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durée : 00:59:22 - Banzzaï du jeudi 27 juin 2024 - par : Nathalie Piolé -
ESSENTIEL, le rendez-vous culture - L'Atelier Philo présenté par Laurence Goldmann - Spécial Spinoza avec : Perrine Simon Nahum, Docteure en histoire et spécialiste de philosophie française contemporaine, directrice de recherches au CNRS et professeure attachée au département de philosophie de l'École normale supérieure. Jean-François Bensahel, normalien, mathématicien, ingénieur, pour son livre chez Grasset « Qui a tué Spinoza ? » et Dan Arbib, Philosophe, normalien, enseignant à l'ENS-Ulm, traducteur du Traité théologico-politique de Spinoza dans la Bibliothèque de la Pléiade. À propos du livre : « Qui a tué Spinoza ? » Paru aux éditions Grasset Et si derrière la mort de Spinoza se cachait, non une santé fragile, mais un assassinat ? Quand Baruch Spinoza s'éteint à seulement 44 ans, en 1677, à La Haye, il laisse dernière lui une œuvre philosophique révolutionnaire, mais aussi des énigmes. Qui est cette mystérieuse personne qui lui a rendu visite le jour de sa mort ? Et pourquoi des lettres et des manuscrits inédits ont-ils disparu de son secrétaire ? À qui donc profite le crime de cette mort étrange ? Catholiques, protestants, monarchistes, juifs, adversaires théoriques, Français, Hollandais… de son vivant, le philosophe ne manquait pas d'ennemis. Nous voici plongés dans la Hollande du XVIIe siècle, carrefour de tous les savoirs et du commerce, terre de paix et de tolérance où Juifs, catholiques et protestants pratiquent librement leur culte. Mais l'équilibre est fragile et les passions nombreuses. On se méfie de Spinoza, trop libre, inclassable. Sa philosophie dérange autant qu'elle fascine, en cette époque où les guerres de religion déchirent l'Europe : Dieu n'est pas une personne, mais la Nature. Il n'y a ni providence, ni miracles, ni paradis, ni enfer, ni immortalité de l'âme. Autant de propositions qui défient l'ordre social et céleste. Du sommet de l'État au presbytère en passant par la Synagogue et les cercles de pensée concurrents, tout conspire, en secret, pour faire taire ce génie séditieux. Dans ce thriller philosophique et historique d'une grande exactitude, Jean-François Bensahel nous fait marcher dans les traces de Spinoza, à travers les complots et les mystères d'une Europe à feu et à sang, où les querelles d'idées sont souvent les plus meurtrières. Un roman incisif et haletant. Biographie de l'auteur Jean-François Bensahel est normalien, mathématicien et ingénieur du Corps des mines. Entrepreneur depuis plus de trente ans, il n'aime rien tant que créer des emplois et s'investir dans le monde associatif et caritatif.
Pierre-Édouard Deldique reçoit dans son magazine Idées : Bernard Pautrat, normalien, agrégé de philosophie, il a animé durant vingt ans un séminaire sur « l'Éthique » à l'École normale supérieure et Dan Arbib, normalien, docteur en philosophie, à l'occasion d'une nouvelle publication des œuvres complètes du philosophe chez Gallimard (collection La Pléiade). (Rediffusion)
Pierre-Édouard Deldique reçoit dans son magazine Idées : Bernard Pautrat, normalien, agrégé de philosophie, il a animé durant vingt ans un séminaire sur « l'Éthique » à l'École normale supérieure et Dan Arbib, normalien, docteur en philosophie, à l'occasion d'une nouvelle publication des œuvres complètes du philosophe chez Gallimard (collection La Pléiade). (Rediffusion)
