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Esta semana con un asunto cultural, el boom literario femenino de América Latina. Encabezan los rankings de ventas y sus libros son leídos y premiados en el mundo. La mayoría rechaza la etiqueta de generación "boom femenino", pero coincide en que las mujeres están pisando fuerte en el universo literario. Analizamos el fenómeno con tres invitados en nuestro estudio. Pensar en el Boom nos lleva a evocar una lista de autores prácticamente canonizados a partir de los años 60 y los 70 del siglo pasado; hablamos en masculino porque la lista está compuesta en exclusiva por hombres. Córtazar, García Márquez, Vargas Llosa, Paz o Fuentes. Fue un fenómeno patriarcal en su constitución con un borrado de las mujeres. Ellas, a pesar de las barreras impuestas por su entorno, lograron en muchos casos publicar sus obras. Destacan nombres como Silvina Ocampo, Elena Garro, Nélida Piñon o Clarice Lispector. Hoy vamos a hablar de las mujeres escritoras que se quedaron silenciadas en aquel boom y también de las más actuales que quieren revisar esa etiqueta.Nos acompañan:Marie-Laure Sara de La Vaissière, doctora en estudios hispanoamericanos e investigadora en el Instituto Católico de Enseñanza Superior de Vendée Julia de Ipola, investigadora de la Ecole Normale Supérieure de Paris. Ha publicado numerosos trabajos sobre estas autoras y en particular sobre Mariana Henríquez José María Martínez, director del Instituto Cervantes en París. En Primera Plana también está en las redes sociales.Coordinación editorial: Florencia Valdés. Realización: Yann Bourdelas, Souheil Khedir, Hadrien Toureaud
Esta semana con un asunto cultural, el boom literario femenino de América Latina. Encabezan los rankings de ventas y sus libros son leídos y premiados en el mundo. La mayoría rechaza la etiqueta de generación "boom femenino", pero coincide en que las mujeres están pisando fuerte en el universo literario. Analizamos el fenómeno con tres invitados en nuestro estudio. Pensar en el Boom nos lleva a evocar una lista de autores prácticamente canonizados a partir de los años 60 y los 70 del siglo pasado; hablamos en masculino porque la lista está compuesta en exclusiva por hombres. Córtazar, García Márquez, Vargas Llosa, Paz o Fuentes. Fue un fenómeno patriarcal en su constitución con un borrado de las mujeres. Ellas, a pesar de las barreras impuestas por su entorno, lograron en muchos casos publicar sus obras. Destacan nombres como Silvina Ocampo, Elena Garro, Nélida Piñon o Clarice Lispector. Hoy vamos a hablar de las mujeres escritoras que se quedaron silenciadas en aquel boom y también de las más actuales que quieren revisar esa etiqueta.Nos acompañan:Marie-Laure Sara de La Vaissière, doctora en estudios hispanoamericanos e investigadora en el Instituto Católico de Enseñanza Superior de Vendée Julia de Ipola, investigadora de la Ecole Normale Supérieure de Paris. Ha publicado numerosos trabajos sobre estas autoras y en particular sobre Mariana Henríquez José María Martínez, director del Instituto Cervantes en París. En Primera Plana también está en las redes sociales.Coordinación editorial: Florencia Valdés. Realización: Yann Bourdelas, Souheil Khedir, Hadrien Toureaud
Molly Rowe, newly appointed Executive director of the Hilliard Art Museum, joins Discover Lafayette to discuss her love of the arts and working with artists. Molly has worked with arts and culture organizations such as the New York City Ballet and Savannah College of Art and Design, and Fortune 500 companies such as Google and The New York Times. Born and raised in Lafayette, Molly's mother was an antique dealer; from an very early age, Molly was exposed to art, antiques, antiques, provenance, and the research that goes into collecting and telling stories about objects. She grew up appreciating art and objects, learning about other cultures and people. At the age of 18, after graduating from the Episcopal School of Acadiana and ready to see the world, she left Lafayette at 18 to attend Cornell University where she earned Bachelor's degrees in History and French literature. Molly then earned an MBA in Strategic Management from Tulane, and completed graduate work in Art History at Sorbonne University and Ecole Normale Supérieure in Paris. Molly's first job was writing for the President and Co-Founder of the Savannah College of Art and Design, Paula Wallace. "It's an institution that started with a dream of one woman who was an educator and now it is globally recognized. It is one of, if not the, largest private art institution in the world. It is a mission driven arts organization, and I learned so much about how it was run, how to build organizations of that nature, how to inspire people through that." The experiences Molly gained help define her career. "Whenever I started working with Paula Wallace, I envisioned myself to be a writer who was going to go on and do doctorate work in literature. I was very always interested in languages and storytelling. But through my work with her at SCAD, I realized that art has it own language and communicates things that words can't. Through studying art and learning about art and exhibiting art, working with artists, you're able to transcend time, cultures, and geography.” Molly shared, "We so often think that being able to create an art object or a painting defines creativity. But some of the most creative people I know are creative in business. I've built my career on working with artists and supporting artists and building businesses with them." After her work at SCAD, she moved to New York and was employed by consultants who worked with arts organizations, museums, institutions, and galleries based all over the world. She eventually opened her own consulting firm with that same focus, at the intersection of arts, education and business,. Molly worked with over 50 institutions internationally, from the United States to Europe, South America, and Asia. Molly says, "It's that work that allowed me to consult with incredible organizations such as Google, New York City Ballet, and The New York Times. My work with them was always focused around art and culture. I think so many businesses recognize the power of art and culture; in order to get a product into the hands of people, they have to tap into how their desired audience communicates, what they like, what they read, what they listen to." Molly explained, "Being able to tap into an audience's culture means you're going to be working with artists. It means you're going to be working with the people that are creating and building that culture. That's where I came in, as this sort of middle person, who would help organizations figure out how they were going to bring their product to people. It was always around working with artists. The other side of that was not only making sure it was good for business, but also that it was good for rhe artists. If we look at Louisiana, one of our biggest economies is cultural tourism. We don't think enough about who is benefiting from that. My job was always making sure that artists were represented appropriately and that were being compensated and rewarded in the right way.
Auditeurs et auditrices, chers radiophiles, je m'adresse toujours à vous mais ce soir exceptionnellement, je souhaiterais m'adresser A TOI, notre chère webradio TrENSistor : A TOI, à la façon que tu as d'être sonore, à la façon que tu as d'être à toutes et à tous dans cette Ecole Normale Supérieure de Lyon. En ce […]
Jeannette talks to the incredible Maud Bailly, the CEO of Sofitel, MGallery, and Emblems, about her remarkable non-linear career journey from the public sector to leading iconic luxury hospitality brands. Maud shares her insights on the importance of energy, passion, and alignment in leadership, as well as her commitment to building diverse and high-performing teams. They discuss the challenges of maintaining a legacy brand while keeping it fresh and relevant, the significance of culture in luxury experiences, and the necessity of making tough commercial decisions KEY TAKEAWAYS Embracing a non-linear career trajectory can lead to unique opportunities and growth. Diverse experiences across different sectors, such as public service and hospitality, can enrich leadership skills and perspectives. Achieving alignment with personal values and professional goals is crucial for maintaining energy and passion in one's work. When individuals are aligned with their purpose, they can harness a natural source of motivation, even amidst challenges. Building diverse teams enhances creativity and problem-solving. By combining talents from various backgrounds, organisations can create a more dynamic and effective workforce, leading to greater collective success. In the hospitality industry, luxury is not just about high-end products but also about the experiences and emotions evoked in guests. Seamless service and personalised touches are essential for creating memorable moments. BEST MOMENTS "Sometimes it's good to have a non-linear career path, although sometimes people don't really get it." "The minute you are aligned with something you do with your values, it's as if alignment was the greatest natural source of energy." "A powerful, curated, diverse team is a secret power. This is my superpower." "Luxury is about simplicity, seamlessness, and culture." "Life is not about avoiding storms. It's about learning to dance under the rain." This is the perfect time to get focused on what YOU want to really achieve in your business, career, and life. It's never too late to be BRAVE and BOLD and unlock your inner BRILLIANT. Visit our new website https://brave-bold-brilliant.com/ - there you'll find a library of FREE resources and downloadable guides and e-books to help you along your journey. If you'd like to jump on a free mentoring session just DM Jeannette at info@brave-bold-brilliant.com. VALUABLE RESOURCES Brave Bold Brilliant - https://brave-bold-brilliant.com/ Brave, Bold, Brilliant podcast series - https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/brave-bold-brilliant-podcast/id1524278970 Maud Bailly - https://group.accor.com/en/Directory/Maud-Bailly ABOUT THE GUEST Maud Bailly began her studies in modern literature at the Ecole Normale Supérieure, before continuing with a Master's degree in Public Administration at the Institut d'Etudes Politiques de Paris. Graduated from the Ecole Nationale d'Administration, she began her career in 2007 at the General Inspectorate of Finance, where she carried out several strategic and financial audit assignments in France and abroad, most notably for the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund. In 2011, she joined the SNCF where she was appointed Director of Paris Montparnasse station and Deputy Director of TGV product coordination for the Paris Rive Gauche area. In 2014, she became Director of Trains. In May 2015, she joined French Prime Minister Manuel Vall's office as Head of the economic & digital department responsible for economic, budget, fiscal, industrial and digital affairs. She worked on various issues such as withholding tax, Brexit and the Digital Republic Act on data protection and accessibility. She left in December 2016, returning to the General Inspectorate of Finance. In April 2017, Maud joined Accor as Chief Digital Officer, member of the Executive Committee, in charge of Digital, Data, Information Systems, Distribution, Sales and Customer and becomes member of the Executive Committee at that time. In May 