presented at the Brazilian Neuroscience Conference.
Professor Karl Friston is one of the most highly cited living neuroscientists in history. He is Professor of Neuroscience at King's College London and holds Honorary Doctorates from the University of Zurich, University of York and Radboud University. He is the world expert on brain imaging, neuroscience, and theoretical neurobiology, and pioneers the Free-Energy Principle for action and perception, with well-over 300,000 citations. Friston was elected a Fellow of the Academy of Medical Sciences (1999). In 2000 he was President of the international Organization of Human Brain Mapping. He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 2006. He became a Fellow of the Royal Society of Biology in 2012 and was elected as a member of EMBO (excellence in the life sciences) in 2014 and the Academia Europaea in (2015). Lecture Title: "Certainties and surprises in our daily lives: the brain as a prediction machine." Special thanks to Karl for allowing me to share this lecture with the MBS audience. EPISODE LINKS: - Karl's Round 1: https://youtu.be/Kb5X8xOWgpc - Karl's Round 2: https://youtu.be/mqzyKs2Qvug - Karl's Website: https://www.fil.ion.ucl.ac.uk/~karl/ - Karl's Books: https://tinyurl.com/2s4e9rsk - Karl's Publications: https://tinyurl.com/y3jw534u - Karl's Wiki: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Karl_J._Friston CONNECT: - Website: https://tevinnaidu.com/ - Podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/drtevinnaidu - Twitter: https://twitter.com/drtevinnaidu/ - Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/drtevinnaidu - Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/drtevinnaidu/ - LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/drtevinnaidu/ ============================= Disclaimer: The information provided on this channel is for educational purposes only. The content is shared in the spirit of open discourse and does not constitute, nor does it substitute, professional or medical advice. We do not accept any liability for any loss or damage incurred from you acting or not acting as a result of listening/watching any of our contents. You acknowledge that you use the information provided at your own risk. Listeners/viewers are advised to conduct their own research and consult with their own experts in the respective fields.
WATCH: https://youtu.be/Gp9Sqvx4H7w Professor Karl Friston is one of the most highly cited living neuroscientists in history. He is Professor of Neuroscience at King's College London and holds Honorary Doctorates from the University of Zurich, University of York and Radboud University. He is the world expert on brain imaging, neuroscience, and theoretical neurobiology, and pioneers the Free-Energy Principle for action and perception, with well-over 300,000 citations. Friston was elected a Fellow of the Academy of Medical Sciences (1999). In 2000 he was President of the international Organization of Human Brain Mapping. He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 2006. He became a Fellow of the Royal Society of Biology in 2012 and was elected as a member of EMBO (excellence in the life sciences) in 2014 and the Academia Europaea in (2015). Lecture Title: "Certainties and surprises in our daily lives: the brain as a prediction machine." EPISODE LINKS: - Karl's Round 1: https://youtu.be/Kb5X8xOWgpc - Karl's Round 2: https://youtu.be/mqzyKs2Qvug - Karl's Website: https://www.fil.ion.ucl.ac.uk/~karl/ - Karl's Books: https://tinyurl.com/2s4e9rsk - Karl's Publications: https://tinyurl.com/y3jw534u - Karl's Wiki: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Karl_J._Friston CONNECT: - Website: https://tevinnaidu.com/ - Podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/drtevinnaidu - Twitter: https://twitter.com/drtevinnaidu/ - Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/drtevinnaidu - Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/drtevinnaidu/ - LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/drtevinnaidu/ ============================= Disclaimer: The information provided on this channel is for educational purposes only. The content is shared in the spirit of open discourse and does not constitute, nor does it substitute, professional or medical advice. We do not accept any liability for any loss or damage incurred from you acting or not acting as a result of listening/watching any of our contents. You acknowledge that you use the information provided at your own risk. Listeners/viewers are advised to conduct their own research and consult with their own experts in the respective fields.
Join us as we delve into the explosive world of volcanoes with one of the world's leading volcanologists, Prof. Tamsin Mather. As a professor of earth sciences at the University of Oxford and an atmospheric chemist, Tamsin's work has significantly advanced our understanding of volcanic activity. She shares fascinating insights into what volcanoes are, how they form, and the complex processes that lead to their eruptions. Tamsin also discusses her newly published book, *ADVENTURES IN VOLCANOLAND*, which explores what volcanoes reveal about our world and ourselves.In our conversation, Tamsin recounts her unexpected journey into the field of volcanology, beginning with a childhood visit to Mount Vesuvius. She explains the intricate science behind volcanic eruptions, describing the role of magma, tectonic plates, and the various types of volcanic activity found across the globe. From the fiery eruptions of Mount Etna to the unique carbonate volcanoes of Tanzania, Tamsin provides a captivating look at the diverse phenomena that define volcanic landscapes. Her passion for combining fieldwork with scientific research shines through as she shares stories from her expeditions and the cutting-edge techniques used to study these powerful natural events.Learn the critical role volcanoes play in shaping our planet and the ongoing research aimed at predicting eruptions and mitigating their impacts. Tamsin's expertise offers a unique perspective on the global effects of volcanic activity, including their influence on the environment and potential for providing essential resources. Whether you're a science enthusiast or simply curious about the wonders of our world, this episode promises to be an enlightening and engaging exploration of the dynamic forces beneath our feet.About Prof. Tamsin Mather:Tamsin Mather is a British volcanologist. She is Professor of Earth Sciences at the Department of Earth Sciences, University of Oxford and a Fellow of University College, Oxford. Tamsin was born and raised in Bristol, UK and has masters degrees in Chemistry and the History and Philosophy of Science from St John's College, University of Cambridge. She completed her PhD in 2004 on the ‘Near-source chemistry of tropospheric volcanic plumes' in the Department of Earth Sciences also at the University of Cambridge. Before joining Oxford Tamsin was a NERC fellow at the Parliamentary Office of Science and Technology and a Royal Society Dorothy Hodgkin research fellow. She has won numerous awards for her scientific work including the Royal Society Rosalind Franklin Award and election to the Academia Europaea and as a Geochemistry Fellow. She regularly participates in events promoting the public understanding of science and TV, radio and podcasts, including the Infinite Monkey Cage on BBC Radio 4. Her debut non-fiction book ADVENTURES IN VOLCANOLAND is published by Abacus (UK) and Hanover Square Press (US) in 2024.Prof. Tamsin Mather's links;https://www.earth.ox.ac.uk/people/mather/https://x.com/tamsinmatherLink to ADVENTURES IN VOLCANOLANDUndercurrent Stories links:https://linktr.ee/undercurrentstoriesIntro and outro music, 'Time for a Coffee' Bob Wells © 2020Question or comment? Send us a text message.www.undercurrentstories.com
rozmowa w języku angielskim: Thanks to Academia Europaea and Politechnika Wroclawska, we had a unique chance to talk about complex systems - such as oceans, waves and currents with Professor Frédéric Dias from University College Dublin, who is an expert in this peculiar and interesting topic. Why somebody want to study this area of science, what skills do you need to be good engineer, what's are some real life applications of theoretical studies and how Professor make long journey from civic engineering through soil mechanic to ocean waves – this and much more you can find out from this podcast so we invite you to listen!
"Aramäisch – Die Sprache Jesu" – Holger Gzella spricht mit Uwe Kullnick über die Weltsprache des Altertums – Histothek Einführung Holger Gzella (Hördauer ca. 13 min) Gespräch zwischen Holger Gzella, Matthias Pöhlmann und Uwe Kullnick (Hördauer ca. 62 min) Moderation Uwe Kullnick, Ko-Moderation Matthias Pöhlmann DIE ERSTE WELTSPRACHE - EINE KULTURGESCHICHTEDie aramäische Sprache ist ein Wunder: Ganz ohne militärische Eroberungen wurde sie im ersten Jahrtausend v. Chr. zur Verwaltungssprache des persischen Großreichs und damit zur ersten Weltsprache überhaupt. Holger Gzella, weltweit einer der besten Kenner des Aramäischen, erklärt, warum sich Sprache und Schrift eines politisch unbedeutenden Territoriums von Nordafrika bis Indien durchsetzten konnte und wie es zu einem zweiten Wunder kam: In der Weltsprache Aramäisch wurden Schriften mit einer universalen Botschaft verfasst, die aus lokalen Kulten die ersten Weltreligionen machten. Das anschaulich geschriebene Buch lässt auf faszinierende Weise das unsichtbare Gewebe erkennen, das die Kultur des Altertums geprägt hat und die großen Religionen bis heute verbindet. Holger Gzella ist Ordinarius für Alttestamentliche Theologie an der Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München. Er gehört weltweit zu den renommiertesten Experten für die aramäische Sprache, hatte von 2005 bis 2019 den Lehrstuhl für Hebräisch und Aramäisch an der Universität Leiden inne und ist Ordentliches Mitglied der Academia Europaea sowie der Königlich-Niederländischen Akademie der Wissenschaften. Wenn Ihnen dieser Beitrag gefallen hat, hören Sie doch auch einmal hier hinein oder vielleicht in diese Sendung Kommen Sie doch auch einfach mal zu unseren Live-Aufzeichnungen ins Pixel (Gasteig) oder nach Schwabing (Georgenstr. 63) Tonbearbeitung Jupp Stepprath, Redaktion und Realisation Uwe Kullnick --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/hoerbahn/message
Professor Karl Friston is one of the most highly cited living neuroscientists in history. He is Professor of Neuroscience at King's College London and holds Honorary Doctorates from the University of Zurich, University of York and Radboud University. He is the world expert on brain imaging, neuroscience, and theoretical neurobiology, and pioneers the Free-Energy Principle for action and perception, with well-over 300,000 citations. Friston was elected a Fellow of the Academy of Medical Sciences (1999). In 2000 he was President of the international Organization of Human Brain Mapping. He was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 2006. He became a Fellow of the Royal Society of Biology in 2012 and was elected as a member of EMBO (excellence in the life sciences) in 2014 and the Academia Europaea in (2015). TIMESTAMPS: (0:00) - Introduction (5:19) - The Meaning of Life (9:18) - How Does Death Shape Life? Mortal Computation (23:22) - Real World Examples of Mortal Computers (Micro to Cosmic) (36:28) - Stephen Grossberg (Adaptive Resonance Theory) (52:01) - Synaptopathy, Bayesian Brains, & Mental Health (1:12:48) - Psychiatric Implications (1:25:01) - Andy Clark (5E Theory) (1:30:43) - Mark Solms (Felt Uncertainty Theory) (1:39:10) - Michael Levin & Chris Fields & Richard Watson (Diverse Intelligence Field) (1:44:08) - Gerald Edelman (1:47:03) - Anil Seth (Awesome Story) (1:50:14) - Book & Author Recommendations (1:54:55) - Conclusion EPISODE LINKS: - Karl's Round 1: https://youtu.be/Kb5X8xOWgpc - Karl's Website: https://www.fil.ion.ucl.ac.uk/~karl/ - Karl's Books: https://tinyurl.com/2s4e9rsk - Karl's Publications: https://tinyurl.com/y3jw534u - Karl's Wiki: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Karl_J._Friston CONNECT: - Website: https://tevinnaidu.com/ - Podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/drtevinnaidu - Twitter: https://twitter.com/drtevinnaidu/ - Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/drtevinnaidu - Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/drtevinnaidu/ - LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/drtevinnaidu/ ============================= Disclaimer: The information provided on this channel is for educational purposes only. The content is shared in the spirit of open discourse and does not constitute, nor does it substitute, professional or medical advice. We do not accept any liability for any loss or damage incurred from you acting or not acting as a result of listening/watching any of our contents. You acknowledge that you use the information provided at your own risk. Listeners/viewers are advised to conduct their own research and consult with their own experts in the respective fields. #KarlFriston #Life #Death #FreeEnergyPrinciple
Interview with Professor Marek Tamm on the subject: What do Estonians remember of their past, i.e. not about Estonian history, but about Estonian mnemohistory? Marek Tamm is the Professor of Cultural History at the School of Humanities in Tallinn University. He is a member of the Estonian Academy of Sciences and of the Academia Europaea. Graduated in history and semiotics at the University of Tartu (1998), he earned his master's degree in medieval studies from the Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales in Paris (School of Advanced Studies in Social Sciences) (1999) and his doctorate in medieval history from Tallinn University (2009). He is the editor-in-chief of the Estonian history journal Acta Historica Tallinnensia and the editor of the Journal of the Philosophy of History. His primary research fields are cultural history of medieval Europe, theory and history of historiography, digital history, and cultural memory studies. Author or co-author of ten books, of a hundred scholarly articles published in Estonian, English, German, and French, and editor of more than thirty collections of articles or special issues.