As the founder or leader of a grocery brand, have you ever thought it would be GREAT to pool your central costs with other brands like yours?Follow Brand Growth Heroes here on Instagram, Tiktok, LinkedinI certainly considered it when I was launching GU Chocolate Puds in France years ago, and as a result, I created a shared field sales team with Innocent France for the French market, and it was certainly something worth doing for the period of time it worked for both businesses. I wanted to explore what this looks like today, so in this next episode, I talk to Ben Arib, founder of Rebel Kitchen, and more recently Nurture Brands, a cohort of eight better-for-you brands - Rebel Kitchen & Myracle Kitchen, Primal Pantry, Doisy & Dam, Emily, Jax Coco, Indie Ba - that share the same platform (and equity) in order to mutualize a lot of their costs. Ben explains how the Nurture Brands' shared model works, why he started it, and all the economics behind it.So that you don't miss the leaders of your favourite brands talk about how they grew their inspirational businesses, click the Follow button beside Brand Growth Heroes on your podcast app (on apple podcasts it's three dots like this (...)Become part of the Brand Growth Heroes community!Sign up here for news and information on Brand Growth Heroes Accelerator ProgrammeEmail Fiona for a 1-1 session: fiona@fionafitzconsulting.comSee how Fiona can group-coach your senior commercial and marketing teams internally: Fiona Fitz Consulting ★ Support this podcast on Patreon ★
Pierre-Édouard Deldique reçoit dans son magazine Idées : Bernard Pautrat, normalien, agrégé de philosophie, il a animé durant vingt ans un séminaire sur « l'Éthique » à l'École normale supérieure et Dan Arbib, normalien, docteur en philosophie, à l'occasion d'une nouvelle publication des œuvres complètes du philosophe chez Gallimard (collection La Pléiade).
Pierre-Édouard Deldique reçoit dans son magazine Idées : Bernard Pautrat, normalien, agrégé de philosophie, il a animé durant vingt ans un séminaire sur « l'Éthique » à l'École normale supérieure et Dan Arbib, normalien, docteur en philosophie, à l'occasion d'une nouvelle publication des œuvres complètes du philosophe chez Gallimard (collection La Pléiade).
***LIVE from the BMW-World in Munich!***- A technological, disruptive perspective on reaching climate goals by 2035 - Today's talk brings us back to our Future Congress in November 2021. An event, that has given us an outlook far beyond 2022.Rethink X think tank Co-Founder, investor and CEO James Arbib gave us a selected insight into the most pressing topic of our time: climate change solutions. He describes how humanity can reduce 90% of emissions by 2035 through disruption in the energy, transport and food sectors.Key is that we stop focussing our attention on making the old system less bad. Rather than band-aid, we should focus on root-cause solutions - sourcing our energy into the transformation of the system! A fundamental change in production system is necessary.This means: moving away from an extraction-based, centralised hierarchical production system, based on scarce resources - and shifting to a system in which molecules, photons and electrons allow us to produce anything we need locally in any place of the world. Abundant input! Allowing for a self-sufficient, decentralised global network. The foundations are laid. Follow this future talk of James Arbib to learn precisely the steps that will cause major disruptions in all sectors - until the market forces reach a tipping point, leading to a collapse of old industry. This techno-optimistic view provides us with a research-based future perspective that only leaves us to say: into a great future! Be inspired and listen. "The only thing that is truly sustainable is adaptability," says James. More on Rethink X: https://www.rethinkx.com Get the full talk with video recording and discussion as well as other talks at Future Congress 2021 here: https://zukunftskongress.2bahead.com/podcast. Or sign up for the membership at https://event.2bahead.de/s/2bAHEAD/future-me-membership-aktion-1-monat/payment for only 1€ in the first month (terminable monthly) and gain free access to all Future Congress content.