2018, Maud joined the French Digital Council, (CNNum), a 30-people-circle nominated by the French Minister of Digital to work on the challenges of the digital transition in France and its economic and societal impacts. She contributed to the report "Travailler à l'ère des plateformes ; mise à jour requise" (Working in the age of platforms; update required). In October 2020, Maud Bailly was appointed Chief Executive Officer for Southern Europe, with the mission to operate and develop the Group's business in France, Spain, Italy, Greece, Portugal, Malta and Israel. In January 2023, Maud was appointed CEO Sofitel, MGallery & Emblems and member of Accor's Luxury & Lifestyle Executive Committee. Additionally, Maud is very committed to coaching and teaching, she gives regular trainings on performance, digital & CSR transformation stakes and organizations. ABOUT THE HOST Jeannette Linfoot is a highly regarded senior executive, property investor, board advisor, and business mentor with over 30 years of global professional business experience across the travel, leisure, hospitality, and property sectors. Having bought, ran, and sold businesses all over the world, Jeannette now has a portfolio of her own businesses and also advises and mentors other business leaders to drive forward their strategies as well as their own personal development. Jeannette is a down-to-earth leader, a passionate champion for diversity & inclusion, and a huge advocate of nurturing talent so every person can unleash their full potential and live their dreams. CONTACT THE HOST Jeannette's linktree - https://linktr.ee/JLinfoot https://www.jeannettelinfootassociates.com/ YOUTUBE - https://www.youtube.com/@braveboldbrilliant LinkedIn - https://uk.linkedin.com/in/jeannettelinfoot Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/jeannette.linfoot/ Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/jeannette.linfoot/ Tiktok - https://www.tiktok.com/@jeannette.linfoot Podcast Description Jeannette Linfoot talks to incredible people about their experiences of being Brave, Bold & Brilliant, which have allowed them to unleash their full potential in business, their careers, and life in general. From the boardroom tables of ‘big' international businesses to the dining room tables of entrepreneurial start-ups, how to overcome challenges, embrace opportunities and take risks, whilst staying ‘true' to yourself is the order of the day.Travel, Bold, Brilliant, business, growth, scale, marketing, investment, investing, entrepreneurship, coach, consultant, mindset, six figures, seven figures, travel, industry, ROI, B2B, inspirational: https://linktr.ee/JLinfoot
Episode 189: Memory as Inheritance: North African Jewish Heritage Through Documentary Film In this podcast, Margaux Fitoussi and Cléo Cohen discuss two of their films, El Hara (2017) and Que Dieu te protège/Rabbi Maak (2021), respectively. Each film asks questions about senses of home, heritage, memory, and displacement among Jewish North Africans. In the interview, Fitoussi and Cohen, who both come from North African Jewish families, discuss their personal relationships with their Jewish, Arab, French, and American identities. Albert Memmi, a prominent Tunisian Jewish author, influenced both filmmakers, as his writings articulate the complexity of Jewish North African identity in relation to class, colonialism, postcoloniality, ambivalence, and exile. Margaux Fitoussi is a visual anthropologist. Her work has screened at Film Society of Lincoln Center in New York, Director's Note, Musée d'art et d'histoire duJudaïsme in Paris, Cultural Pinacothèque in Rio de Janeiro and São Paulo, and SAVVY Contemporary in Berlin. Her translations have been published by AUC Press and Liverpool University Press. Before beginning her doctorate in anthropology at Columbia University, she studied religion at Harvard University and history at UC Berkeley. Cléo Cohen was born in 1993. She studied literature at the Ecole Normale Supérieure de la rue d'Ulm and at the Sorbonne. In 2017, she was a student at the Ecole documentaire de Lussas where she directed her first short documentary, Avant le depart (26'), which was selected at several festivals in France and internationally. Her first feature length film, Que Dieu te protège (77'), produced by Petit à Petit Production, was selected in several international festivals including CINEMED, IDFA, Traces de vie, JFF, CINEMAMED, CineJue Barcelone, Kaleidoskop FF, and the Festival du Film d'Auteur de Rabat, and won prizes at DOKLEIPZIG (Prix Interreligieux) and MIZNA ARAB FILM FESTIVAL (Prix du public). The film was broadcast on France 3 (l'Heure d). She is the author of several radiodocumentaries produced by France Culture including the series "Juive-arabe : comment je me suis réconciliée" (Jewish-Arab: How I Reconciled with Myself) (LSD, The Documentary Series), broadcast in May 2022. This podcast was recorded via Zoom on the 18th of September 2023 with Luke Scalone, CEMAT Chargé de Programmes. We thank Mr. Souheib Zallazi, (student at CFT, Tunisia) and Mr. Malek Saadani (student at ULT, Tunisia), for their interpretation of el Ardh Ardhi of Sabri Mesbah, performed for the introduction and conclusion of this podcast. Souheib on melodica and Malek on guitar. Production and editing: Lena Krause, AIMS Resident Fellow at the Centre d'Études Maghrébines à Tunis (CEMAT).
Welcome to the 75th episode of the Decode Quantum podcast. In our series of three episodes recorded in Lindau where dozens of physics Nobel laureates were gathered with young scientists, we had a chance to meet David Wineland. This podcast was recorded on July 1st, 2024, in Lindau, Germany during the 73rd Lindau Nobel Laureate Meeting.David Wineland is an American physicist currently at the University of Oregon who is specialized in atomic physics, and in particular, uses laser-cooled trapped ions to implement the elements of quantum-computing. He became a laureate of the Nobel prize in physics in 2012 along with Serge Haroche of Ecole Normale Supérieure and Collège de France, Paris. He received his PhD in physics from Harvard University in 1970 on a topic we'll see later in our discussion. He was then a post-doc at the University of Washington where he worked on electrons in ion traps. In 1975, he joined the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) where he created a group working on ion storage and was also an academic at the University of Colorado, Boulder. He and his colleagues were among the first {laser cooling was demonstrated at the same time by the group of Peter Toschek in Heidelberg} to laser-cool ions in 1978 and then demonstrated other optical techniques to control ions and implement the first two-qubit logic gate in 1995. He and colleagues also worked on the creation of the most precise atomic clock using quantum logic on a single aluminum ion in 2019. The 2005 experiment was the first demonstration of quantum-logic spectroscopy. The most precise quantum logic clock using an Al+ (aluminum) ion was demonstrated in 2019. This work later contributed to the creation of trapped ion quantum computers from the companies IonQ and Quantinuum. The transcript from the podcast published on Olivier Ezratty's website has been edited by David Wineland and Olivier Ezratty. It is slightly different from the podcast audio recording to clarify the discussion content.https://www.oezratty.net/wordpress/2024/decode-quantum-with-david-wineland
Il vient d'annoncer une levée de 4 millions d'euros, j'ai eu le plaisir de recevoir Paul-Adrien Hyppolite, cofondateur de Spiko, le projet français qui tokénise des bons du Trésor américain et européen. Paul-Adrien, qui est passé par les plus grandes écoles françaises (Polytechnique, Ecole Normale Supérieure, Les Mines de Paris) et Harvard, nous emmène dans les coulisses de cette classe d'actifs où Spiko s'attaque à des acteurs comme le géant BlackRock et l'un des leaders des RWA (Real World Assets), Ondo Finance. En savoir plus sur Spiko : https://www.spiko.xyz/ Interview enregistrée le 7 mai 2024. // SOMMAIRE DE LA VIDÉO 00:00 Introduction à Spiko et à la tokénisation d'instruments financiers 03:14 Les raisons derrière la tokénisation des bons du Trésor 11:47 Les défis liés aux taux d'intérêt et au risque de contrepartie 24:23 Les différentes phases de la tokénisation des fonds d'investissement 29:36 Les avantages de la tokénisation des fonds 33:26 Le fonds Biddle de BlackRock vs le produit de Spiko 46:07 Le lancement prochain du fonds de Spiko 49:34 Distribution auprès des entreprises 51:00 Modalités de distribution des fonds 53:23 Différence avec les acteurs SVT 55:20 Sécurité et réglementation 58:13 Pas de frais d'entrée ou de sortie 01:02:33 Choix de la blockchain Ethereum 01:04:11 Utilisation de Stellar par d'autres acteurs 01:05:38 Rebasing et ajustement de la supply 01:06:37 Interactions entre actifs permissionnés et permissionless 01:10:00 Gestion des espèces et des actifs financiers 01:11:48 Modèle de rémunération 01:13:11 Coexistence des actifs permissionnés et permissionless dans la DeFi 01:14:37 La gouvernance de Flex et la possibilité de lister des actifs sur Uniswap 01:15:03 Différence entre le listing d'instruments financiers et la facilitation de transferts OTC 01:16:02 Les bons du Trésor et les fonds monétaires comme actifs à tokéniser 01:17:28 Le défi de la liquidité sur les marchés secondaires 01:18:23 L'importance de l'effet de réseau dans le développement des marchés 01:35:21 Les blockchains comme opportunité de révolutionner le secteur financier // ME SUIVRE
Artificial Intelligence - just the sound of it transports us to a sci-fi movie. But of course, this is no longer a fiction or a future possibility. We see AI already revolutionizing countless sectors and industries, and it's coming for education- its impact is imminent, if not already in motion. We're dying to know if this is a story with a happy ending or if we're in the horror genre. So stick around for our episode with expert Claire Goldsmith to form a conclusion yourselves.More on Claire Goldsmith;Claire is a consultant and advisor in educational innovation and strategic planning across schools, non-profits, and technology companies. As executive director of the Malone Schools Online Network (MSON) from 2016-2022, she strategically expanded and strengthened the national independent school online learning consortium, led professional development for teachers nationwide, and created innovative new programming.Claire helped develop MSON while serving in the leadership of Stanford Online High School, ultimately as its director of admission and external relations. Previously, Claire taught French and English and coached debate at the Harvard-Westlake School in LA.Claire is the Board Chair of the Enrollment Management Association. She is also Vice President of the Board of trustees of LA's Wilshire Boulevard Temple, which runs Brawerman Elementary School, a member of the Board of Trustees and co-chair of the Equity Committee of the Winsor School in Boston, her alma mater, a member of the Advisory Council of Geffen Academy of UCLA and Stanford Online High School, and a member of the Institute for Educational Advancement's Caroline D. Bradley Scholarship Committee. Claire graduated from Harvard College with a degree in history and literature and from the Stanford Graduate School of Education with a master's degree in policy, organization, and leadership studies. She completed graduate work on a Harvard fellowship at the Ecole Normale Supérieure in Paris and was a fellow with Education Pioneers. Her writing has appeared in national publications such as Chalkbeat and The Wall Street Journal, and she has shared expertise on artificial intelligence at national conferences and through webinars, such as with Common Sense Media.Resources:nosillyquestionspodcast.comhttps://www.instagram.com/nosillyquestionspodcast/