------------------Support the channel------------ Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/thedissenter PayPal: paypal.me/thedissenter PayPal Subscription 3 Dollars: https://tinyurl.com/ybn6bg9l PayPal Subscription 5 Dollars: https://tinyurl.com/ycmr9gpz PayPal Subscription 10 Dollars: https://tinyurl.com/y9r3fc9m PayPal Subscription 20 Dollars: https://tinyurl.com/y95uvkao ------------------Follow me on--------------------- Twitter: https://twitter.com/TheDissenterYT This show is sponsored by Enlites, Learning & Development done differently. Check the website here: http://enlites.com/ Dr. Michela Massimi is Professor of Philosophy of Science in the Department of Philosophy at the University of Edinburgh, affiliated with the Higgs Centre for Theoretical Physics. She works in the area of history and philosophy of science with a focus on the physical sciences. She is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh, the Royal Astronomical Society, corresponding Member of the Académie Internationale de Philosophie des Sciences and elected Member of the Academia Europaea. Dr. Massimi is the recipient of the Royal Society's Wilkins-Bernal-Medawar Medal and Lecture 2017 for her interdisciplinary work and communication of philosophy of science, especially modern physics. Dr. Massimi is the author of several books, including Perspectival Realism. In this episode, we focus on Perspectival Realism. We talk about realism in science, the “scientific perspective”, and the perspectival nature in scientific representation. We discuss pluralism in science. We talk about perspectival modelling, and the problem of inconsistent models. We discuss data, phenomena, and their relationship. We talk about natural kinds, and contingentism. Finally, we discuss multiculturalism and cosmopolitanism in science, and if science is really about knowing what objective reality is. -- A HUGE THANK YOU TO MY PATRONS/SUPPORTERS: PER HELGE LARSEN, JERRY MULLER, HANS FREDRIK SUNDE, BERNARDO SEIXAS, OLAF ALEX, ADAM KESSEL, MATTHEW WHITINGBIRD, ARNAUD WOLFF, TIM HOLLOSY, HENRIK AHLENIUS, JOHN CONNORS, FILIP FORS CONNOLLY, DAN DEMETRIOU, ROBERT WINDHAGER, RUI INACIO, ZOOP, MARCO NEVES, COLIN HOLBROOK, PHIL KAVANAGH, MIKKEL STORMYR, SAMUEL ANDREEFF, FRANCIS FORDE, TIAGO NUNES, FERGAL CUSSEN, HAL HERZOG, NUNO MACHADO, JONATHAN LEIBRANT, JOÃO LINHARES, STANTON T, SAMUEL CORREA, ERIK HAINES, MARK SMITH, JOÃO EIRA, TOM HUMMEL, SARDUS FRANCE, DAVID SLOAN WILSON, YACILA DEZA-ARAUJO, ROMAIN ROCH, DIEGO LONDOÑO CORREA, YANICK PUNTER, ADANER USMANI, CHARLOTTE BLEASE, NICOLE BARBARO, ADAM HUNT, PAWEL OSTASZEWSKI, NELLEKE BAK, GUY MADISON, GARY G HELLMANN, SAIMA AFZAL, ADRIAN JAEGGI, PAULO TOLENTINO, JOÃO BARBOSA, JULIAN PRICE, EDWARD HALL, HEDIN BRØNNER, DOUGLAS FRY, FRANCA BORTOLOTTI, GABRIEL PONS CORTÈS, URSULA LITZCKE, SCOTT, ZACHARY FISH, TIM DUFFY, SUNNY SMITH, JON WISMAN, DANIEL FRIEDMAN, WILLIAM BUCKNER, PAUL-GEORGE ARNAUD, LUKE GLOWACKI, GEORGIOS THEOPHANOUS, CHRIS WILLIAMSON, PETER WOLOSZYN, DAVID WILLIAMS, DIOGO COSTA, ANTON ERIKSSON, CHARLES MOREY, ALEX CHAU, AMAURI MARTÍNEZ, CORALIE CHEVALLIER, BANGALORE ATHEISTS, LARRY D. LEE JR., OLD HERRINGBONE, STARRY, MICHAEL BAILEY, DAN SPERBER, ROBERT GRESSIS, IGOR N, JEFF MCMAHAN, JAKE ZUEHL, BARNABAS RADICS, MARK CAMPBELL, TOMAS DAUBNER, LUKE NISSEN, CHRIS STORY, KIMBERLY JOHNSON, BENJAMIN GELBART, JESSICA NOWICKI, LINDA BRANDIN, NIKLAS CARLSSON, ISMAËL BENSLIMANE, GEORGE CHORIATIS, VALENTIN STEINMANN, PER KRAULIS, KATE VON GOELER, ALEXANDER HUBBARD, LIAM DUNAWAY, BR, MASOUD ALIMOHAMMADI, PURPENDICULAR, JONAS HERTNER, URSULA GOODENOUGH, GREGORY HASTINGS, DAVID PINSOF, SEAN NELSON, AND MIKE LAVIGNE! A SPECIAL THANKS TO MY PRODUCERS, YZAR WEHBE, JIM FRANK, ŁUKASZ STAFINIAK, TOM VANEGDOM, BERNARD HUGUENEY, CURTIS DIXON, BENEDIKT MUELLER, THOMAS TRUMBLE, KATHRINE AND PATRICK TOBIN, JONCARLO MONTENEGRO, AL NICK ORTIZ, AND NICK GOLDEN! AND TO MY EXECUTIVE PRODUCERS, MATTHEW LAVENDER, SERGIU CODREANU, BOGDAN KANIVETS, AND ROSEY!
Chair Professor and Dean of Research & Innovation joins host Sue Rocco for a conversation about why she wanted to leave her rural town in the south of France, how she discovered her calling in research, and how she dealt with gender bias that she faced in school and among her peers.Sylvie Lorente, Associate Dean for Research & Innovation in the College of Engineering at Villanova University, shared the story behind her title with us on September 6, 2023.Sylvie is also a Professor (Exceptional Class) at the National Institute of Applied Sciences (INSA), University of Toulouse, France. In 2019, she joined Villanova University where she holds the position of College of Engineering Chair Professor in the department of Mechanical Engineering.She was appointed Hung Hing-Ying Distinguished Visiting Professorship in Science and Technology at Hong Kong University (Hong Kong) in 2017. Sylvie Lorente is also an Extraordinary Professor at the University of Pretoria (South Africa), and an Adjunct Professor at Duke University, USA. She is a member of the Academia Europaea.She is editor of the International Communications in Heat and Mass Transfer and a member of several other editorial boards. Sylvie Lorente has a passion for flow architectures and works on thermal design, energy storage, vascularized structures, porous media, biological flow networks, urban design, and organisations. Together with her group, she uncovers the engineered and biological hierarchical flow pathways that endow complex systems with efficient properties and behaviors. She is the author of 7 books, 10 book chapters, and 200+ peer-reviewed international journal papers. She is listed amongst the 2% most cited scientists worldwide.Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/women-to-watch-r/donationsAdvertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
WATCH: https://youtu.be/Kb5X8xOWgpc Professor Karl Friston is one of the greatest neuroscientists in history. He is Professor of Neuroscience at King's College London and holds Honorary Doctorates from the University of Zurich, University of York and Radboud University. He is the world expert on brain imaging, neuroscience, and theoretical neurobiology, and pioneers the Free-Energy Principle for action and perception, with well-over 300,000 citations. Friston received the first Young Investigators Award in Human Brain Mapping (1996) and was elected a Fellow of the Academy of Medical Sciences (1999). In 2000 he was President of the international Organization of Human Brain Mapping. In 2003 he was awarded the Minerva Golden Brain Award and was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 2006. He became of Fellow of the Royal Society of Biology in 2012, received the Weldon Memorial prize and Medal in 2013 for contributions to mathematical biology and was elected as a member of EMBO (excellence in the life sciences) in 2014 and the Academia Europaea in (2015). He was the 2016 recipient of the Charles Branch Award for unparalleled breakthroughs in Brain Research and the Glass Brain Award - a lifetime achievement award in the field of human brain mapping. EPISODE LINKS: - Karl's Website: https://www.fil.ion.ucl.ac.uk/~karl/ - Karl's Books: https://www.amazon.co.uk/Books-Karl-J-Friston/s?rh=n%3A266239%2Cp_27%3AKarl+J.+Friston - Karl's Publications: https://scholar.google.co.uk/citations?user=q_4u0aoAAAAJ&hl=en - Karl's Wiki: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Karl_J._Friston CONNECT: - Website: https://tevinnaidu.com - Instagram: https://instagram.com/drtevinnaidu - Facebook: https://facebook.com/drtevinnaidu - Twitter: https://twitter.com/drtevinnaidu - LinkedIn: https://linkedin.com/in/drtevinnaidu TIMESTAMPS: (0:00) - Introduction (0:47) - I am, Therefore I Think (212) - Free Energy Principle (FEP), Bayesian Brain & Active Inference (6:19) - FEP Formalism & Being a Polymath (12:10) - Computational Psychiatry & Psychopathology (18:01) - Psychosis & Illusions (Priors vs Posteriors) (24:33) - Does FEP defend Illusionism? (31:49) - What is Consciousness? (44:55) - Working with Chris Frith & Mark Solms (51:38) - Markov Blankets (57:22) - Using Markov Blankets to understand Neural Networks (1:07:08) - Work of Chris Fields, Michael Levin and others (1:10:58) - Bridging the Gap (Multidisciplinary Approaches) (1:14:26) - Potential hindrances to identifying Markov blankets (1:2027) - Future of FEP (3 Directions of Travel) (1:30:22) - Markov Blankets, The Self & Free Will (1:35:41) - Meaning of Life (1:42:44) - Who Inspires Karl Friston? (Helmholtz & Feynman) (1:53:52) - Will Karl ever write an "easy read"? (1:56:52) - Karl's recommended reading (2:01:09) - Conclusion Website · YouTube
Innovation technologique Liliane Bettencourt (2022-2023) - Lydéric BocquetCollège de FranceAnnée 2022-2023Colloque - La nanofluidique à la croisée des chemins : Computer Explorations of Soft Flowing MatterMajor progress in experimental micro-nanofluidics over the last decades has spawned the opportunity to explore new states of droplet-based soft flowing matter, such as microfluidic crystals, high-density confined emulsions, bijels, as well as various types of soft granular flows. These novel states of soft matter raise fundamental challenges to non-equilibrium statistical physics mostly on account of strong nonlinear and nonlocal effects, which set their mechanical and rheological properties far apart from those of the three fundamental states of matter (solid,liquid and gas) they are made of. In this talk, I shall present selected computer simulations and machine-learning algorithms which help shedding light into these fascinating states of soft flowing matter and lay the ground for future applications in science and engineering.Sauro SucciDr Succi holds a degree in Nuclear Engineering from the University of Bologna and a PhD in plasma physics from the Ecole Polytechnique Federale de Lausanne. He currently serves as Senior Research Executive and Principal Investigator at the Center for Life Nano-Neuro Sciences at la Sapienza of the Italian Institute of Technology. He is also a Research Affiliate of the Physics Department of Harvard University and a Honorary Professor at the University College London. His research activity covers a broad range of topics related to complex states of flowing matter, such as thermonuclear plasmas, fluid turbulence, micro and nanofluidics, soft matter as well as quantum and subnuclear fluids. He is best known for his contributions to the early inception, development and application of the Lattice Boltzmann method, for which he has received a number of international awards, including the APS 2017 Aneesur Rahman Prize in Computational Physics, the 2019 CECAM Berni Alder Prize for exceptional contributions to the microscopic simulation of matter. He is an elected member of Academia Europaea (2015) and in 2017 he has been awarded the ERC-AdG "Computational design of mesoscale porous materials".