durée : 00:55:03 - invité : Yakir Arbib - par : Alex Dutilh - C'est en trio que Yakir Arbib présente son nouvel album « Three Colors ». D'emblée, le trait d'union entre le jeu magistral de Chris Jennings à la contrebasse et le groove énergique du batteur Roberto Giaquinto apparaît comme une évidence pour embellir la palette sonore du pianiste. - réalisé par : Fabien Fleurat
durée : 00:55:03 - invité : Yakir Arbib - par : Alex Dutilh - C'est en trio que Yakir Arbib présente son nouvel album « Three Colors ». D'emblée, le trait d'union entre le jeu magistral de Chris Jennings à la contrebasse et le groove énergique du batteur Roberto Giaquinto apparaît comme une évidence pour embellir la palette sonore du pianiste. - réalisé par : Fabien Fleurat
Orbiting with us this week on Wonderspace is James Arbib who is the co-founder of RethinkX which is an independent think tank that forecasts the speed and scale of technology-driven disruption and its implications across society. In his own story and in his story of hopefulness, James passionately shares about how tech has the potential to solve most of the systemic problems we are facing today. This interview will truly blow the fuses! Check out their free online book and more recent reports at www.rethinkx.com View the shortened video episode here: https://youtu.be/jdF0oOcEhH4 -------------- More about Wonderspace: https://ourwonder.space Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCBUt53ifgsf4Hu9tQTWjEmA/videos Facebook: http://facebook.com/ourwonderspace Instagram: http://instagram.com/ourwonderspace Twitter: https://twitter.com/ourwonderspace Online community: http://wonderspace.mn.co/ --------------- Music: https://theade.me
Emanuel Arbib is the Chief Executive Officer of IAM Capital Group in London, an asset manager whose product range includes real estate, hedge fund of funds and green opportunity products. Prior to founding IAM he was a director at a NASDAQ listed company that controlled an Italian motorcycle manufacturer, and prior to that a director of a family office based in Jersey and Monte Carlo. He works extensively across Israel, Italy, the US and the UK. Our conversation looks at what is key when winning and retaining the loyalty of family offices in wealth management and the wisdom what he has gained from working with some great financiers over the years. We also examine the role that internships plays in ensuring diversity of thought and fresh ideas within an organization.
We are on the cusp of the fastest, deepest, most consequential transformation of human civilization in history, a transformation every bit as significant as the move from foraging to cities and agriculture 10,000 years ago. James Arbib and Tony Seba, Rethinking Humanity James Arbib is co-founder of RethinkX, a nonprofit think tank that explores how technology will shape the future and disrupt all levels of society, including information energy, materials, transportation, and my favorite, food – food that will not come from slaughtered animals. Jamie and RethinkX cofounder, Tony Seba are the authors of Rethinking Humanity: Five Foundational Sector Disruptions, the Lifecycle of Civilizations, and the Coming Age of Freedom. They predict that new technologies could wipe out poverty and solve climate change in the next 10-15 years, and bring in a new "Age of Freedom.” Which sounds pretty phenomenal, but they also warn that it could pose huge challenges for a a world that still clings to outdated concepts such as democracy, capitalism and the nation state.
Sarah Arbib est professeur d'anglais dans un collège de Choisy le Roy. Les langues ont été très tôt pour elle un moyen de s'évader, d'échapper à son quotidien. Elle aborde l'enseignement de cette langue avec un angle "rythmique" et "musical" qui semble particulièrement plaire à ses élèves. La musique est justement son côté etc : Sarah vient d'enregistrer un duo avec Abhishek Mukherjee qui vit à Calcutta. Dans cet épisode, elle revient sur la genèse de ce projet et nous explique pourquoi ça a changé sa vie. Vous pouvez écouter sa reprise avec Abhishek en cliquant sur "Ready for love"
Hannah MacInnes joins James Arbib, on The Klosters Forum Feed & Flourish Podcast series, to discuss the topic of biodiversity and ways in which we can transform our food systems in order to positively preserve our planet. James Arbib is the founder of Tellus Mater, a grant-making foundation that works on issues related to sustainability, with a focus on influencing the flows of capital through the financial system. He is also the co-Founder of RethinkX, a not-for-profit think tank that has developed a framework to better understand the non-linear nature of technology disruption across the economy and its broad implications across society.