Maud a 23 ans, et elle est actuellement étudiante à l' Ecole Normale Supérieure de Paris. En septembre 2022, elle a pris une année de césure pour partir découvrir le monde à la voile.Dans cet extrait, elle nous raconte un des moments les plus émouvant de l'aventure. - #parcours exceptionnels
In this podcast episode, we delve into the captivating world of Noga Arikha, a philosopher, historian of ideas, and science humanist. She takes us on a journey from her childhood in Paris to her experiences working with neuropsychiatric patients and her current endeavor—writing a biography of anthropologist Franz Boas for the Yale University Press, set to be released in 2025. Arikha holds the position of Visiting Fellow at the European University Institute in Florence, is an Associate Fellow of the Warburg Institute (London), an Honorary Fellow of the Center for the Politics of Feelings, a Research Associate at the Institut Jean Nicod of the Ecole Normale Supérieure in Paris. Throughout the episode, Arikha shares personal reflections on curiosity and emphasizes its essential role in personal and societal growth. She encourages listeners not to shy away from embracing their feelings in this thought-provoking conversation with Garrick Jones. Purchase The Ceiling Outside: The Science and Experience of the Disrupted Mind Purchase Napoleon and the Rebel: A Story of Brotherhood, Passion, and Power Purchase Passions and Tempers: A History of the Humours Get your copy of The Curious Advantage on Amazon The Curious Advantage Audiobook is also available on Audible Follow The Curious Advantage on LinkedIn and Instagram About the Curious Advantage Podcast The Curious Advantage Podcast series, hosted by the authors of The Curious Advantage book – Paul Ashcroft (co-founder & partner, Ludic Group), Simon Brown (Partner, Talent, EY), and Garrick Jones (co-founder & partner, Ludic Group) – explores how curiosity is a driving force for success in both individual lives and organizations, particularly in our evolving digital landscape. This podcast distills insights from neuroscience, anthropology, history, and behaviorism to make the concept of curiosity accessible and applicable to everyone. The Curious Advantage Podcast is executive produced by Jessica Wickham and produced by Aliki Paolinelis. Audio editing is expertly handled by Danny Cross, and visuals are crafted by John McGinty. About The Curious Advantage Book The Curious Advantage is an exploration of the idea of Curiosity and its increasing importance for thriving in the digital age. Taking the widest possible exploration of things Curious – historical, contemporary, neuro-scientific, anthropological, behavioural, semantic and business-focused.At the heart of the book is our model of Curiosity, called 'Sailing the 7C's of Curiosity'. This model provides individuals with a practical framework for how to be successfully Curious and use Curiosity as a power skill to unlock their own potential. To find out more visit: curiousadvantage.com
En nouvelle diffusion: Le théorème de Marguerite, lʹamour des maths dans un film Lʹavenir de Marguerite, brillante élève en mathématiques à lʹEcole Normale Supérieure (ENS) à Paris, semble tout tracé. Seule fille de sa promotion, elle termine une thèse quʹelle doit exposer devant un parterre de chercheurs. Le jour J, une erreur bouscule toutes ses certitudes et lʹédifice sʹeffondre. Marguerite décide de tout quitter pour tout recommencer. "Platéosaure, ceci est un dinosaure" l'exposition du Muséum dʹhistoire naturelle de Neuchâtel C'est la nouvelle exposition temporaire du Muséum d'histoire naturelle de Neuchâtel dédiée aux dinosaures et, plus précisément, au Platéosaure, méconnu du grand public. Une expo créative et interactive, avec des films dʹanimations, des ateliers pour les enfants et des créations exclusives pour illustrer lʹenvironnement de lʹépoque. Wanda Diaz-Merced, astrophysicienne, transforme en sons des signaux en provenance du cosmos Wanda Diaz-Merced a commencé ses recherches au début des années 2000. Aujourdʹhui, elle est basée au CNRS, à Paris, où elle élabore un cadre de recherche autour de cette sonification. Cʹest grâce à une écoute précise et détaillée ainsi qu'un logiciel que Wanda Diaz-Merced peut convertir en sons les données des phénomènes astrophysiques. Comment du pourquoi : Pourquoi les oignons font-ils pleurer ? La réponse dʹHubert Girault, responsable du Laboratoire d'électrochimie physique et analytique de l'Ecole polytechnique fédérale
François Kammerer is a French Philosopher of Mind. He received training in philosophy at the Ecole Normale Supérieure de Lyon (MA) and at the Université Paris-Sorbonne (PhD). After his PhD, he held positions as a lecturer in Paris (Ecole Normale Supérieure/Institut Jean Nicod) and as a postdoctoral research fellow in Belgium (Université catholique de Louvain/FNRS), Germany (Ruhr-Universität Bochum/Humboldt Foundation) and the United States (New York University) and currently a postdoc at the Institute for Philosophy of the Ruhr-Universität Bochum. His research mostly focuses on phenomenal consciousness. He defends an illusionist conception of phenomenal consciousness: it introspectively seems to us that we are phenomenally conscious, but we are not. Such a conception raises all kinds of difficult and fascinating issues, from a metaphysical, psychological, epistemological and moral perspective – which he explores in his work. EPISODE LINKS: - François' Website: https://www.francoiskammerer.com/ - François' Publications: https://tinyurl.com/3mnj8vwr - François' Books: https://tinyurl.com/3mnj8vwr TIMESTAMPS: (0:00 - Introduction (0:50) - Definitions: Consciousness & Illusionism (4:30) - Recent IIT Controversy (Science or Pseudoscience?) (8:57) - Panpsychism & Idealism (13:50) - Is Consciousness the modern day Elan Vital? (18:56) - From Property Dualism to Illusionism (25:02) - "Illusionism" as a name (30:40) - Michael Graziano (Caricature vs Illusion) (43:55) - Daniel Dennett's impact (49:12) - Susan Blackmore's Delusionism (54:43) - Weak vs Strong Illusionism (58:07) - Moorean Argument against Illusionism (1:04:26) - Ethics Without Sentience (1:16:40) - Coherence of other Metaphysical positions (Ft Friston, Levin, Clarke) (1:27:02) - Maintaining an open mind within consciousness discourse (1:30:20) - Nicolas Humphrey's Phenomenal Surrealism (1:34:01) - Perks of Illusionism (1:37:37) - Infamous Illusionism Symposium (1:40:41) - Influencial Philosophers (1:45:38) - Other philosophical topics of interest (1:48:24) - Conclusion CONNECT: - Website: https://tevinnaidu.com/ - Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/drtevinnaidu - Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/drtevinnaidu/ - Twitter: https://twitter.com/drtevinnaidu/ - LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/drtevinnaidu/ For Business Inquiries: info@tevinnaidu.com ============================= ABOUT MIND-BODY SOLUTION: Mind-Body Solution explores the nature of consciousness, reality, free will, morality, mental health, and more. This podcast presents enlightening discourse with the world's leading experts in philosophy, physics, neuroscience, psychology, linguistics, AI, and beyond. It will change the way you think about the mind-body dichotomy by showing just how difficult — intellectually and practically — the mind-body problem is. Join Dr. Tevin Naidu on a quest to conquer the mind-body problem and take one step closer to the mind-body solution. Dr Tevin Naidu is a medical doctor, philosopher & ethicist. He attained his Bachelor of Medicine & Bachelor of Surgery degree from Stellenbosch University, & his Master of Philosophy degree Cum Laude from the University of Pretoria. His academic work focuses on theories of consciousness, computational psychiatry, phenomenological psychopathology, values-based practice, moral luck, addiction, & the philosophy & ethics of science, mind & mental health. ===================== Disclaimer: We do not accept any liability for any loss or damage incurred from you acting or not acting as a result of watching any of our publications. You acknowledge that you use the information provided at your own risk. Do your research. Copyright Notice: This video and audio channel contain dialog, music, and images that are the property of Mind-Body Solution. You are authorised to share the link and channel, and embed this link in your website or others as long as a link back to this channel is provided. © Mind-Body Solution
This is Arete Coach Podcast Episode 1141, with host Severin Sorensen bringing you an exciting episode with Dr. Philippe Bouissou. Philippe, is a man whose multifaceted journey through Silicon Valley is filled with invaluable insights. From being a best-selling author, TEDx speaker, and growth expert to an entrepreneur, CEO, venture capitalist, and board member, Philippe has donned many hats. His book "Aligning the Dots" presents a revolutionary approach to optimizing resource allocation for sustainable, profitable growth. As a managing partner and co-founder of Blue Dots Partners LLC, he focuses on accelerating top-line growth. In his years as a venture capitalist, Philippe evaluated over 2300 startups and witnessed firsthand the common pitfalls that led to their demise. A key realization he shares is the critical importance of focus and self-awareness for a startup's survival and success. This episode dives deep into Philippe's entrepreneurial journey, the eye-opening lessons he gleaned from Steve Jobs at Apple, and the profound understanding that, ultimately, every business is in the business of 'manufacturing and delivering delight' to its customers. We'll also discuss the lessons learned from failures, the humbling experience of studying physics, the crucial role of alignment within teams, the significance of having CEO experience before serving as a board member, and much more. Philippe's career began as the founder and CEO of G2I Incorporated, a UNIX software company later acquired by Matra. He then joined Apple as the director of the Worldwide Internet Commerce Group, where he founded and managed the online Apple Store, catapulting its revenue from zero to 350 million. Post-Apple, Philippe transitioned into venture capitalism and co-managed the Milestone Group, a management consulting firm serving over 220 clients. Throughout his career, he has led 120 management consulting projects with giants like Cisco, Microsoft, SAP, and VeriSign, and served on the board of directors of 20 companies, including the Association for Corporate Growth (ACG). Armed with degrees from Ecole Normale Supérieure in mathematics, a master's in physics, and a Ph.D. in nonlinear physics and chaos theory, Philippe brings a wealth of knowledge and experience to the table. Join us for a stimulating 60-minute cognitive stroll with two new friends, as we traverse through a multitude of topics, each more enlightening than the last. The Arete Coach Podcast aims to uncover the art and science of executive coaching. Learn more about the podcast at aretecoach.io. This Podcast interview was recorded on June 22, 2023. Copyright © 2023 by Arete Coach™ LLC. All rights reserved.