In episode 21, we chat with Professor Ian Robertson about the science and neuroscience behind confidence. If you have confidence, it can empower you to reach heights you never thought possible. But if you don't, it can have a devastating effect on your future. Confidence lies at the core of what makes things happen. Probing the science and neuroscience behind confidence that has emerged over the last decade, clinical psychologist and neuroscientist Professor Ian Robertson tells us how confidence plays out in our minds, our brains and indeed our bodies. He explains where it comes from and how it spreads. And why it's not necessarily something you are born with, but something that can be learned. We discuss: How our upbringing impacts our confidence The science behind confidence The ‘can do' and ‘can happen' matrix Our imagination is the Chief Operating Officer of confidence Why women face more issues with self-confidence than men. From the science behind confidence to practical tips for boosting self-assurance, this episode is a must-listen for anyone looking to improve their mindset and achieve their goals And in let's take this offline, Annette Sloan and I break down the three biggest takeaways, plus we answer a question from our listener Shane, who's company has been partnered with another company for a major project and both have very differing views. Get in touch: Cathal@betteratwork.com.au or https://betteratwork.com.au Get in touch on Instagram: @betteratwork_ Get in touch on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/cathal-quinlan/ Send us a question or leave us a voicemail: https://betteratwork.com.au/contact-us/ About Guest Ian Robertson is an Emeritus Professor of Psychology at Trinity College Dublin and Co-Director of the Global Brain Health Institute. He is also the T Boone Pickens Distinguished Scientist at the Center for BrainHealth at the University of Texas at Dallas and is a Member of Academia Europaea, as well as being a trained clinical psychologist and neuroscientist. Website: https://ianrobertson.org/ LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/ian-robertson-4480502/ Book: https://ianrobertson.org/product/how-confidence-works-the-new-science-of-self-belief-and-why-some-people-learn-it-and-others-dontSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Critical mineral exploration will play a key role in human development and progress. The April 2023 special section of The Leading Edge focuses on the issue of critical minerals from the perspective of recent progress in mining exploration and anticipated future needs as the global energy economy transitions to higher use of, and reliance on, renewables. In this conversation with host Andrew Geary, Dr. Alan Jones defines critical minerals and how and why each country defines them differently. He explains why the public has a dim view of mining and what we can learn from China's long-term mineral vision. He elaborates on the valuable role of copper in utilizing electric vehicles and why we still don't understand the planet we live on. Alan also makes a case for why we must inspire young minds with the possibilities of critical minerals exploration. Do you want to be part of the future of humanity? This is the question at the center of this can't miss episode. Listen to the full archive at https://seg.org/podcast. RELATED LINKS * Chester J. Weiss and Alan G. Jones, (2023), "Introduction to this special section: Critical minerals exploration," The Leading Edge 42: 236–236. (https://doi.org/10.1190/tle42040236.1) * Alan G. Jones, (2023), "Mining for net zero: The impossible task," The Leading Edge 42: 266–276. (https://doi.org/10.1190/tle42040266.1) * Read the April 2023 special section: Critical minerals exploration. (https://library.seg.org/toc/leedff/42/4) Subscribers can read the full articles at https://library.seg.org/, and abstracts are always free. BIOGRAPHY Alan G. Jones is currently Senior Professor Emeritus at the Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies, a Specially-Appointed Professor at the China University of Geosciences Beijing, and Adjunct Professor at Macquarie University and at the University of Western Australia. In addition, upon his retirement he formed an MT consulting company - Complete MT Solutions Inc. - with former students and a colleague in 2016. Alan was awarded the Tuzo Wilson medal of the Canadian Geophysical Union in 2006, was Appointed an International Member of the Geo-Electromagnetism Committee, Chinese Geophysical Society in 2009, was elected to Academia Europaea also in 2009 and was made a Member of the Royal Irish Academy in 2010. He was a Blaustein Visiting Professor at Stanford University for the Winter Term of 2016, and was appointed a Life Affiliate Member of the Geological Society of South Africa in 2016. In 2019 he was elected a Fellow of the American Geophysical Union. Alan is the most published (almost 200 papers) and most cited (over 13,500 citations) scientist in his chosen field of magnetotellurics. Together with Alan Chave, he published the most authoritative textbook to date on MT - The Magnetotelluric Method: Theory and Practice (Cambridge University Press). He is a qualified Professional Geoscientist accredited by the Professional Geoscientists Ontario (PGO). CREDITS Seismic Soundoff explores the depth and usefulness of geophysics for the scientific community and the public. If you want to be the first to know about the next episode, please follow or subscribe to the podcast wherever you listen to podcasts. Two of our favorites are Apple Podcasts and Spotify. If you have episode ideas, feedback for the show, or want to sponsor a future episode, find the "Contact Seismic Soundoff" box at https://seg.org/podcast. Zach Bridges created original music for this show. Andrew Geary hosted, edited, and produced this episode at TreasureMint. The SEG podcast team is Jennifer Cobb, Kathy Gamble, and Ally McGinnis.
Die Debatte mit Ann Kristin Schenten, David Gutensohn und Barbara Prainsack --- Die Arbeitswelt ist im Umbruch. Erfüllung finden junge Menschen nicht mehr im Job, sondern in der Freizeit. Nicht etwa, weil sie faul sind, sondern weil sich harte Arbeit schon lange nicht mehr zu lohnen scheint. Trotz 40-Stunden-Woche können sich viele Menschen ein sorgenfreies Leben nicht leisten. Wie lässt sich das ändern? Kann Arbeit wieder sinnstiftend werden? Wie vereinbaren wir kürzere Arbeitszeiten mit dem Fachkräftemangel? Darüber sprechen David Gutensohn und Barbara Prainsack. --- David Gutensohn hat in Berlin Sozialwissenschaften studiert und wurde an der Deutschen Journalistenschule in München zum Redakteur ausgebildet. Er schreibt bei ZEIT ONLINE über die Themen Arbeit und den Fachkräftemangel. 2021 veröffentlichte er im Atrium Verlag das Buch "Pflege in der Krise – Applaus ist nicht genug" und wurde vom Medium Magazin unter die Top 30 jungen Journalistinnen und Journalisten des Jahres gewählt. 2022 wurde er mit dem Otto Brenner Preis für kritischen Journalismus ausgezeichnet. --- Barbara Prainsack, geboren 1975 in Klagenfurt, ist Professorin am Institut für Politikwissenschaft der Universität Wien, zuvor lehrte sie am King’s College London. Sie ist international ausgewiesene Expertin für Gesundheits-, Wissenschafts- und Technologiepolitik, Vorsitzende der Ethik-Kommission der Europäischen Kommission, Mitglied u.a. der britischen Royal Society of Arts, gewähltes ausländisches Mitglied der Königlich Dänischen Akademie der Wissenschaften, gewähltes Mitglied der Academia Europaea und Leiterin zweier wissenschaftlicher Studien, die Auskunft über unseren Umgang mit der Pandemie gaben. --- Mehr Infos unter www.rbbkultur.de/derzweitegedanke --- Schreiben Sie uns gern direkt an derzweitegedanke@rbbkultur.de
February 6, 2023 Hoover Institution | Stanford University A Hoover History Working Group Seminar with Beatrice de Graaf. Beatrice de Graaf illuminates how, long before economic considerations set in motion the creation of the European Union, collective European security provided the first impulse for the integration of European norms and institutions. After Napoleon's defeat in 1815, Europe's victorious powers sought to forestall the reemergence of war and revolutionary terror by establishing the Allied Council. The Council transformed interstate relations into the first, modern system of collective security in Europe. Drawing on the records of the Council and the correspondence of key figures such as Metternich, Castlereagh, Wellington, and Alexander I, Beatrice de Graaf tells the story of Europe's transition from concluding a war to consolidating a new order. ABOUT THE SPEAKER Beatrice de Graaf is a historian and a security researcher. She studies the emergence of and threats to European security arrangements from the 19th century until the present. Her book Fighting Terror after Napoleon: How Europe Became Secure after 1815, won the 2022 Arenberg Prize for European History. She is currently working on a translation of her latest book, Radical Redemption: What Terrorists Believe In, which combines testimony, history, psychology, politics and theology to understand how the search for radical personal redemption can lead to violence. Beatrice is a member of The Netherlands Academy of Sciences and of the Academia Europaea. She is the editor of Terrorism and Political Violence, as well as of the Journal of Modern European History. She is also a fellow at the Program on Extremism and the ISIS Files Project at George Washington University. ABOUT THE PROGRAM The Hoover History Working Group aims to conduct and disseminate historical research on issues of national and international concern, and provide concrete recommendations on the basis of research and discussion. The mission of the Hoover Institution Library & Archives is to collect, preserve, and make available the most important materials about global political, social, and economic change in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. We serve as a platform for a vibrant community of scholars and a broad public interested in the meaning and role of history.