For Episode 37 Sean and Tim are joined by the President of Athletics Australia, Mark Arbib. After a political career as a NSW Senator, that included time as the Federal Minister for Sport, Mark has had extensive experience with a number of major sports. These include Rugby Union, Rugby League, and Football, and he also sits on the Australian Olympic Committee. In some broad-ranging discussions we delve into the world of Mark Arbib including his vast experience in Australia’s sporting landscape and the motivations behind his move into the senior leadership position for Athletics in this country. Mark also details what’s been happening at Athletics Australia during the pandemic and how their operational model has adapted to the new working conditions we all face. With Bathurst 2021 now a major focus for AA, we discuss how preparations are tracking and if the current situation may impact the planning and delivery of the World Cross Country Championship. So if you want to get to know the man who’s leading our sport in Australia, tune in to Down the Track Ep. 37 Timeline 0:00:00 to 0:01:12 Intro and welcome Sean & Mark Arbib to Episode 37 0:01:13 to 0:29:57 Get to know Mark Arbib 0:29:58 to 0:43:57 What’s happening at Athletics Australia including competition options and the One Sport model 0:43:58 to 1:01:54 Some updates on Bathurst 2021 in light of the current situation 1:01:55 to 1:06:10 Episode wrap and Sean enlightens us with some knowledge on the number 37
durée : 00:03:21 - Les Envies du week-end - par : Caroline Broué - Une découverte pianistique et un album de BD désopilant - réalisation : Doria Zénine
durée : 00:03:21 - Les Envies du week-end - par : Caroline Broué - Une découverte pianistique et un album de BD désopilant - réalisation : Doria Zénine
durée : 00:53:46 - Yakir Arbib - par : Alex Dutilh - Avec “My Name is Yakir”, en piano solo, Yakir Arbib frappe un coup de maître. L’album jazz de l’année pour notre confrère de Télérama… Sortie chez JMS / Pias. - réalisé par : Fabien Fleurat
durée : 00:53:46 - Yakir Arbib - par : Alex Dutilh - Avec “My Name is Yakir”, en piano solo, Yakir Arbib frappe un coup de maître. L’album jazz de l’année pour notre confrère de Télérama… Sortie chez JMS / Pias. - réalisé par : Fabien Fleurat
In this sixth episode, Barclays' Charlotte Roberts is joined by Jamie Arbib, Co-Founder of RethinkX. Charlotte asks him about the change facing 'transport as a service' and where opportunities to innovate lie, who he thinks will win the autonomous vehicle race, and what he would be doing if he could start his career afresh.
With Action Bronson's "Mr. Wonderful" in stores now and doing well commercially, we decided to discuss the topic of white rappers and what it means to be a white rapper in 2015. We were joined in the conversation by Dan Isenberg (aka Stan Ipcus) and Dana Arbib of A Peace Treaty. We talked about what it means to be a white rapper and how YouTube and social media has opened doors that were previously closed off to rappers who might not have fit stereotypical molds. We also named as many white rappers as we could (and apologies to all those we missed).
Tefilin Shel Yad Standing Or Seating? To: Emanuel Arbib Jul 6, 2014
CARTA - Center for Academic Research and Training in Anthropogeny (Audio)
This CARTA series explores the evolution of “Theory of Mind” (ToM), the ability to impute mental states such as beliefs, desires, and intentions to oneself and others, and how ToM makes us uniquely human. Elizabeth Spelke (Harvard Univ) begins with a discussion about What Makes Humans Different?, followed by Jason Mitchell (Harvard Univ) on Brain Imaging Studies, and Michael Arbib (Univ of Southern California) on Mirror Neurons and More. Series: "CARTA - Center for Academic Research and Training in Anthropogeny" [Science] [Show ID: 25936]
CARTA - Center for Academic Research and Training in Anthropogeny (Video)
This CARTA series explores the evolution of “Theory of Mind” (ToM), the ability to impute mental states such as beliefs, desires, and intentions to oneself and others, and how ToM makes us uniquely human. Elizabeth Spelke (Harvard Univ) begins with a discussion about What Makes Humans Different?, followed by Jason Mitchell (Harvard Univ) on Brain Imaging Studies, and Michael Arbib (Univ of Southern California) on Mirror Neurons and More. Series: "CARTA - Center for Academic Research and Training in Anthropogeny" [Science] [Show ID: 25936]
How, in this age of scientific rationalism, can we begin to understand religious visions and mystical experiences--now being reported by a growing number of people on the nightly news, across the internet, and by word-of-mouth? Dr. Lisa Bitel and Dr. Michael A. Arbib discuss visions from the Middle Ages to today, especially the tensions between cultural, spiritual, and neurological explanations for extraordinary sights, and consider new ways to understand these mysterious phenomena.Made possible by a generous contribution from K&L Gates