How do the wealthy maintain their wealth through tax havens, and what can we learn about these opaque practices? Recorded on April 3, 2023, this panel featured experts explaining aspects of the global ecosystem of tax avoidance, including how corporations and individuals move across multiple legal jurisdictions to maintain wealth and avoid paying taxes. The panel included Duncan Wigan, Professor with Special Responsibilities in the Department of Organization at Copenhagen Business School; and Gabriel Zucman, Professor of Economics at the Paris School of Economics and Ecole Normale Supérieure – PSL, Associate Professor of Economics at UC Berkeley, Director of the EU Tax Observatory, and director of the James M. and Cathleen D. Stone Center on Wealth and Income Inequality at UC Berkeley. The panel was moderated by Marion Fourcade, Professor of Sociology at UC Berkeley and Director of Social Science Matrix. Co-sponsored by Social Science Matrix, the Network for a New Political Economy (N2PE), the Stone Center on Wealth and Income Inequality, and the Berkeley Economy and Society Initiative.
As Tax Day approaches in the United States, we're revisiting our conversation with Gabriel Zucman, the authority on wealth taxes. For the last 40 years, trickle-down politicians have slashed tax rates on the rich, benefiting the wealthy few at the expense of the American middle class. Zucman explains how the rich manage to dodge taxes, and how we can fix this broken system. This episode originally aired on November 26, 2019. Gabriel Zucman is now Professor of Economics at the Paris School of Economics and Ecole Normale Supérieure – PSL, Associate Professor of Economics at the University of California, Berkeley, Director of the EU Tax Observatory, and Director of the James M. and Cathleen D. Stone Center on Wealth and Income Inequality at UC Berkeley. Twitter: @gabriel_zucman The Triumph of Injustice: https://wwnorton.com/books/the-triumph-of-injustice The Wealth Detective Who Finds the Hidden Money of the Super Rich: https://www.bloomberg.com/news/features/2019-05-23/the-wealth-detective-who-finds-the-hidden-money-of-the-super-rich Website: http://pitchforkeconomics.com Twitter: @PitchforkEcon Instagram: @pitchforkeconomics Nick's twitter: @NickHanauer
Blackcoffee podcast is back with a new series of Blackcoffee meets Europe, the winning project of the Culture of Solidarity Fund of the European Cultural Foundation. This final episode will take us to France, on a dialogue with a country which colonial past is worldly renowned. This will be an occasion to discuss French perspectives on decoloniality with an architect and geographer from Cameroon who's living and studying in France, at the Ecole Normale Supérieure of Paris. Who are the actors of decoloniality and France ? What are their means to survive the colonial and capitalistic modernity in France ? Is French decoloniality inclusive ? Which features does France share with Italy on coloniality and decoloniality ? How can these two countries mutually influence each other on this capital issue ?
Deep learning models — transformers in particular — are defining the cutting edge of AI today. They're based on an architecture called an artificial neural network, as you probably already know if you're a regular Towards Data Science reader. And if you are, then you might also already know that as their name suggests, artificial neural networks were inspired by the structure and function of biological neural networks, like those that handle information processing in our brains. So it's a natural question to ask: how far does that analogy go? Today, deep neural networks can master an increasingly wide range of skills that were historically unique to humans — skills like creating images, or using language, planning, playing video games, and so on. Could that mean that these systems are processing information like the human brain, too? To explore that question, we'll be talking to JR King, a CNRS researcher at the Ecole Normale Supérieure, affiliated with Meta AI, where he leads the Brain & AI group. There, he works on identifying the computational basis of human intelligence, with a focus on language. JR is a remarkably insightful thinker, who's spent a lot of time studying biological intelligence, where it comes from, and how it maps onto artificial intelligence. And he joined me to explore the fascinating intersection of biological and artificial information processing on this episode of the TDS podcast. *** Intro music: - Artist: Ron Gelinas - Track Title: Daybreak Chill Blend (original mix) - Link to Track: https://youtu.be/d8Y2sKIgFWc *** Chapters: 2:30 What is JR's day-to-day? 5:00 AI and neuroscience 12:15 Quality of signals within the research 21:30 Universality of structures 28:45 What makes up a brain? 37:00 Scaling AI systems 43:30 Growth of the human brain 48:45 Observing certain overlaps 55:30 Wrap-up
In questo audio il prezioso incontro con Lucio Baccaro economista e Gloria Origgi filosofaL'intervista è nel podcast Contemporaneamente a cura di Mariantonietta Firmani, il podcast pensato per Artribune.In Contemporaneamente podcast trovate incontri tematici con autorevoli interpreti del contemporaneo tra arte e scienza, letteratura, storia, filosofia, architettura, cinema e molto altro. Per approfondire questioni auliche ma anche cogenti e futuribili. Dialoghi straniati per accedere a nuove letture e possibili consapevolezze dei meccanismi correnti: tra locale e globale, tra individuo e società, tra pensiero maschile e pensiero femminile, per costruire una visione ampia, profonda ed oggettiva della realtà.Con Lucio Baccaro e Gloria Origgi parliamo di economia politica e filosofia, lavoro, denaro, umano e web; valori cruciali per l'umanità del terzo millennio. Parliamo del rapporto tra declino dei sindacati e aumento dei lavori precari, e del design tecnico dei social che non favorisce il dialogo ma la polarizzazione attraverso algoritmi che accentrano l'informazione. L'Italia esprime una scarsa domanda di lavoro qualificato, con lo sviluppo dei robot i lavori avranno maggiore intensità di competenze. L'attuale forma del web non è il suo destino. L'evoluzione tecnologica, monopolizzata dal capitalismo per massimizzare profitti, si arresta sulle contrapposizioni sociali. E ancora, la reputazione è capitale simbolico sul web riacquista importanza e fragilità perché con il tramite delle tecnologie spesso confondiamo popolarità con autorità. Per riequilibrare disponibilità di fondi tra quotidianità e guerre o pandemie, bisogna considerare che le risorse sono concentrate nelle mani dello 0,1% del top delle élite. E molto altro.ASCOLTA L'INTERVISTA! BREVI NOTE BIOGRAFICHE DEGLI AUTORIGloria Origgi, filosofa, vive e lavora a Parigi. Direttrice di Ricerca al CNRS, Institut Nicod, Ecole Normale Supérieure Parigi (PSL). Laurea in Filosofia all'università di Milano. Dopo il dottorato in Filosofia e scienze cognitive all'Ecole Polytechnique di Parigi, insegna all'Università di Bologna. E' stata visiting professor in numerose università: Columbia Unversity, New York, Bielefeld University, Germania, Università San Raffaele, Milano, Universidad UNISINOS, Porto Alegre, Brasile. Si occupa principalmente di epistemologia sociale e filosofia delle scienze sociali. Parte della sua ricerca è centrata sulla teoria della conoscenza, e del ruolo di Internet nel cambiamento del nostro rapporto con il sapere. Ultimamente ha sviluppato una teoria della reputazione, per comprendere come viene usata la reputazione degli altri per selezionare l'informazione. Inoltre si occupa del ruolo delle emozioni politiche nella conoscenza e nella mobilitazione collettiva. Tra i suoi lavori: Qu'est-ce que la confiance? 2008, La Reputazione 2017, Passions Sociales 2019. Lucio Baccaro economista politico, Direttore del Max Planck Institute for the Study of Societies in Cologne, professore onorario di sociologia all'Università di Ginevra. È stato docente presso Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland Ohio, la Massachusetts Institute of Technology. È stato alto funzionario di ricerca presso International Institute for Labour Studies of the International Labour Organization (ILO) di Ginevra, Agenzia delle Nazioni Unite. Laurea in filosofia ed Marter of Business Administration alla Sapienza di Roma, nel 1997 Dottorato in Diritto del Lavoro e Relazioni Industriali all'Università di Pavia, nel 1999 dottorato in Management e Scienze Politiche presso il MIT. La sua ricerca è centrata su economia politica comparata, relazioni industriali e mercati del lavoro, modelli di crescita da basi sociopolitiche e sui risultati socioeconomici. Il suo lavoro è multimetodo e combina l'analisi econometrica con casi di studio comparativi, applicando strumenti testuali quantitativi come la modellazione tematica e l'analisi del sentimento. Nonché approcci più micro come l'analisi di grandi sondaggi. Inoltre è membro dell'American Political Science Association dal 1996. È stato membro del consiglio esecutivo della Society for the Advancement of Socio-Economics Oxofrd. Tra le molte pubblicazioni l'ultima e "Trajectories of Neoliberal Transformation: European Industrial Relations since the 1970s" Cambridge University Press, 2017.