Professor Chris Rapley CBE is Professor of Climate Science at University College London's Department of Earth Sciences. He served previously as Director of the British Antarctic Survey and of the Science Museum, and is a passionate and plain-speaking advocate for Climate Science. Professor Rapley is a Fellow of UCL and of St Edmund's College, Cambridge, a member of the Academia Europaea, Chair of the European Science Foundation's European Space Sciences Committee, Member of the Advisory Board of the UK government's Clean Growth Fund, Patron of the Surrey Climate Commission, a member of the Science Advisory board of Scientists' Warning, and a member of the UK Parliamentary and Scientific Committee. His previous posts include Directorships of the Science Museum and British Antarctic Survey, Chair of the London Climate Change Partnership, President of the Scientific Committee on Antarctic Research, Executive Director of the International Geosphere-Biosphere Programme, and founder and Head of UCL's Earth Remote Sensing Group. He was Instrument Scientist on astrophysical and solar sounding rocket payloads, of the Bent Crystal Spectrometer on NASA's Solar Maximum Mission, assisted JPL with the Cassini RADAR instrument, and led numerous ESA studies on the use of radar altimeters to study the Earth. He was Chair of the International Planning Group for the International Polar Year 2007-2008 and Chair of the ESA Director General's High-Level Science Policy Advisory Committee. In 2014 Prof Rapley and the playwright Duncan Macmillan wrote the acclaimed play ‘2071' which Prof Rapley performed at the Royal Court theatre and in Hamburg and Brussels. More recently Prof Rapley was the Science Consultant on BBC1's ‘Climate Change – The Facts' presented by Sir David Attenborough, and the three-part BBC1/PBS series on Greta Thunberg. In 2003 Prof Rapley was appointed CBE by Her Majesty the Queen. In 2008 he was awarded the Edinburgh Science Medal for having made 'a significant contribution to the understanding and wellbeing of humanity'. Prof Rapley holds a PhD. from UCL in X-ray astronomy, an M.Sc from the University of Manchester in Radio Astronomy, and an MA from Jesus College, Oxford in Physics.
Nicolai J. Foss is a Professor of Strategy at the Department of Strategy and Innovation, CBS, Honorary Adjunct Professor, Department of Marketing & Management, Southern Denmark University, and External Chair, Danish Institute for Advanced Studies, 2020-2025. Trained as an economist at the Copenhagen University (M.Sc.,1989), Foss his received his PhD degree from the Copenhagen Business School in 1993, where he was Assistant, Associate and Full Professor, before he moved to Bocconi University 1 September 2016. From 2016-2019 he was the Rodolfo Debenedetti Chaired Professor of Entrepreneurship at the Bocconi University, Milano. He has held part-time and visiting professorships at several universities. Foss has served as a panel member of the European Research Council and on the Board of Directors of the Strategic Management Society. He is a member of Academia Europaea, and a Fellow of the Strategic Management Society. Encompassing 227 journal articles, 102 book chapters and 26 books (edited as well as monographs), his work has been published in the leading journals in management. He has published books with leading publishers, such as Cambridge University Press and Oxford University Press. Many of his papers have been reprinted in research handbooks, and several of his articles and books are translated into Chinese, Russian, and Spanish. His google scholar citations are above 40k, and his H-index is 101. He is a Clarivate Highly Cited Researcher. He was listed as the “best Danish economist” by the newspaper, Børsen, in 2013, 2014, and 2015. Visit https://www.aib.world/frontline-ib/nicolai-foss/ for the original video interview.
In this episode, we talk to Prof. Murat Tekalp, who is a Professor of Electrical and Electronics Engineering at Koç University, an IEEE Fellow, and a member of the Turkish Academy of Sciences and Academia Europaea. We talk about his research interests including image restoration and super-resolution which are the classical signal processing problems over the years, as well as modern deep learning approaches for digital image and video processing.
I am really excited to interview Neil Leach, an architect and interdisciplinary scholar. Besides teaching at FIU, he is also Visiting Professor at Harvard GSD and Tongji University, Professor at the European Graduate School, a NASA Innovative Advanced Concepts Fellow and an academician of the Academia Europaea. In this interview, you will get to know Neil's journey, his research work, thoughts on applications of AI in Architecture, alongwith advice to young engineers and students to get started who wish to do similar work. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/mayur-m-mistry/message
Fat cells are specialised to store large amounts of fat that act as metabolic energy depots. However, fat cells carry out many other vital functions such as appetite regulation. Fat cells can talk to each other, the brain and the other organs. In this episode, Professor Susanne Mandrup talks about fat cells, as well as the epigenetics and DNA associated with fat cells and metabolic disease. Ph.D. Susanne Mandrup is Professor at Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology at SDU where she serves as Director of the Center of Excellence in Functional Genomics and Tissue Plasticity (ATLAS) and Center for Adipocyte Signaling (ADIPOSIGN), as well as Head of the Functional Genomics & Metabolism Research Unit. Click here for more information about ATLAS and ADIPOSIGN.Professor Susanne Mandrup is an elected member of the Royal Danish Academy of Sciences and Letters, Academia Europaea, AcademiaNet, and the European Molecular Biology Organization (EMBO) and Knight of the Order of Dannebrog.For more information about Professor Susanne Mandrup, please refer to the SDU Research Portal.Follow Susanne on Twitter @susmandrupPlease fill out our podcast review form to help us evaluate the season.Follow us and get in touch.Twitter: @Science_Beers, @DanishIASFacebook: @Scienceandbeers, @DanishIASEmail: scienceandbeers@gmail.comwww.scienceandbeers.com/podcastSign up for our newsletter.This season of the podcast is made with the support from the Danish Institute for Advanced Study. Follow their Lecture series.This podcast is hosted by Michael Magee.Cheers to Science! See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Confabulating with Prof. David ABULAFIA *Prof. Abulafia new book available at: https://www.amazon.co.uk/Boundless-Sea-Human-History-Oceans/dp/1846145082* Professor David Abulafia FBA College positions: Life Fellow Papathomas Professorial Fellow Former Fellow Librarian University positions: Professor of Mediterranean History Subject: History Degrees MA in History (Cambridge), PhD in History (Cambridge), LittD (Cambridge) Awards and prizes British Academy Medal (2013) Commendatore dell'Ordine della Stella della Solidarietà Italiana (Italian Republic, 2004) Elected to Academia Europaea (2002) Research interests The Mediterranean at all periods but especially in the Middle Ages and Renaissance, and above all Italy and Spain; attitudes to non-Christians in medieval Europe and the early Atlantic world. Books include Frederick II (1988), The Mediterranean in History (2003), Italy in the central Middle Ages (2004), The Discovery of Mankind: Atlantic encounters in the age of Columbus (2008) and The Great Sea: a human history of the Mediterranean (2011). Teaching interests Part II paper on The Jewish Presence in Medieval Society; Special Subject on King René of Anjou: chivalry, patronage and power in fifteenth-century Europe (starting in 2011) Other interests Travel
Voilà plus de vingt ans que Anne-Marie Kermarrec fait de la recherche en informatique à un très haut niveau. Elle s’est aussi frottée, en tant qu’entrepreneuse dans la Deep Tech, aux investisseurs, accompagnateurs, incubateurs et start-upeurs de tout crin. Évoluant depuis longtemps dans ce milieu, elle constate qu’elle est encore trop souvent parmi les rares femmes dans l’assemblée. Comment mettre fin à la sous-féminisation de ce secteur encore très machiste, à l’image de notre société ? Anne-Marie Kermarrec est professeure en informatique à l’École polytechnique fédérale de Lausanne, en Suisse, et fondatrice de la start-up Mediego, issue de l’Inria. Membre de l’Academia Europaea et ACM Fellow, elle est lauréate du prix Montpetit et du prix de l’Innovation de l’Académie des sciences. Elle est notre invitée.
Mikhail Gelfand is a Russian professor, Doctor of Biological Sciences (Molecular Biology), Candidate of Physical and Mathematical Sciences (Biophysics). Member of the Academia Europaea. Professor and Vice President for Biomedical Research at the Skolkovo Institute of Science and Technology. Mikhail is a well-established bioinformatics specialist in the international scientific community. His research encompasses comparative genomics, systems biology, molecular evolution, transcriptomics, metagenomics. Currently, he is studying co-evolution of transcription factors and their recognition sites, microevolution of bacterial genomes on the strain level, the evolution of alternative splicing, a three-dimensional structure of chromatin, and epigenetics. Deputy editor-in-chief of the newspaper "Troitsky Variant - Science". One of the founders of the Dissernet, a volunteer community network working to clean Russian science of plagiarism. Member of the Council of the Society of Scientists. He is a member of the board of the Evolution educational foundation. He was a member of the Public Council under the Ministry of Education and Science of the Russian Federation. Mikhail is the author of many scientific publications and articles. In 2007 Mikhail was awarded the A. A. Baev prize of the Russian Academy of Science. FIND MIKHAIL ON SOCIAL MEDIA Facebook | Instagram ================================ SUPPORT & CONNECT: Support on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/denofrich Twitter: https://twitter.com/denofrich Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/denofrich YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/denofrich Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/den_of_rich/ Hashtag: #denofrich © Copyright 2022 UHNWI data. All rights reserved.
Mikhail Gelfand is a Russian professor, Doctor of Biological Sciences (Molecular Biology), Candidate of Physical and Mathematical Sciences (Biophysics). Member of the Academia Europaea. Professor and Vice President for Biomedical Research at the Skolkovo Institute of Science and Technology. Mikhail is a well-established bioinformatics specialist in the international scientific community. His research encompasses comparative genomics, systems biology, molecular evolution, transcriptomics, metagenomics. Currently, he is studying co-evolution of transcription factors and their recognition sites, microevolution of bacterial genomes on the strain level, the evolution of alternative splicing, a three-dimensional structure of chromatin, and epigenetics. Deputy editor-in-chief of the newspaper "Troitsky Variant - Science". One of the founders of the Dissernet, a volunteer community network working to clean Russian science of plagiarism. Member of the Council of the Society of Scientists. He is a member of the board of the Evolution educational foundation. He was a member of the Public Council under the Ministry of Education and Science of the Russian Federation. Mikhail is the author of many scientific publications and articles. In 2007 Mikhail was awarded the A. A. Baev prize of the Russian Academy of Science.
Luigi Rizzi Linguistique générale Collège de France Année 2020-2021 Leçon inaugurale Depuis plus de soixante ans, des chercheurs du monde entier collaborent à une vaste entreprise de description des langues humaines au sein de ce qu’on a appelé la linguistique générative, avec ce but extraordinaire d’en comprendre le noyau invariant et les propriétés fondamentales. S’appuyant sur un ensemble immense de données linguistiques, ils cherchent à saisir les propriétés générales du langage et les paramètres de variation entre les langues, mais également la capacité des locuteurs à produire de nouveaux énoncés, qui s’appuient sur quelques procédures essentielles du langage. Ce domaine possède également une dimension développementale : comment les enfants font-ils pour apprendre leur langue ? Pourquoi passent-ils par des phases systématiques ? — ; et bien sûr une dimension historique : comment la structure des langues évolue-t-elle au fil des siècles ? Ces efforts débouchent aujourd’hui sur une cartographie des structures syntaxiques, qui peut s’appuyer sur un riche dialogue avec les sciences cognitives. Plusieurs de ces questions constitueront le cœur des travaux de la nouvelle chaire Linguistique générale du Collège de France, confiée au linguiste Luigi Rizzi, qui a exercé dans les universités de Genève et de Sienne, et qui est un éminent membre de la British Academy, de l’Academia Europaea, de la Linguistic Society of America, et de l’American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Luigi RIZZI est l’auteur de plus de 175 articles, qui ont eu un impact considérable en linguistique formelle, mais aussi bien au-delà, jusqu’aux frontières des sciences cognitives, de la biologie et des sciences numériques. Son œuvre scientifique est incontournable dans quatre thèmes centraux de la linguistique contemporaine : l’étude de l’invariance et de la variation entre les langues ; la théorie de la localité ; la cartographie des structures syntaxiques ; et l’acquisition du langage. Entre 2014 et 2019, il a été lauréat et principal investigateur du Conseil européen de la recherche (ERC) pour le projet Syntactic Cartography and Locality in Adult Grammar and Language Acquisition (SynCart).