Dr. Audrey Cottet is an academic researcher in the Physics department of the Ecole Normale Supérieure in Paris. She has over twenty years of expertise in theoretical physics, with a focus on condensed matter physics and quantum physics. Outside the lab, Audrey is a Middle Eastern dance and percussion student.She has learned how to player finger cymbals with Hassan Abdel Khalek and Nicolas Derolin in Paris. This practice motivated her secondary research activity on the history of cymbal playing. She has recently written one article on finger cymbal played in the Roman Empire, in the journal “Early Music” published by the Oxford University Press. She also has a second article published in the Review CLARA (Classical Art and Archaeology) hosted by the University of Oslo.In this episode you will learn about:- Proper terminology: zills, sagats or cymbals- The very first mentions of cymbals and finger cymbals in ancient history- The process of writing a peer reviewed article- The tradition of finger cymbals playing in the Roman Empire- First known mentions of finger cymbals in Egyptian cultureShow Notes to this episode:Follow Dr. Audrey Cottet via Instagram. Two of her articles available here: Playing finger cymbals in the Roman Empire: an iconographic study, and Cymbals playing in a Roman mosaic from Mariamin in SyriaAlso, check her performance at the upcoming show "Hommages" choregraphed by Ciya with her amateur dance troupe the “Ballet Egypt'Ciya”, with invited professional dancers (Yael Zarca, Gennaro Festa, Myrto Kaukias) and with a small finger cymbal solo by Audrey (July 3rd, in Montrouge near Paris).Find information on how you can support Ukraine and Ukrainian belly dancers HERE.Podcast: www.ianadance.com/podcast
Au milieu du XXe siècle, l'historien britannique Arnold Hugh Martin Jones affirmait dans un texte consacré à la numismatique et à l'histoire qu'il était peut être mieux pour les numismates de prendre moins au sérieux les pièces anciennes, leurs types ainsi que leur légende. Storiavoce vous propose aujourd'hui de faire mentir cette affirmation en nous transportant à l'époque romaine. Et si la monnaie était plus qu'une histoire économique mais bien une histoire politique, autant qu'une histoire de réception et de représentations ? Que nous disent les monnaies de cette histoire politique ? Comment et où frappait-on monnaie sous l'empire ? Les monnaies d'Auguste sont-elles comparables à celles de Constantin trois siècles plus tard ? La même monnaie était-elle utilisée dans l'ensemble des provinces impériales ? Ces monnaies sont-elles enfin le reflet de ce que nous appellerions une civilisation ? Notre invité : Depuis dix ans, Donatien Grau exerce des fonctions universitaires (Ecole Normale Supérieure, Sorbonne) et muséales (Getty, musée d'Orsay, musée du Louvres). Docteur en littérature française et comparée, en littérature moderne et histoire de l'art, et en sciences historiques et philologiques, il est l'auteur à la fois de travaux savants (Néron en Occident, 2015, Le Roman romain, 2018), et d'écrits contemporains (Plato in L. A., 2018, Le Musée transitoire, avec Emanuele Coccia, 2018). Il co-dirige la collection Figures aux éditions Grasset et vient de publier aux Belles Lettres : La Mémoire numismatique de l'Empire romain (https://www.lesbelleslettres.com/livre/9782251452395/la-memoire-numismatique-de-lempire-romain) (518 pages, 43€).
"Retour vers le passé" est une émission réalisée par les étudiant.e.s du cours d'allemand "Résistance, hier et aujourd'hui" de l'Ecole Normale Supérieure le samedi 2 avril 2022. L'actualité brûlante de la guerre en Ukraine rappelle la situation de l'Allemagne dans les années 1920. Les étudiants du cours d'allemand "Résistances d'hier et d'aujourd'hui" de l'ENS ont décidé de revenir sur l'histoire et la vie économique durant la république de Weimar, un régime politique qui a duré de la fin de la première guerre mondiale au début de la seconde. Capucine Dulau et Andreï Fedorovsky feront une chronique à deux voix sur l'histoire politique de ce régime. Pour compléter, François Citton nous expliquera les mécanismes économiques qui ont affaibli cette république à l'époque et continuent d'impacter la conception de l'Allemagne sur les politiques budgétaires. Romane Carlier réagira à tout ceci, en rapportant le témoignage de sa grand-mère. Quant à Antonin Drouot, il animera cette table ronde ! La première partie de l'émission fut réalisée par François Citton puis la deuxième par Capucine Dulau. Pause musicale : David Bowie - Helden Un atelier organisé par Theresa Wagner, lectrice à l'École normale supérieure, dans le cadre de son cours d'allemand "Résistances, hier et aujourd'hui" et animé par Eléonore Genest et Swann Blanchet dans le cadre des ateliers "A Vous Les Studios" de Radio Campus Paris.
The Algerian Higher Education system has evolved significantly over the past six decades, responding to the changing economic and political contexts of the country. After inheriting the French colonial education system in the sixties with minor adjustments, the seventies saw a democratisation of the space. During the eighties, the role of the single national party was affirmed with a marked Arabization of the social sciences and the establishment of several universities across the country. But from the eighties onwards, there was also a loss of autonomy and independence of the university, with increased centralisation of management by the Ministry of Higher Education, and academic leadership positions being filled by administrators. As a result, scientific research, creative innovation, and emergence of new ideas at all levels declined significantly. This loss of autonomy resulted in the migration of academics and graduates abroad. Today, the Algerian higher education system has over 1.7 million students and over 130 Higher Education Institutions, compared to 55,000 students in 1980 and 3000 in 1963, and less than 10 Higher Education Institutions in 1963. This webinar will discuss current challenges and future opportunities across the higher education system in Algeria, with an emphasis on its historical background, evolution, and broader societal role since independence. Mounir Khaled Berrah is a professor and author with interests in higher education, research development and innovation systems, international cooperation in science, technology and innovation, statistical information systems and digital transition. Berrah was Director of the Ecole Nationale Polytechnique in Algeria from 1997 - 2005. He was also Director General of the National Statistics Office in Algeria from 2009 - 2020. Hayat Messekher is Professor of English at the Ecole Normale Supérieure of Bouzaréah (Algiers) where she teaches pre-service teacher-trainees. She previously served as Head of the English Department. She also serves as a Consultant for British Council Algeria where she manages the portfolio of education and society programmes. Mohamed Miliani is Professor of English at the University of Oran 2, Algeria. He specialises in education, Teaching English as a Foreign Language (TEFL), and English for Specific Purposes (ESP). He is research project lead in university ethics at the Centre for Research in Cultural and Social Anthropology (CRASC). He also serves as president of the Algerian Technical Committee for Education (UNESCO-Algeria). Khaoula Taleb-Ibrahimi is Professor of Sciences of Languages and Director of the Linguistics, Sociolinguistics and Didactics of Languages (LISODIL) Research Laboratory at the University of Algiers II. Taleb-Ibrahimi defended and obtained her PhD on the sciences of languages at the University of Grenoble, France in 1991. She has taught linguistics, didactics, discourse analysis, language policy, textual linguistics and sociolinguistics.
The promise of a liberal arts education has always been the insight offered to us by classic texts about the human experience. Emily Allen-Hornblower and Nafeesah Goldsmith tell us the appeal is not limited just to traditional students in classrooms, but also students learning in environments as challenging as the American judicial system. Emily Allen-Hornblower is Associate Professor of Classics at Rutgers University. She is a graduate of the Ecole Normale Supérieure in Paris, France, and received her Ph.D in Classics from Harvard University. She has published articles on archaic and classical Greek literature, Greek and Roman historiography, and the twentieth-century reception of Greek drama. She is the author of “From Agent to Spectator: Witnessing the Aftermath in Ancient Greek Epic and Tragedy.” Her areas of interest include, storytelling, religion and gender, ancient cultural history, ancient Greek and Roman epic, Greek drama, and social justice. Her book and articles center on both ancient and modern conceptions and portrayals of the human condition, suffering, and connection and disconnection between individuals and groups. Allen-Hornblower has taught Classics and world history in medium and maximum security prisons in New Jersey, as part of the Scholarship and Transformative Education in Prisons (NJ-STEP) program. Nafeesah Goldsmith is the CEO of RISE, Real Intervention Supports Excellence, a mission-based sustainability initiative that supports initiatives that support at-risk communities and building prison-free futures. When she was 21 years old, she began serving a 15-year prison sentence at the Edna Mahan Correctional Facility for Women, where she began her college career through the Clinton College Bound/NJ-STEP program. Goldsmith was released from prison on June 23, 2015, and dedicates her time to speaking on incarceration, reentry, the School to Prison Pipeline, and the effects of incarceration on families and communities. She studied Criminal Justice at Monmouth University after earning a bachelor's degree in Sociology. She is also an alumna of Rutgers University and is currently pursuing a degree in law. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
In this week's #Forum2000online Chat, French political scientist and Arabist and Professor at Paris Sciences and Lettres University, Gilles Kepel, spoke about the situation in Afghanistan and the wider region now that the US have withdrew. In this interview, you will learn that: We were supposed to expect the withdrawal of US forces from Afghanistan, but the hasty execution of it was rather surprising. Recent images of the withdrawal are reminiscent of the US defeat in Saigon in 1975. Today's Taliban shows differences from the Taliban of 1996 to 2001. Human and other rights are disappearing as if 20 years of American presence had not occurred. The international jihadist movement might seek to relocate some of its activities to Afghanistan Europe will have to take responsibility for migration and its borders. Gilles Kepel is a French political scientist and Arabist and Professor at Paris Sciences and Lettres University (PSL) as well as the Director of the Middle East and Mediterranean Program at Ecole Normale Supérieure. His newest book „Away from Chaos: The Middle East and the Challenge to the West” was published in English translation in 2020. This interview was recorded on October 5, 2021 and moderated by Arzu Geybulla, Azerbaijanian journalist and member of the Forum 2000 Program Council. For more information about our activities follow our web and social media: Web: https://www.forum2000.cz Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/forum.2000 Twitter: https://twitter.com/Forum_2000
Episode sponsored by Paperpile: https://paperpile.com/ (paperpile.com) Get 20% off until December 31st with promo code GOODBAYESIAN21 Bonjour my dear Bayesians! Yes, it was bound to happen one day — and this day has finally come. Here is the first ever 100% French speaking ‘Learn Bayes Stats' episode! Who is to blame, you ask? Well, who better than Rémi Louf? Rémi currently works as a senior data scientist at Ampersand, a big media marketing company in the US. He is the author and maintainer of several open source libraries, including MCX and BlackJAX. He holds a PhD in statistical Physics, a Masters in physics from the Ecole Normale Supérieure and a Masters in Philosophy from Oxford University. I think I know what you're wondering: how the hell do you go from physics to philosophy to Bayesian stats?? Glad you asked, as it was my first question to Rémi! He'll also tell us why he created MXC and BlackJax, what his main challenges are when working on open-source projects, and what the future of PPLs looks like to him. Our theme music is « Good Bayesian », by Baba Brinkman (feat MC Lars and Mega Ran). Check out his awesome work at https://bababrinkman.com/ (https://bababrinkman.com/) ! Thank you to my Patrons for making this episode possible! Yusuke Saito, Avi Bryant, Ero Carrera, Brian Huey, Giuliano Cruz, Tim Gasser, James Wade, Tradd Salvo, Adam Bartonicek, William Benton, Alan O'Donnell, Mark Ormsby, Demetri Pananos, James Ahloy, Jon Berezowski, Robin Taylor, Thomas Wiecki, Chad Scherrer, Nathaniel Neitzke, Zwelithini Tunyiswa, Elea McDonnell Feit, Bertrand Wilden, James Thompson, Stephen Oates, Gian Luca Di Tanna, Jack Wells, Matthew Maldonado, Ian Costley, Ally Salim, Larry Gill, Joshua Duncan, Ian Moran, Paul Oreto, Colin Caprani, George Ho, Colin Carroll, Nathaniel Burbank, Michael Osthege, Rémi Louf, Clive Edelsten, Henri Wallen, Hugo Botha, Vinh Nguyen, Raul Maldonado, Marcin Elantkowski, Tim Radtke, Adam C. Smith, Will Kurt, Andrew Moskowitz, Hector Munoz, Marco Gorelli, Simon Kessell, Bradley Rode, Patrick Kelley, Rick Anderson, Casper de Bruin and Philippe Labonde. Visit https://www.patreon.com/learnbayesstats (https://www.patreon.com/learnbayesstats) to unlock exclusive Bayesian swag ;) Links from the show: Rémi on GitHub: https://github.com/rlouf (https://github.com/rlouf) Rémi on Twitter: https://twitter.com/remilouf (https://twitter.com/remilouf) Rémi's website: https://rlouf.github.io/ (https://rlouf.github.io/) BlackJAX -- Fast & modular sampling library: https://github.com/blackjax-devs/blackjax (https://github.com/blackjax-devs/blackjax) MCX -- Probabilistic programs on CPU & GPU, powered by JAX: https://github.com/rlouf/mcx (https://github.com/rlouf/mcx) French Presidents' popularity dashboard: https://www.pollsposition.com/popularity (https://www.pollsposition.com/popularity) How to model presidential approval (in French): https://anchor.fm/pollspolitics/episodes/10-Comment-Modliser-la-Popularit-e121jh2 (https://anchor.fm/pollspolitics/episodes/10-Comment-Modliser-la-Popularit-e121jh2) LBS #23, Bayesian Stats in Business & Marketing, with Elea McDonnel Feit: https://www.learnbayesstats.com/episode/23-bayesian-stats-in-business-and-marketing-analytics-with-elea-mcdonnel-feit (https://www.learnbayesstats.com/episode/23-bayesian-stats-in-business-and-marketing-analytics-with-elea-mcdonnel-feit) LBS #30, Symbolic Computation & Dynamic Linear Models, with Brandon Willard: https://www.learnbayesstats.com/episode/symbolic-computation-dynamic-linear-models-brandon-willard (https://www.learnbayesstats.com/episode/symbolic-computation-dynamic-linear-models-brandon-willard) This podcast uses the following third-party services for analysis: Podcorn - https://podcorn.com/privacy Support this podcast
Wiecie, że nawet drapanie się jest elementem układu odpornościowego? To jego część najprostsza, mechaniczna. – Kolejną warstwą jest układ odpornościowy wrodzony, który dzielimy prawie z wszelkimi organizmami na Ziemi. Rośliny mają układ wrodzony, muszki, kręgowce, przeróżne organizmy. To jest bardzo stare rozwiązanie – mówi dr Aleksandra Walczak, fizyczka pracująca na francuskiej uczelni Ecole Normale Supérieure. *Przygotowanie każdego odcinka to wiele godzin pracy. Jeśli podobał Wam się ten podcast – możecie mnie wesprzeć w serwisie Patronite. Dzięki!https://patronite.pl/radionaukowe *Zastanawiacie się, co fizyka ma do układu odpornościowego? Bardzo dobre pytanie. Okazuje się, że ta nauka może wnieść interesujący wkład w rozumienie naszej biologii. – W układzie wrodzonym są pewne rozwiązania logiczne wspólne dla roślin i dla nas . To już jest rozumowanie mniej jak biologów, a bardziej fizyków czy informatyków – zauważa dr Walczak. I my, i rośliny musimy z jednymi bakteriami współpracować, a przed innymi się chronić. Rozróżnianie „dobrych” bakterii od „złych” to skomplikowane zadanie dla układu odpornościowego.Samą dr Walczak fascynuje kolejna warstwa naszej odporności czyli układ adaptacyjny. – Nie rodzimy się z nim, ale rodzimy się z mechanizmem do jego generacji. Produkujemy go przez całe życie. On się adaptuje, dostosowuje do naszej rzeczywistości i koewoluuje z naszymi patogenami – opowiada badaczka.Układ adaptacyjny to głównie komórki B i T, zwane limfocytami. Produkujemy je na bieżąco, ale co ciekawe im jesteśmy starsi, tym wytwarzamy ich mniej. – To starość immunologiczna, ale ze starością przychodzi tez mądrość. Organizm widział więcej infekcji, jest bardziej doświadczony – opowiada naukowczyni. Część komórek jest już sprawdzona „w boju”, to tzw. komórki pamięciowe, nowe limfocyty są nazywane naiwnymi. Zanim nowy limfocyt zostanie wypuszczony do pracy, chodzi do „szkoły”, przechodzi wewnętrzny „egzamin”, czy nie jest np. zbyt nadgorliwy. Doskonałym wsparciem treningowym dla naszej odporności są szczepionki.Co ciekawe, nie ma w zasadzie dwóch takich samych układów immunologicznych. Mamy w sobie takie same biologiczne maszyny produkujące komórki odpornościowe, ale efekt zawsze będzie nieco inny. – Mój układ odpornościowy jest inny niż pani, a pani byłby inny niż pani siostry bliźniaczki – podkreśla fizyczka.Natomiast mnóstwa spraw o systemie ochronnym naszych organizmów jeszcze nie wiemy. Nie do końca wiadomo, dlaczego niektórzy ciągle kichają i łapią przeziębienia, a innych nic się nie ima. Dlatego tak interesujące jest spojrzenie z perspektywy innej nauki: fizyki statystycznej, poszukiwania ogólnych praw natury.Dr Walczak naszą biologię, nasz układ odpornościowy zapisuje w równaniach. – Chcę znaleźć równania statystyczne i probabilistyczne opisujące nasz układ odpornościowy adaptacyjny – opowiada. Badania dają też efekty praktyczne. – Zaproponowaliśmy m.in. technologię, która pozwala sprawdzać jak potencjalnie niebezpieczne są różne warianty pewnych białek w SARS-CoV-2 – dodaje badaczka.Dr Aleksandra Walczak jest uznaną badaczką, laureatką nagród naukowych, a także trzykrotną laureatką prestiżowego grantu ERC – Europejskiej Rady ds. Badań Naukowych. Posłuchajcie koniecznie!https://www.phys.ens.fr/~awalczak/https://radionaukowe.pl/
In this episode, I converse with Dr. Yilin Wang, a distinguished C.L.E. Moore Instructor in Mathematics at MIT. Yilin obtained her Ph.D. advised by the Fields Medalist Wendelin Werner at ETH Zurich and before that, she studied at Ecole Normale Supérieure de Paris and University Paris-Sud (Paris-Saclay) for her bachelor's. Beginning in January 2022, Yilin will be a Strauch Postdoctoral Fellow at Mathematical Sciences Research Institute (MSRI), Berkeley. Yilin has been working on topics at the interface of Complex analysis and Probability theory and her current research focuses on themes that aim at enlightening the connections among Random Conformal Geometry, Geometric Function Theory, and Teichmueller theory. We indulge in a terrific chat about her phenomenal journey in science; mathematics as an art and the meaning it holds for her; heading to France for her mathematical education and the European system of doing maths; not getting bogged down with failures and terrific mentors who guided and inspired her; seminars and collaborations in a (post) pandemic world; diversity and representation of underrepresented groups in mathematics; and many more things!!