Luigi Rizzi Linguistique générale Collège de France Année 2020-2021 Leçon inaugurale Depuis plus de soixante ans, des chercheurs du monde entier collaborent à une vaste entreprise de description des langues humaines au sein de ce qu’on a appelé la linguistique générative, avec ce but extraordinaire d’en comprendre le noyau invariant et les propriétés fondamentales. S’appuyant sur un ensemble immense de données linguistiques, ils cherchent à saisir les propriétés générales du langage et les paramètres de variation entre les langues, mais également la capacité des locuteurs à produire de nouveaux énoncés, qui s’appuient sur quelques procédures essentielles du langage. Ce domaine possède également une dimension développementale : comment les enfants font-ils pour apprendre leur langue ? Pourquoi passent-ils par des phases systématiques ? — ; et bien sûr une dimension historique : comment la structure des langues évolue-t-elle au fil des siècles ? Ces efforts débouchent aujourd’hui sur une cartographie des structures syntaxiques, qui peut s’appuyer sur un riche dialogue avec les sciences cognitives. Plusieurs de ces questions constitueront le cœur des travaux de la nouvelle chaire Linguistique générale du Collège de France, confiée au linguiste Luigi Rizzi, qui a exercé dans les universités de Genève et de Sienne, et qui est un éminent membre de la British Academy, de l’Academia Europaea, de la Linguistic Society of America, et de l’American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Luigi RIZZI est l’auteur de plus de 175 articles, qui ont eu un impact considérable en linguistique formelle, mais aussi bien au-delà, jusqu’aux frontières des sciences cognitives, de la biologie et des sciences numériques. Son œuvre scientifique est incontournable dans quatre thèmes centraux de la linguistique contemporaine : l’étude de l’invariance et de la variation entre les langues ; la théorie de la localité ; la cartographie des structures syntaxiques ; et l’acquisition du langage. Entre 2014 et 2019, il a été lauréat et principal investigateur du Conseil européen de la recherche (ERC) pour le projet Syntactic Cartography and Locality in Adult Grammar and Language Acquisition (SynCart).
Luigi Rizzi Linguistique générale Collège de France Année 2020-2021 Leçon inaugurale Depuis plus de soixante ans, des chercheurs du monde entier collaborent à une vaste entreprise de description des langues humaines au sein de ce qu’on a appelé la linguistique générative, avec ce but extraordinaire d’en comprendre le noyau invariant et les propriétés fondamentales. S’appuyant sur un ensemble immense de données linguistiques, ils cherchent à saisir les propriétés générales du langage et les paramètres de variation entre les langues, mais également la capacité des locuteurs à produire de nouveaux énoncés, qui s’appuient sur quelques procédures essentielles du langage. Ce domaine possède également une dimension développementale : comment les enfants font-ils pour apprendre leur langue ? Pourquoi passent-ils par des phases systématiques ? — ; et bien sûr une dimension historique : comment la structure des langues évolue-t-elle au fil des siècles ? Ces efforts débouchent aujourd’hui sur une cartographie des structures syntaxiques, qui peut s’appuyer sur un riche dialogue avec les sciences cognitives. Plusieurs de ces questions constitueront le cœur des travaux de la nouvelle chaire Linguistique générale du Collège de France, confiée au linguiste Luigi Rizzi, qui a exercé dans les universités de Genève et de Sienne, et qui est un éminent membre de la British Academy, de l’Academia Europaea, de la Linguistic Society of America, et de l’American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Luigi RIZZI est l’auteur de plus de 175 articles, qui ont eu un impact considérable en linguistique formelle, mais aussi bien au-delà, jusqu’aux frontières des sciences cognitives, de la biologie et des sciences numériques. Son œuvre scientifique est incontournable dans quatre thèmes centraux de la linguistique contemporaine : l’étude de l’invariance et de la variation entre les langues ; la théorie de la localité ; la cartographie des structures syntaxiques ; et l’acquisition du langage. Entre 2014 et 2019, il a été lauréat et principal investigateur du Conseil européen de la recherche (ERC) pour le projet Syntactic Cartography and Locality in Adult Grammar and Language Acquisition (SynCart).
Luigi Rizzi Linguistique générale Collège de France Année 2020-2021 Leçon inaugurale Depuis plus de soixante ans, des chercheurs du monde entier collaborent à une vaste entreprise de description des langues humaines au sein de ce qu’on a appelé la linguistique générative, avec ce but extraordinaire d’en comprendre le noyau invariant et les propriétés fondamentales. S’appuyant sur un ensemble immense de données linguistiques, ils cherchent à saisir les propriétés générales du langage et les paramètres de variation entre les langues, mais également la capacité des locuteurs à produire de nouveaux énoncés, qui s’appuient sur quelques procédures essentielles du langage. Ce domaine possède également une dimension développementale : comment les enfants font-ils pour apprendre leur langue ? Pourquoi passent-ils par des phases systématiques ? — ; et bien sûr une dimension historique : comment la structure des langues évolue-t-elle au fil des siècles ? Ces efforts débouchent aujourd’hui sur une cartographie des structures syntaxiques, qui peut s’appuyer sur un riche dialogue avec les sciences cognitives. Plusieurs de ces questions constitueront le cœur des travaux de la nouvelle chaire Linguistique générale du Collège de France, confiée au linguiste Luigi Rizzi, qui a exercé dans les universités de Genève et de Sienne, et qui est un éminent membre de la British Academy, de l’Academia Europaea, de la Linguistic Society of America, et de l’American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Luigi RIZZI est l’auteur de plus de 175 articles, qui ont eu un impact considérable en linguistique formelle, mais aussi bien au-delà, jusqu’aux frontières des sciences cognitives, de la biologie et des sciences numériques. Son œuvre scientifique est incontournable dans quatre thèmes centraux de la linguistique contemporaine : l’étude de l’invariance et de la variation entre les langues ; la théorie de la localité ; la cartographie des structures syntaxiques ; et l’acquisition du langage. Entre 2014 et 2019, il a été lauréat et principal investigateur du Conseil européen de la recherche (ERC) pour le projet Syntactic Cartography and Locality in Adult Grammar and Language Acquisition (SynCart).
Luigi Rizzi Linguistique générale Collège de France Année 2020-2021 Leçon inaugurale Depuis plus de soixante ans, des chercheurs du monde entier collaborent à une vaste entreprise de description des langues humaines au sein de ce qu’on a appelé la linguistique générative, avec ce but extraordinaire d’en comprendre le noyau invariant et les propriétés fondamentales. S’appuyant sur un ensemble immense de données linguistiques, ils cherchent à saisir les propriétés générales du langage et les paramètres de variation entre les langues, mais également la capacité des locuteurs à produire de nouveaux énoncés, qui s’appuient sur quelques procédures essentielles du langage. Ce domaine possède également une dimension développementale : comment les enfants font-ils pour apprendre leur langue ? Pourquoi passent-ils par des phases systématiques ? — ; et bien sûr une dimension historique : comment la structure des langues évolue-t-elle au fil des siècles ? Ces efforts débouchent aujourd’hui sur une cartographie des structures syntaxiques, qui peut s’appuyer sur un riche dialogue avec les sciences cognitives. Plusieurs de ces questions constitueront le cœur des travaux de la nouvelle chaire Linguistique générale du Collège de France, confiée au linguiste Luigi Rizzi, qui a exercé dans les universités de Genève et de Sienne, et qui est un éminent membre de la British Academy, de l’Academia Europaea, de la Linguistic Society of America, et de l’American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Luigi RIZZI est l’auteur de plus de 175 articles, qui ont eu un impact considérable en linguistique formelle, mais aussi bien au-delà, jusqu’aux frontières des sciences cognitives, de la biologie et des sciences numériques. Son œuvre scientifique est incontournable dans quatre thèmes centraux de la linguistique contemporaine : l’étude de l’invariance et de la variation entre les langues ; la théorie de la localité ; la cartographie des structures syntaxiques ; et l’acquisition du langage. Entre 2014 et 2019, il a été lauréat et principal investigateur du Conseil européen de la recherche (ERC) pour le projet Syntactic Cartography and Locality in Adult Grammar and Language Acquisition (SynCart).
Luigi Rizzi Linguistique générale Collège de France Année 2020-2021 Leçon inaugurale Depuis plus de soixante ans, des chercheurs du monde entier collaborent à une vaste entreprise de description des langues humaines au sein de ce qu’on a appelé la linguistique générative, avec ce but extraordinaire d’en comprendre le noyau invariant et les propriétés fondamentales. S’appuyant sur un ensemble immense de données linguistiques, ils cherchent à saisir les propriétés générales du langage et les paramètres de variation entre les langues, mais également la capacité des locuteurs à produire de nouveaux énoncés, qui s’appuient sur quelques procédures essentielles du langage. Ce domaine possède également une dimension développementale : comment les enfants font-ils pour apprendre leur langue ? Pourquoi passent-ils par des phases systématiques ? — ; et bien sûr une dimension historique : comment la structure des langues évolue-t-elle au fil des siècles ? Ces efforts débouchent aujourd’hui sur une cartographie des structures syntaxiques, qui peut s’appuyer sur un riche dialogue avec les sciences cognitives. Plusieurs de ces questions constitueront le cœur des travaux de la nouvelle chaire Linguistique générale du Collège de France, confiée au linguiste Luigi Rizzi, qui a exercé dans les universités de Genève et de Sienne, et qui est un éminent membre de la British Academy, de l’Academia Europaea, de la Linguistic Society of America, et de l’American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Luigi RIZZI est l’auteur de plus de 175 articles, qui ont eu un impact considérable en linguistique formelle, mais aussi bien au-delà, jusqu’aux frontières des sciences cognitives, de la biologie et des sciences numériques. Son œuvre scientifique est incontournable dans quatre thèmes centraux de la linguistique contemporaine : l’étude de l’invariance et de la variation entre les langues ; la théorie de la localité ; la cartographie des structures syntaxiques ; et l’acquisition du langage. Entre 2014 et 2019, il a été lauréat et principal investigateur du Conseil européen de la recherche (ERC) pour le projet Syntactic Cartography and Locality in Adult Grammar and Language Acquisition (SynCart).