Internationally renowned jazz pianist, Laurent de Wilde has been described as an exciting and passionate musician. Born in the United States in 1960, de Wilde spent his formative years (1964 to 1983) in France where he was immersed in French culture, music and literature eventually studying philosophy at the “Ecole Normale Supérieure” in Paris. Returning to the United States on a scholarship to further his musical knowledge, he studied jazz piano in New York where he resided for eight years. In the late 1980's he recorded his first albums with trumpet player Eddie Henderson and drummers Jack DeJohnette and Billy Hart. Returning to Paris in 1991, he continued his musical career touring throughout Europe, the United States and Japan. In 1993 he was awarded the Django Reinhardt Prize and in 1998 the “Victoires du Jazz”. In this period he also wrote his first book, a biography of Thelonious Monk that was published by Gallimard in 1996. The book received critical acclaim and has been translated and published in the United States, the U.K., Japan, Spain and Italy. To mark the centennial of Thelonious Monk's birthday and the twentieth anniversary of the publication of his Thelonious Monk biography, de Wilde's album titled “New Monk Trio” has been released. Accompanied by Jérôme Regard on double bass and Donald Kontomanou on drums, de Wilde revisits Monk's repertoire delivering a contemporary reading of the pianist's work and proving that Monk's modernity transcends the limits of time and continues to shake the essential values of music. Originally recorded March 19th 2018 . www.laurentdewilde.com www.jammincolors.com www.joekelleyradio.com
Did you know that a high percentage of missed school days in emerging markets are due to dental problems caused by poor dental care practices? Or, that 90 percent of global health problems, including COVID-19, would be solved if all of us washed our hands seven times a day? In this podcast, Thomas Serval, CEO of Baracoda Group, discusses how health issues can be prevented through daily care and wellness practices. His company is creating new smart objects for the bathroom—mirrors, bathmats, toothbrushes, and so on—connected by an open operating system, CareOS. The smart bathroom ecosystem Baracoda and its partners are developing is privacy-first, but the data and insights generated can help people proactively prevent diseases and support better health practices over the long-term. We talk about Thomas’ 17 years of experience at CES, where Baracoda has consistently introduced award-winning daily healthtech innovations. This year marks the fifth year in a row of garnering CES Innovation Awards. At this year’s virtual event, Baracoda unveiled the Themis smart mirror, named a CES 2021 Innovation Awards Honoree. Themis provides a privacy-first wide range of health and wellness capabilities: skin analysis, product recommendations, makeup and beard tutorials, daily temperature checks, smart alerts, fertility cycle reminders, and more—all in a compact form factor with a 10-inch screen at an accessible price. The company also showcased Baracoda BBalance, the smart bathroom mat that checks weight, balance, and posture—also a CES 2020 Innovation Awards Honoree. Not many people think of the bathroom as the hub of preventative health practices, but this enlightening podcast will change your mind. New connected objects can help you spot suspicious moles that might signal skin cancer, check your temperature and heart rate, and determine whether or not you are brushing your teeth effectively. Learn more about Baracoda’s daily healthtech innovations, the company’s strategy, and the impact it could have on your health through better daily care—all in the privacy of your bathroom. Thomas Serval, Co-Founder Chairman and CEO - Baracoda Former senior executive at Microsoft and Google. A graduate of the Ecole Normale Supérieure, and of the Ecole Nationale de la Statistique et de l’Administration Economique (ENSAE), Thomas filed his first patent - a Bluetooth barcode scanner - in 2000, and co-founded Baracoda the following year. Thomas is a serial entrepreneur and a visionary leader. He transforms large companies, as much as the daily life of consumers, through his disruptive innovations. Thomas is a board member of Arte and Younited Credit.
Welcome to the 100th episode of the BSP Podcast. To celebrate this milestone we have a specially recorded interview with Professor Shaun Gallagher (University of Memphis, USA, and University of Wollongong, Australia). Gallagher is interviewed by Jessica Stanier (Wellcome Centre for Cultures and Environments of Health at the University of Exeter) and Hannah Berry (BSP Secretary). “I’m really happy we’ve reached 100 episodes!” – writes Dr Matt Barnard, founder and editor of the BSP Podcast. “I started the podcast because I wanted to amplify the voice of our delegates at conferences. Phenomenology is an important movement in thought, challenging us to listen harder, and engage with the world and human experiences. As such, I’m delighted that Shaun Gallagher, who has done so much to advocate for phenomenology and communicate it clearly, agreed to be interviewed for this special episode. I’m also super grateful to Jessica Stanier and Hannah Berry. They came up with really interesting questions, leading to a unique and open discussion that I really enjoyed editing. I am sure our listeners will enjoy it too.” BIOS: Shaun Gallagher is the Lillian and Morrie Moss Professor of Excellence in Philosophy at the University of Memphis, USA, and Professorial Fellow at the School of Liberal Arts, University of Wollongong, Australia. His research is interdisciplinary and focuses on embodied cognition and the phenomenology of self, action, intention, and social interaction, He held the Humboldt Foundation Anneliese Maier Research Fellowship (2012-18). He has been Honorary Professor at Tromsø University (Norway), Durham University (UK) and the University of Copenhagen (Denmark). He has held visiting research positions at MRC: Centre for Cognition and Brain Sciences, Cambridge University; Ecole Normale Supériure, Lyon; CREA and Ecole Normale Supériure, Paris; Humboldt University, Berlin; Keeble College, Oxford University; and Sapienza - University of Rome. His publications include Action and Interaction (Oxford 2020); The Phenomenological Mind -3rd ed (Routledge 2020); Enactivist Interventions: Rethinking the Mind (Oxford 2017); The Neuro-phenomenology of Awe and Wonder (Palgrave Macmillan 2015); Phenomenology (Palgrave Macmillan 2012; 2nd ed in 2021); How the Body Shapes the Mind (Oxford 2005); Hermeneutics and Education (SUNY Press 1992); and as editor, the Oxford Handbook of the Self (2011); and co-editor The Oxford Handbook of 4E Cognition (2018). He is editor-in-chief of the journal Phenomenology and the Cognitive Sciences. His books and articles have been translated into 14 different languages, and have been cited more than 29,000 times (Google Scholar). He served as principle investigator on grants from the European Science Foundation, Marie Curie Actions, the National Science Foundation, the Templeton Foundation; and has been co-PI on awards from the Australian Research Council, Marie Curie, Humboldt Foundation, and the Arts and Humanities Research Council (UK). Hannah Berry has recently completed her doctoral thesis on empathy from the University of Liverpool. The thesis is called ‘The Shoe Never Fits: a phenomenological revision of empathy and intersubjectivity’ and offers a critical analysis of phenomenological, psychological and biological descriptions of empathy and proposes a development to Husserl’s theory of analogising apprehension in order to describe an interpersonal experience that takes into account sociability as well as the subjective experience of self and other. Her interests are in psycho- and socio-linguistics, forensic linguistics, pragmatics, phenomenology and philosophy of mind. Hannah is the current secretary for the British Society for Phenomenology and is the lead tutor of the WEA’s North West refugee education programme. Jessie Stanier is a PhD student at the Wellcome Centre for Cultures and Environments of Health at the University of Exeter. She takes an engaged approach to her study of phenomenology, ageing, and older age by collaborating with various people affected by the lived realities of ageing and caring. In her PhD thesis, she aims to shed new light on normative determinants of ageing and how they affect lived experiences and possibilities for older people. She co-hosted this year’s BSP conference online, and she is currently co-editing a Special Issue of Puncta: Journal of Critical Phenomenology on ‘Pandemic Politics & Phenomenology’. The British Society for Phenomenology is a not-for-profit organisation set up with the intention of promoting research and awareness in the field of Phenomenology and other cognate arms of philosophical thought. Currently, the society accomplishes these aims through its journal, events, and podcast. Why not find out more, join the society, and subscribe to our journal the JBSP? https://www.britishphenomenology.org.uk/
Neurobiologiste spécialiste de l’exploration du fonctionnement du cerveau, Pierre-Marie Lledo est aujourd’hui, chercheur à l’Institut Pasteur et responsable du projet : “Perception et mémoire”. Ancien élève de l’Ecole Normale Supérieure, il a obtenu en 1995 la médaille de bronze du CNRS. Dans ce nouvel épisode, il revient sur la force du cerveau humain.Un échange passionnant pour en apprendre plus sur l’outil le plus précieux de l’être humain, évoquant par moments un avenir digne des films de Science-Fiction.Erasme disait : “On ne naît pas homme, on le devient”, et c’est notamment en développant la dimension unique du cerveau humain : son aspect immatériel : l’âme, l’esprit, que cette citation prend tout son sens. Si cette caractéristique de notre cerveau nous permet de nous distinguer des autres espèces animales, est-il scientifiquement possible d’améliorer nos capacités et nos actions ? Une question fondamentale que nous avons creusé tout au long de cet entretien avec Pierre-Marie Lledo : est-il possible d’améliorer notre matière grise pour laisser place à une sorte de “super cerveau” ? Durant ses précieuses recherches Pierre-Marie Lledo n’a cessé de déconstruire les idées reçues qu’on entend bien souvent au sujet du cerveau humain. Durant cet épisode, il revient sur l’une des principales : notre capacité d'apprentissage, qui selon la croyance collective aurait une durée de vie limitée. En somme, nous serions plus aptes à apprendre durant notre enfance, une idée constante qui n’est pas véridique, selon le chercheur. En effet, il rappelle que nous sommes disposés à apprendre tout au long de notre vie. Puis, il revient sur l’effet du confinement sur le cerveau et la santé mentale. Une situation inédite pour l’homme du XXIème siècle, qui nous a démontré l’importance du lien social et des interactions réelles, sur notre bien-être. Au moment d’aborder cette thématique, Pierre-Marie Lledo nous donne un précieux conseil sur fond de résilience pour mobiliser les troupes à l’heure du télétravail pour toutes et tous. Il préconise de transformer le problème en objectif afin que ce dernier devienne un moteur de désir. Un mécanisme indispensable et efficace grâce à un effort collectif. Prendre le contre-pied d'une situation loin d’être idyllique pour faire renaître une unité de groupe et le sentiment d’appartenance au groupe. Une partie de ce podcast est également consacrée aux progrès qui entourent les avancées de la neuroscience, presque tout droit sorties de films de science-fiction à la Blade Runner, avec notamment les fameux implants cérébraux d'Elon Musk. Fantasmes élitistes et non-éthiques pour Pierre-Marie Lledo, qui met en garde contre les projets du directeur général de Neuralink. Un échange enrichissant pour mieux comprendre notre cerveau et améliorer nos capacités. A écouter et méditer.Ce Podcast est proposé par l'Apm.L’ambition de l’Apm c’est d’inspirer les entrepreneurs, de les aider à se transformer pour créer des richesses et contribuer à bâtir un monde plus humain.Interviews réalisées par Thibault Tourvieille De Labrouhe et Rémi RochonCe podcast est réalisé et enregistré par les équipes de Supernatifs
Au menu du jour : un point sur la grande conférence QCB du 4 novembre. Compte-rendu de visites à Grenoble et au LKB de l’Ecole Normale Supérieure puis un peu d’actualité technologique avec Toshiba, Honeywell et Pasqal.