Luigi Rizzi Linguistique générale Collège de France Année 2020-2021 Leçon inaugurale Depuis plus de soixante ans, des chercheurs du monde entier collaborent à une vaste entreprise de description des langues humaines au sein de ce qu’on a appelé la linguistique générative, avec ce but extraordinaire d’en comprendre le noyau invariant et les propriétés fondamentales. S’appuyant sur un ensemble immense de données linguistiques, ils cherchent à saisir les propriétés générales du langage et les paramètres de variation entre les langues, mais également la capacité des locuteurs à produire de nouveaux énoncés, qui s’appuient sur quelques procédures essentielles du langage. Ce domaine possède également une dimension développementale : comment les enfants font-ils pour apprendre leur langue ? Pourquoi passent-ils par des phases systématiques ? — ; et bien sûr une dimension historique : comment la structure des langues évolue-t-elle au fil des siècles ? Ces efforts débouchent aujourd’hui sur une cartographie des structures syntaxiques, qui peut s’appuyer sur un riche dialogue avec les sciences cognitives. Plusieurs de ces questions constitueront le cœur des travaux de la nouvelle chaire Linguistique générale du Collège de France, confiée au linguiste Luigi Rizzi, qui a exercé dans les universités de Genève et de Sienne, et qui est un éminent membre de la British Academy, de l’Academia Europaea, de la Linguistic Society of America, et de l’American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Luigi RIZZI est l’auteur de plus de 175 articles, qui ont eu un impact considérable en linguistique formelle, mais aussi bien au-delà, jusqu’aux frontières des sciences cognitives, de la biologie et des sciences numériques. Son œuvre scientifique est incontournable dans quatre thèmes centraux de la linguistique contemporaine : l’étude de l’invariance et de la variation entre les langues ; la théorie de la localité ; la cartographie des structures syntaxiques ; et l’acquisition du langage. Entre 2014 et 2019, il a été lauréat et principal investigateur du Conseil européen de la recherche (ERC) pour le projet Syntactic Cartography and Locality in Adult Grammar and Language Acquisition (SynCart).
Luigi Rizzi Linguistique générale Collège de France Année 2020-2021 Leçon inaugurale Depuis plus de soixante ans, des chercheurs du monde entier collaborent à une vaste entreprise de description des langues humaines au sein de ce qu’on a appelé la linguistique générative, avec ce but extraordinaire d’en comprendre le noyau invariant et les propriétés fondamentales. S’appuyant sur un ensemble immense de données linguistiques, ils cherchent à saisir les propriétés générales du langage et les paramètres de variation entre les langues, mais également la capacité des locuteurs à produire de nouveaux énoncés, qui s’appuient sur quelques procédures essentielles du langage. Ce domaine possède également une dimension développementale : comment les enfants font-ils pour apprendre leur langue ? Pourquoi passent-ils par des phases systématiques ? — ; et bien sûr une dimension historique : comment la structure des langues évolue-t-elle au fil des siècles ? Ces efforts débouchent aujourd’hui sur une cartographie des structures syntaxiques, qui peut s’appuyer sur un riche dialogue avec les sciences cognitives. Plusieurs de ces questions constitueront le cœur des travaux de la nouvelle chaire Linguistique générale du Collège de France, confiée au linguiste Luigi Rizzi, qui a exercé dans les universités de Genève et de Sienne, et qui est un éminent membre de la British Academy, de l’Academia Europaea, de la Linguistic Society of America, et de l’American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Luigi RIZZI est l’auteur de plus de 175 articles, qui ont eu un impact considérable en linguistique formelle, mais aussi bien au-delà, jusqu’aux frontières des sciences cognitives, de la biologie et des sciences numériques. Son œuvre scientifique est incontournable dans quatre thèmes centraux de la linguistique contemporaine : l’étude de l’invariance et de la variation entre les langues ; la théorie de la localité ; la cartographie des structures syntaxiques ; et l’acquisition du langage. Entre 2014 et 2019, il a été lauréat et principal investigateur du Conseil européen de la recherche (ERC) pour le projet Syntactic Cartography and Locality in Adult Grammar and Language Acquisition (SynCart).
Luigi Rizzi Linguistique générale Collège de France Année 2020-2021 Leçon inaugurale Depuis plus de soixante ans, des chercheurs du monde entier collaborent à une vaste entreprise de description des langues humaines au sein de ce qu’on a appelé la linguistique générative, avec ce but extraordinaire d’en comprendre le noyau invariant et les propriétés fondamentales. S’appuyant sur un ensemble immense de données linguistiques, ils cherchent à saisir les propriétés générales du langage et les paramètres de variation entre les langues, mais également la capacité des locuteurs à produire de nouveaux énoncés, qui s’appuient sur quelques procédures essentielles du langage. Ce domaine possède également une dimension développementale : comment les enfants font-ils pour apprendre leur langue ? Pourquoi passent-ils par des phases systématiques ? — ; et bien sûr une dimension historique : comment la structure des langues évolue-t-elle au fil des siècles ? Ces efforts débouchent aujourd’hui sur une cartographie des structures syntaxiques, qui peut s’appuyer sur un riche dialogue avec les sciences cognitives. Plusieurs de ces questions constitueront le cœur des travaux de la nouvelle chaire Linguistique générale du Collège de France, confiée au linguiste Luigi Rizzi, qui a exercé dans les universités de Genève et de Sienne, et qui est un éminent membre de la British Academy, de l’Academia Europaea, de la Linguistic Society of America, et de l’American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Luigi RIZZI est l’auteur de plus de 175 articles, qui ont eu un impact considérable en linguistique formelle, mais aussi bien au-delà, jusqu’aux frontières des sciences cognitives, de la biologie et des sciences numériques. Son œuvre scientifique est incontournable dans quatre thèmes centraux de la linguistique contemporaine : l’étude de l’invariance et de la variation entre les langues ; la théorie de la localité ; la cartographie des structures syntaxiques ; et l’acquisition du langage. Entre 2014 et 2019, il a été lauréat et principal investigateur du Conseil européen de la recherche (ERC) pour le projet Syntactic Cartography and Locality in Adult Grammar and Language Acquisition (SynCart).
Luigi Rizzi Linguistique générale Collège de France Année 2020-2021 Leçon inaugurale Depuis plus de soixante ans, des chercheurs du monde entier collaborent à une vaste entreprise de description des langues humaines au sein de ce qu’on a appelé la linguistique générative, avec ce but extraordinaire d’en comprendre le noyau invariant et les propriétés fondamentales. S’appuyant sur un ensemble immense de données linguistiques, ils cherchent à saisir les propriétés générales du langage et les paramètres de variation entre les langues, mais également la capacité des locuteurs à produire de nouveaux énoncés, qui s’appuient sur quelques procédures essentielles du langage. Ce domaine possède également une dimension développementale : comment les enfants font-ils pour apprendre leur langue ? Pourquoi passent-ils par des phases systématiques ? — ; et bien sûr une dimension historique : comment la structure des langues évolue-t-elle au fil des siècles ? Ces efforts débouchent aujourd’hui sur une cartographie des structures syntaxiques, qui peut s’appuyer sur un riche dialogue avec les sciences cognitives. Plusieurs de ces questions constitueront le cœur des travaux de la nouvelle chaire Linguistique générale du Collège de France, confiée au linguiste Luigi Rizzi, qui a exercé dans les universités de Genève et de Sienne, et qui est un éminent membre de la British Academy, de l’Academia Europaea, de la Linguistic Society of America, et de l’American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Luigi RIZZI est l’auteur de plus de 175 articles, qui ont eu un impact considérable en linguistique formelle, mais aussi bien au-delà, jusqu’aux frontières des sciences cognitives, de la biologie et des sciences numériques. Son œuvre scientifique est incontournable dans quatre thèmes centraux de la linguistique contemporaine : l’étude de l’invariance et de la variation entre les langues ; la théorie de la localité ; la cartographie des structures syntaxiques ; et l’acquisition du langage. Entre 2014 et 2019, il a été lauréat et principal investigateur du Conseil européen de la recherche (ERC) pour le projet Syntactic Cartography and Locality in Adult Grammar and Language Acquisition (SynCart).
Luigi Rizzi Linguistique générale Collège de France Année 2020-2021 Leçon inaugurale Depuis plus de soixante ans, des chercheurs du monde entier collaborent à une vaste entreprise de description des langues humaines au sein de ce qu’on a appelé la linguistique générative, avec ce but extraordinaire d’en comprendre le noyau invariant et les propriétés fondamentales. S’appuyant sur un ensemble immense de données linguistiques, ils cherchent à saisir les propriétés générales du langage et les paramètres de variation entre les langues, mais également la capacité des locuteurs à produire de nouveaux énoncés, qui s’appuient sur quelques procédures essentielles du langage. Ce domaine possède également une dimension développementale : comment les enfants font-ils pour apprendre leur langue ? Pourquoi passent-ils par des phases systématiques ? — ; et bien sûr une dimension historique : comment la structure des langues évolue-t-elle au fil des siècles ? Ces efforts débouchent aujourd’hui sur une cartographie des structures syntaxiques, qui peut s’appuyer sur un riche dialogue avec les sciences cognitives. Plusieurs de ces questions constitueront le cœur des travaux de la nouvelle chaire Linguistique générale du Collège de France, confiée au linguiste Luigi Rizzi, qui a exercé dans les universités de Genève et de Sienne, et qui est un éminent membre de la British Academy, de l’Academia Europaea, de la Linguistic Society of America, et de l’American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Luigi RIZZI est l’auteur de plus de 175 articles, qui ont eu un impact considérable en linguistique formelle, mais aussi bien au-delà, jusqu’aux frontières des sciences cognitives, de la biologie et des sciences numériques. Son œuvre scientifique est incontournable dans quatre thèmes centraux de la linguistique contemporaine : l’étude de l’invariance et de la variation entre les langues ; la théorie de la localité ; la cartographie des structures syntaxiques ; et l’acquisition du langage. Entre 2014 et 2019, il a été lauréat et principal investigateur du Conseil européen de la recherche (ERC) pour le projet Syntactic Cartography and Locality in Adult Grammar and Language Acquisition (SynCart).
Luigi Rizzi Linguistique générale Collège de France Année 2020-2021 Leçon inaugurale Depuis plus de soixante ans, des chercheurs du monde entier collaborent à une vaste entreprise de description des langues humaines au sein de ce qu’on a appelé la linguistique générative, avec ce but extraordinaire d’en comprendre le noyau invariant et les propriétés fondamentales. S’appuyant sur un ensemble immense de données linguistiques, ils cherchent à saisir les propriétés générales du langage et les paramètres de variation entre les langues, mais également la capacité des locuteurs à produire de nouveaux énoncés, qui s’appuient sur quelques procédures essentielles du langage. Ce domaine possède également une dimension développementale : comment les enfants font-ils pour apprendre leur langue ? Pourquoi passent-ils par des phases systématiques ? — ; et bien sûr une dimension historique : comment la structure des langues évolue-t-elle au fil des siècles ? Ces efforts débouchent aujourd’hui sur une cartographie des structures syntaxiques, qui peut s’appuyer sur un riche dialogue avec les sciences cognitives. Plusieurs de ces questions constitueront le cœur des travaux de la nouvelle chaire Linguistique générale du Collège de France, confiée au linguiste Luigi Rizzi, qui a exercé dans les universités de Genève et de Sienne, et qui est un éminent membre de la British Academy, de l’Academia Europaea, de la Linguistic Society of America, et de l’American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Luigi RIZZI est l’auteur de plus de 175 articles, qui ont eu un impact considérable en linguistique formelle, mais aussi bien au-delà, jusqu’aux frontières des sciences cognitives, de la biologie et des sciences numériques. Son œuvre scientifique est incontournable dans quatre thèmes centraux de la linguistique contemporaine : l’étude de l’invariance et de la variation entre les langues ; la théorie de la localité ; la cartographie des structures syntaxiques ; et l’acquisition du langage. Entre 2014 et 2019, il a été lauréat et principal investigateur du Conseil européen de la recherche (ERC) pour le projet Syntactic Cartography and Locality in Adult Grammar and Language Acquisition (SynCart).
A talk by Professor Michael Cronin (TCD) as part of the School of Languages, Literatures and Cultural Studies Research Seminar Series in association with Trinity Long Room Hub. The future of travel is central to contemporary debates about pandemics and ‘flight shaming'. The nature and status of travel as an absolute right or unquestionable good are being called into question in the context of globalized infectious diseases and well-publicised evidence pointing to the prohibitive ecological costs of mass air travel. The lecture will explore a number of interpretive frameworks from critical ecology to travel writing and translation studies that might help us to understand and navigate a post-nomadic future. Michael Cronin, BA (TCD), MA (UCD), PhD (TCD), FTCD, holds the 1776 Chair of French at Trinity College. He taught in the Université of Tours, the École Normale Supérieure (Cachan) and was Director of the Centre for Translation and Textual Studies at Dublin City University. He is an elected Member of the Royal Irish Academy, the Academia Europaea, and he is an Officer in the Ordre des Palmes Académiques. He has published extensively on language, culture, translation and travel writing.
W dzisiejszym odcinku o przekładach literatury indyjskiej rozmawiali: prof. dr hab. Danuta Stasik (hindi), prof. dr hab. Joanna Jurewicz (sanskryt) i dr Michał Panasiuk (bengalski). W dyskusji udział wzięli też doktoranci: Barbara Banasik, Iga Bielawska i Krzysztof Gutowski. Spotkanie poprowadziły: Anna Klingofer-Szostakowska i Barbara Banasik. Prof. dr hab. Danuta Stasik to kierowniczka Katedry Azji Południowej na Wydziale Orientalistycznym Uniwersytetu Warszawskiego, prezesuje również European Association for South Asian Studies. Specjalistka w zakresie średniowiecznej literatury Indii Północnych i tradycji Ramajany. Tłumaczka współczesnej poezji hindi. Zaangażowana w promowanie kultury indyjskiej i języka hindi na Zachodzie, za co otrzymała w 2009 r. nagrodę im. dr. George’a Griersona. Prof. dr. hab. Joanna Jurewicz to lingwistka kognitywna i tłumaczka z sanskrytu i angielskiego (Katedra Azji Południowej Wydziału Orientalistycznego UW). W centrum jej zainteresowań leży filozoficzna myśl hinduska wyrażana w najstarszych indyjskich zabytkach literackich. Szczególnie interesują ją początki myślenia abstrakcyjnego, a także dziedziczenie pojęć i obrazów w trakcie kulturowego przekazu. Wiceprezeska Polskiego Towarzystwa Semiotycznego, członkini Academia Europaea. Dr Michał Panasiuk to indolog-bengalista. Absolwent i pracownik warszawskiej indologii (Katedra Azji Południowej na Wydziale Orientalistycznym UW). Badacz historii i kultury Bengalu. Tłumacz literatury polskiej na bengalski. Autor przekładu m.in. poezji Wisławy Szymborskiej na język Rabindranatha Tagore’a. Spotkanie odbyło się w ramach cyklu organizowanego przez Doktoranckie Koło Naukowe "Orientuj się!" we współpracy z Muzeum Azji i Pacyfiku oraz Laboratorium badań nad przekładem WO UW. Patronem cyklu jest Stowarzyszenie Tłumaczy Literatury. --- Na przekład jest podcastem Stowarzyszenia Tłumaczy Literatury, organizacji, która od 2009 roku zrzesza tłumaczy i tłumaczki książek, działając na rzecz lepszej widoczności zawodu, godziwych warunków pracy i życia oraz przyjaznych kontaktów między tłumaczami książek w Polsce i na świecie. Na stronie Stowarzyszenia (stl.org.pl) można znaleźć dużą bazę ogólnodostępnej wiedzy dla osób zainteresowanych pracą tłumacza literackiego, a także kontakty do tłumaczy i tłumaczek zrzeszonych w STL. Jeszcze więcej danych i informacji na temat aspektów finansowych, prawnych i organizacyjnych dostępnych jest dla zalogowanych członków. Muzyka wykorzystana w czołówce i zakończeniu odcinka pochodzi z utworu "Mystery Sax" (Kevin MacLeod, Creative Commons License). Chętnie wysłuchamy Waszych uwag i sugestii pod adresem podcast@stl.org.pl
Francisco García Olmedo (Cádiz, 1938) es doctor Ingeniero Agrónomo y licenciado en Química. Ha sido catedrático de la Universidad Politécnica de Madrid (1970-2008). Es miembro de la Real Academia de Ingeniería, de la Academia Europaea y del Colegio Libre de Eméritos. Ha investigado sobre ingeniería genética vegetal y, más concretamente, sobre la inmunidad innata de las plantas. Ha sido autor de las primeras patentes sobre plantas transgénicas realizadas en España y vendidas en el mercado internacional. Fue becario postdoctoral y profesor visitante en la Universidad de Minnesota, fue becario March (1964-1965) y miembro de Comisiones y del Consejo Científico de la Fundación Juan March y del Instituto Juan March (1979-1994). Entre otros, ha recibido el premio de la Real Academia de Ciencias, el de las Ciencias de la CEOE y el Columela. Ha publicado numerosos libros, como La tercera revolución verde (1998), Entre el placer y la necesidad (2001), El ingenio y el hambre (2009) y Fundamentos de la Nutrición Humana (2011). También es autor de los poemarios Natura según Altroío (2002) y El mar congelado. Glosas y tergiversos (2005) y de las novelas Notas a Fritz (2004) y Motivos de fuga (2011), con la que fue finalista del premio Ateneo de Sevilla. Ha colaborado durante años en Revista de Libros, "El Cultural" de El Mundo y otros periódicos y revistas.Más información de este acto
Memorias de la Fundación: Francisco García Olmedo entrevistado por Íñigo Alfonso. Francisco García Olmedo (Cádiz, 1938) es doctor Ingeniero Agrónomo y licenciado en Química. Ha sido catedrático de la Universidad Politécnica de Madrid (1970-2008). Es miembro de la Real Academia de Ingeniería, de la Academia Europaea y del Colegio Libre de Eméritos. Ha investigado sobre ingeniería genética vegetal y, más concretamente, sobre la inmunidad innata de las plantas. Ha sido autor de las primeras patentes sobre plantas transgénicas realizadas en España y vendidas en el mercado internacional. Fue becario postdoctoral y profesor visitante en la Universidad de Minnesota, fue becario March (1964-1965) y miembro de Comisiones y del Consejo Científico de la Fundación Juan March y del Instituto Juan March (1979-1994). Entre otros, ha recibido el premio de la Real Academia de Ciencias, el de las Ciencias de la CEOE y el Columela. Ha publicado numerosos libros, como La tercera revolución verde (1998), Entre el placer y la necesidad (2001), El ingenio y el hambre (2009) y Fundamentos de la Nutrición Humana (2011). También es autor de los poemarios Natura según Altroío (2002) y El mar congelado. Glosas y tergiversos (2005) y de las novelas Notas a Fritz (2004) y Motivos de fuga (2011), con la que fue finalista del premio Ateneo de Sevilla. Ha colaborado durante años en Revista de Libros, "El Cultural" de El Mundo y otros periódicos y revistas. Explore en www.march.es/conferencias/anteriores el archivo completo de Conferencias en la Fundación Juan March: casi 3.000 conferencias, disponibles en audio, impartidas desde 1975.
https://www.brainforum.it/video/giacomo-rizzolatti-gli-altri-sono-come-me-meccanismi-neurali-alla-base-dellempatia/Giacomo Rizzolatti si è laureato in Medicina e Chirurgia all’Università di Padova dove ha anche conseguito la specializzazione in Neurologia. È membro dell’Accademia dei Lincei, dell’Academia Europaea, dell’Académie Francaise des Sciences, ed è Honorary Foreign Member dell’American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Recentemente è stato eletto alla National Academy of Science, USA ed ha ricevuto il Premio Principe delle Asturie per la Scienza, il più prestigioso premio scientifico spagnolo. Ha ricevuto Lauree Honoris Causa dall’Università Claude Bernard di Lione, dall’Università di San Pietroburgo, e dall’Università di Lovanio. Giacomo Rizzolatti ha scoperto i neuroni specchio, fondamentali nei processi di apprendimento, nell’empatia, nei rapporti sociali, e che sono oggi studiati in tutto il mondo perché la loro mancanza potrebbe essere alla radice di comportamenti asociali e disturbi psichici.
In this segment of my discussion with Siniša Malešević, we examine his research into the sociological roots of the nation state in the modern era, as well as the social mechanisms and techniques the nation state uses in order to wed the individual (the citizen) to the ideologies and interests of the nation — through a combination of sophisticated state propaganda, state-mandated education (indoctrination), and warfare. Siniša expounds on the role nationalism (and its corollary: patriotism) has played in the “rise of organized brutality” — a function implicit in the formation and legitimation of the nation state. In Siniša’s work and in this interview, he “demonstrates that violence is determined by organizational capacity, ideological penetration and micro-solidarity, rather than biological tendencies, meaning that despite pre-modern societies being exposed to spectacles of cruelty and torture, such societies had no organizational means to systematically slaughter millions of individuals.” Siniša Malešević is a Full Professor and Chair of Sociology at the University College, Dublin, Ireland. He is an elected member of Royal Irish Academy and Academia Europaea (the European Academy) and an elected Associated Member of the Academy of Sciences and Arts of Bosnia and Herzegovina. He is the author of numerous books, including ‘Grounded Nationalisms,’ ‘The Rise of Organised Brutality: A Historical Sociology of Violence,’ ‘Nation-States and Nationalisms: Organisation, Ideology and Solidarity,’ ‘The Sociology of War and Violence,’ ‘Identity as Ideology,’ and ‘The Sociology of Ethnicity.’ Learn more about Siniša’s work at his website: https://sinisa2malesevic.wordpress.com Pre-order Siniša’s upcoming book ‘Grounded Nationalisms’: https://amzn.to/2AyCWSj This is a segment of episode #165 of Last Born In The Wilderness “The Rise Of Organized Violence: The Brutalities Of National Identity w/ Siniša Malešević.” Listen to the full episode: http://bit.ly/LBWmalešević WEBSITE: https://www.lastborninthewilderness.com PATREON: http://bit.ly/LBWPATREON DONATE: Paypal: http://bit.ly/LBWPAYPAL Ko-Fi: http://bit.ly/LBWKOFI DROP ME A LINE: (208) 918-2837 FOLLOW & LISTEN: SoundCloud: http://bit.ly/LBWSOUNDCLOUD iTunes: http://bit.ly/LBWITUNES Google Play: http://bit.ly/LBWGOOGLE Stitcher: http://bit.ly/LBWSTITCHER RadioPublic: http://bit.ly/LBWRADIOPUB YouTube: http://bit.ly/LBWYOUTUBE NEWSLETTER: http://bit.ly/LBWnewsletter SOCIAL MEDIA: Facebook: http://bit.ly/LBWFACEBOOK Twitter: http://bit.ly/LBWTWITTER Instagram: http://bit.ly/LBWINSTA
In this episode, I speak with Siniša Malešević — Full Professor and Chair of Sociology at the University College in Dublin, Ireland. Siniša is the author of numerous books, including ‘The Rise of Organised Brutality: A Historical Sociology of Violence’ and the upcoming ‘Grounded Nationalisms.’ We discuss Siniša research into the historical formation of national identity (nationalism) in the modern era, and how the molding of national identities by nation states over the past several centuries has given rise to unprecedented large-scale violence, at a scale previously unseen throughout human history. In this discussion with Siniša, we examine his research into the sociological roots of the nation state in the modern era, as well as the social mechanisms and techniques the nation state uses in order to wed the individual (the citizen) to the ideologies and interests of the nation — through a combination of sophisticated state propaganda, state-mandated education (indoctrination), and warfare. Siniša expounds on the role nationalism (and its corollary: patriotism) has played in the “rise of organized brutality” — a function implicit in the formation and legitimation of the nation state. In Siniša’s work and in this interview, he “demonstrates that violence is determined by organizational capacity, ideological penetration and micro-solidarity, rather than biological tendencies, meaning that despite pre-modern societies being exposed to spectacles of cruelty and torture, such societies had no organizational means to systematically slaughter millions of individuals.”♢ We discuss these subjects and more in this episode. Siniša Malešević is a Full Professor and Chair of Sociology at the University College, Dublin, Ireland. He is an elected member of Royal Irish Academy and Academia Europaea (the European Academy) and an elected Associated Member of the Academy of Sciences and Arts of Bosnia and Herzegovina. He is the author of numerous books, including ‘Grounded Nationalisms,’ ‘The Rise of Organised Brutality: A Historical Sociology of Violence,’ ‘Nation-States and Nationalisms: Organisation, Ideology and Solidarity,’ ‘The Sociology of War and Violence,’ ‘Identity as Ideology,’ and ‘The Sociology of Ethnicity.’✦ ♢Source: http://bit.ly/OrganizedViolence ✦Source: http://bit.ly/SMbio Episode Notes: - Learn more about Siniša’s work at his website: https://sinisa2malesevic.wordpress.com - Pre-order Siniša’s new book ‘Grounded Nationalisms’: https://amzn.to/2AyCWSj - Learn more about and purchase Siniša’s book ‘The Rise of Organised Brutality: A Historical Sociology of Violence’: https://amzn.to/2TnA0ih - Much of Siniša’s research can be found here: http://ucd.academia.edu/SinisaMalesevic - The song featured in this episode is “Praise The Lord And Pass The Ammunition” by Kay Kyser from the album Heart & Soul: Celebrating The Unforgettable Songs Of Frank Loesser. - WEBSITE: https://www.lastborninthewilderness.com - PATREON: http://bit.ly/LBWPATREON - DONATE: Paypal: http://bit.ly/LBWPAYPAL Ko-Fi: http://bit.ly/LBWKOFI - DROP ME A LINE: (208) 918-2837 - FOLLOW & LISTEN: SoundCloud: http://bit.ly/LBWSOUNDCLOUD iTunes: http://bit.ly/LBWITUNES Google Play: http://bit.ly/LBWGOOGLE Stitcher: http://bit.ly/LBWSTITCHER RadioPublic: http://bit.ly/LBWRADIOPUB YouTube: http://bit.ly/LBWYOUTUBE - NEWSLETTER: http://bit.ly/LBWnewsletter - SOCIAL MEDIA: Facebook: http://bit.ly/LBWFACEBOOK Twitter: http://bit.ly/LBWTWITTER Instagram: http://bit.ly/LBWINSTA
Spotkanie z prof. Vivianem Nuttonem odbyło się 13 grudnia w Instytucie Historii UŁ. Prelekcja była częścią cyklu wykładów otwartych poświęconych historii medycyny, organizowanych pod patronatem JM Rektora Uniwersytetu Łódzkiego oraz La Société Française d'Histoire de la Médecine. Celem spotkań jest zapoznanie publiczności z dziedzictwem antycznej myśli medycznej i jej nowożytnym odbiorem. Organizatorami przedsięwzięcia są: Centrum Ceraneum, Wydział Filozoficzno-Historyczny i Wydział Filologiczny Uniwersytetu Łódzkiego. Profesor Nutton specjalizuje się w historii medycyny od czasu antyku do nowożytności, w lecznictwie grecko-rzymskim i jego recepcji w okresie odrodzenia. W czasie wykładu przedstawił efekty przeprowadzonych w ostatnich latach analiz nieznanych wcześniej pism Galena. Rzuciły one nowe światło na poglądy starożytnego lekarza nt. anatomii, psychologii i filozofii, jak również instytucji kulturalnych Imperium Rzymskiego. Vivian Nutton pracował na swym macierzystym Uniwersytecie w Cambridge i w Wellcome Trust Centre for the History of Medicine, związany był również z Centre for the History of Medicine na University College London. Jest autorem artykułów naukowych zebranych m.in. w serii Variorum w tomie „From Democedes to Harvey: Studies in the History of Medicine” oraz przekrojowej monografii „Ancient Medicine” i haseł nt. medycyny w encyklopedii „Der neue Pauly”. Najnowszą pracą Profesora jest „Principles of anatomy according to the opinion of Galen, by Johann Guinter and Andreas Vesalius (2017)”. Obecnie pełni funkcję współredaktora serii Medical History. Jest członkiem międzynarodowych towarzystw naukowych, w tym Akademii Brytyjskiej, Academia Europaea i Académie des inscriptions et belles-lettres.
In this week's stem cells @ lunch digested episode, PhD student Ana-Maria Cujba speaks to Dr Caroline Hill from the Francis Crick Institute about her research into cell signalling and using fish as models to study signalling during embryonic development. Dr Caroline Hill is an established Group Leader at the Francis Crick Institute. She was awarded her PhD from Cambridge University, was elected to EMBO in 2002 and to the Academia Europaea in 2013. In 2015, she was elected a Fellow of the European Academy of Cancer Sciences. For more information about her work please follow the link... https://www.crick.ac.uk/research/a-z-researchers/researchers-d-j/caroline-hill/
Che cosa fa di noi quello che siamo? È partendo da questa domanda che inizia l’ultimo podcast della serie La Creazione del Mondo - Dal Big Bang al pensiero umano, dove Markus Zohner intervista il genetista Edoardo Boncinelli, membro dell’Accademia Europea e dell’EMBO, l’Organizzazione Europea per la Biologia Molecolare. È stato, inoltre, Presidente della Società Italiana di Biofisica e Biologia Molecolare. Nel 2005 ha ricevuto l’EMBO Award for Communication in the Life Sciences. http://radiopetruska.com/discography/la-nascita-della-vita-dall-inorganico-allorganico-con-prof-dr-ernesto-di-mauro-professore-ordinario-di-biologia-molecolare-dipartimento-di-biologia-e-biotecnologie-cha/ Questa serie rappresenta un percorso cominciato ancora prima del Big Bang, che si conclude con la nascita del pensiero umano. Il numero di elementi che ci condiziona è infinito e infinito è il numero di individualità che si possono generare. Noi incidiamo sul mondo meno di quanto il mondo incida su di noi. Ad aiutarci c’è la cultura. Spesso si dice che in natura vince il più forte. È davvero così? Il Prof. Boncinelli dice che la risposta è semplice. Sta tutto nell’evoluzione: è la natura che seleziona chi lascerà più discendenti. Quindi, quale può essere il nostro posto in questo pianeta? Ci potremmo considerare la specie più intelligente e forte del pianeta, eppure, noi non saremo di certo gli ultimi a scomparire. Con i suoi studi, Edoardo Boncinelli ha dato dei contributi fondamentali alla comprensione dei meccanismi biologici dello sviluppo embrionale degli animali superiori e dell’uomo. È stato fra i primi, nel 1985, a comprendere il significato delle nuove scoperte sul controllo genetico dello sviluppo della drosofila e ad estenderle allo studio degli esseri umani. Con il suo gruppo di lavoro ha individuato e caratterizzato una famiglia di geni, detti omeogeni, che controllano il corretto sviluppo del corpo, dalla testa al coccige. Queste scoperte sono riconosciute come una pietra miliare della biologia di questo secolo, se non della biologia di tutti i tempi. A partire dal 1991 si è poi dedicato alla studio del cervello e della corteccia cerebrale individuando altre due famiglie geniche che giocano un ruolo cruciale in questi processi. Ha mostrato inoltre come tutto questo possa avere delle applicazioni mediche, immediate e a più lunga scadenza. Edoardo sostiene che la cultura, il nostro pensiero e la nostra coscienza sono le cose che ci consentono di vivere sulla Terra, poiché ci differenziano da tutti gli altri esseri viventi. Grazie a questi, non dobbiamo riscoprire il mondo sempre da capo. Eppure, c’è stato un momento preciso nella storia, in cui l’uomo ha portato avanti la sua evoluzione e ha iniziato ad essere creativo, differenziandosi, così, dagli altri esseri viventi presenti sulla Terra. Per scoprire come è nato il pensiero umano e la creatività, non ti resta che mettere le cuffie e schiacciare play! Prof. Dr. Edoardo Boncinelli Edoardo Boncinelli e’ professore di Biologia e Genetica presso l’Università Vita-Salute di Milano. E’ stato Direttore della SISSA, la Scuola Internazionale Superiore di Studi Avanzati di Trieste, dopo essere stato Capo del Laboratorio di Biologia Molecolare dello Sviluppo presso il Dipartimento di Ricerca Biologica e Tecnologica dell’Istituto Scientifico San Raffaele di Milano. Fisico di formazione, si e’ dedicato allo studio della genetica e della biologia molecolare degli animali superiori e dell’uomo prima a Napoli, presso l’Istituto Internazionale di Genetica e Biofisica (IGB) del CNR, dove ha percorso le tappe fondamentali della sua carriera scientifica, e poi a Milano. E’ membro dell’Academia Europaea e dell’EMBO, l’Organizzazione Europea per la Biologia Molecolare, ed e’ stato Presidente della Societa’ Italiana di Biofisica e Biologia Molecolare. Nel 2005 ha ricevuto l’EMBO Award for Communication in the Life Sciences.
Sarah Broadie is in the Moral Philosophy Department at the University of St Andrews. She has previously worked in philosophy departments at Princeton, Rutgers, Yale, the University of Texas at Austin, and Edinburgh University. Her publications include Nature, Change, and Agency in Aristotle’s Physics (1982); Passage and Possibility: a study of Aristotle’s modal concepts (1982); Ethics with Aristotle (1991); Aristotle, Nicomachean Ethics: Commentary, with translation by Christopher Rowe (2002); Aristotle and Beyond, Essays on Metaphysics and Ethics (2007); Nature and Divinity in Plato’s Timaeus (2011); Philoponus on Aristotle, Physics 4. 10-14 (on Time), translation and notes (2012). She is a Fellow of the British Academy, the Royal Society of Edinburgh, the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and the Academia Europaea. This year's Presidential Address marks the official inauguration of Professor Sarah Broadie (St. Andrews) as the 105th President of the Aristotelian Society. This podcast is an audio recording of Professor Broadie's address - 'Actual Instead' - at the Aristotelian Society on 8 October 2012. The recording was produced by Backdoor Broadcasting Company in conjunction with the Institute of Philosophy, University of London.