Today it's great to have Dr Monica Barbir on the podcast. Dr Barbir is the Postdoctoral Researcher at the International Research Center for Neurointelligence (IRCN) BabyLab, University of Tokyo. She is interested in the cognitive mechanisms that make learning language easy for babies but hard for adults. Her goal is to innovate novel language learning methods that would ultimately allow adults to learn language as well as babies. Dr Barbir studied language acquisition at the University of Toronto and the Ecole Normale Supérieure, taught English as a foreign language with the Japanese Exchange and Teaching Programme, and designed novel tools for learning language during her MA in comic book design. Listen to this episode to hear more about Dr Barbir's amazing research, great insights regarding the issues women face in Academia, and wonderful advice for everyone regardless of career choice.Time stamps:[00:49] Dr Barbir's introduction[01:24] Dr Barbir's research journey[06:09] Obstacles in research journey[11:56] Work/life balance[17:42] Dr Barbir's research on grammar[26:47] Hopes for future research[28:55] Issues that women in Academia are facing today according to Dr Barbir[32:40] Dr Barbir's advice for everyone thinking about a career in Academia or for those just starting a career in AcademiaLinks:Dr Barbir's website: https://monicab.net/IRCN BabyLab: https://babylab.ircn.jp/en/International Research Center for Neurointelligence (IRCN): https://ircn.jp/en/The University of Tokyo: https://www.u-tokyo.ac.jp/en/Science-based information about language learning in childhood in form of comics: https://kotoboo.org/Get in touch:e-mail: podcast.irenalovcevic@gmail.comtwitter: @IrenaLovcevicinstagram: @irenalovcevicwebsite: https://munduslibrium.com/
Today it's great to have Dr Marieke van Heugten on the podcast. Dr van Heugten is an Assistant Professor at the Department of Psychology and Director of the Buffalo BabyLab at the at the University at Buffalo, State University of New York. She completed her B.A. and M.Sc. at Radboud University in the Netherlands before moving to Canada where she received her Ph.D. from the University of Toronto. She then held a postdoctoral position at the Ecole Normale Supérieure in Paris, France. In August 2015 she started her position at the University at Buffalo. Dr van Heugten's research focuses on when and how children learn to comprehend spoken language. Specifically, she explores how children (learn to) recognize words from fluent speech, how they (learn to) process the relationships between words in a sentence, and how they (learn to) take into account information from the environment during language processing to better understand the message. Listen to this episode to hear more about Dr van Heugten's research on language processing in infants and children, Dr van Heugten's research journey, and on the challenges that female researchers face in Academia.Time stamps:[00:41] Dr van Heugten's introduction[00:57] Dr van Heugten's research journey[02:47] Obstacles in research journey[05:02] Work/life balance[06:05] Dr van Heugten's research on language processing in infants, toddlers and children[09:07] Plans for future research[10:04] Issues that women in Academia are facing today according to Dr van Heugten[11:13] Dr van Heugten's advice for everyone thinking about a career in Academia or for those just starting a career in AcademiaLinks:Buffalo BabyLab: https://ubwp.buffalo.edu/babylab/Buffalo BabyLab Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/buffalobabylab/Follow Dr van Heugten on Twitter: @mvheugtenGet in touch:e-mail: podcast.irenalovcevic@gmail.comtwitter: @IrenaLovcevicinstagram: @irenalovcevicwebsite: https://munduslibrium.com/
durée : 01:46:08 - Le Grand Atelier - par : Vincent Josse - C'est un cinéaste qui a raté plusieurs fois le concours de l’Ecole Normale Supérieure. Ancien prof de lettres classiques que le 7ème Art a passionné tardivement, et ancien grand critique de cinéma devenu l’un des fondateurs de la Nouvelle Vague, on ignore souvent que les films ont attiré beaucoup de spectateurs. - invités : Eric Rohmer - Eric ROHMER
durée : 00:51:25 - Répliques - par : Alain Finkielkraut - Comme l'a montré la soirée des Césars, la promotion spectaculaire de la diversité au rang de valeur suprême ne montre-t-elle pas que l'universel est en crise et que cette idée mérite plus que jamais d'être défendue par un plaidoyer ardent et argumenté ? - réalisation : François Caunac - invités : Chantal Delsol philosophe, romancière, éditorialiste, professeure émérite de philosophie politique et membre de l’Institut, Académie des Sciences morales et politiques; Francis Wolff professeur émérite à l’Ecole Normale Supérieure ULM.
Patrick Laude is a scholar, author and teacher. His works deal with the relationship between mysticism, symbolism and poetry, as well as focusing on contemporary spiritual figures such as Simone Weil, Louis Massignon and Frithjof Schuon. Born in France in 1958, Patrick took a graduate degree in Philosophy at the University of Paris IV Sorbonne while studying at the Ecole Normale Supérieure in Paris. He traveled to the US in the early eighties and obtained his Ph.D. in 1985 from Indiana University. He joined Georgetown University in 1991. Laude's scholarly work is primarily focused on comparative mysticism, the symbolic imagination in religion and literature, and Western interpretations of Asian contemplative traditions. He is the author of several books and numerous articles on these subjects. Although we had some technical difficulties during the chat and couldn't quite get all the subject material out of the way, I believe we still managed to coax out some valuable materials on comparing religions of the East and West, as expressed in his excellent book, “Shimmering Mirrors: Reality and Appearance in Contemplative Metaphysics of East and West”. I recommend this book for all those interested in this difficult subject. We will have a book deal available for listeners soon! Watch this space. Music & Mixing Credit: Chris Kelly - for all music enquiries, including original music and editing services please contact shipoffoolscast@protonmail.com Find out more at https://ship-of-fools-podcast.pinecast.co This podcast is powered by Pinecast. Support SOF Cast by contributing to their Tip Jar: https://tips.pinecast.com/jar/ship-of-fools-podcast Find out more at https://ship-of-fools-podcast.pinecast.co This podcast is powered by Pinecast.
Béatrice Han-Pile studied philosophy, history and literature at the Ecole Normale Supérieure (Paris) and was awarded a Fellowship from the Thiers Foundation while completing her doctoral thesis on Michel Foucault. Before coming to Essex, she taught in France at the Universities of Paris IV-Sorbonne, Reims and Amiens. She is the author of Foucault's Critical Project: Between the Transcendental and the Historical (Stanford University Press, 2002). She has published mostly on Foucault, Nietzsche, Schopenhauer, phenomenology (in particular Heidegger) and the philosophy of agency. In 2015-2018 she was Principal Investigator on a three-year AHRC-funded project on ‘The Ethics of Powerlessness: The Theological Virtues Today’ (EoP). She is currently working on medio-passive agency, both in itself and through the writings of early Christian thinkers (John Cassian and St Augustine) and of more recent authors such as Nietzsche, Foucault and Heidegger. She is also working on hope as a (medio-passive) virtue of powerlessness and on the conditions under which this theological virtue might afford us with appropriate ethical guidance in secular contexts. This podcast is an audio recording of Professor Han-Pile's talk - 'Two Puzzles in the Early Christian Constitution of the Self: Reflections on Foucault’s Interpretation of John Cassian' - at the Aristotelian Society on 8 June 2020. The recording was produced by the Backdoor Broadcasting Company.
Lubomira Rochet is a French-Bulgarian national, economist by training and graduate of the Ecole Normale Supérieure, Sciences Po Paris and College of Europe in Bruges. She began her career in 2003 at Capgemini as Director of Strategy and Development for the Sogeti entity. In 2008, she joined Microsoft to manage its relationships with start-ups and the innovation ecosystem. In 2010, she became Deputy CEO of the digital marketing agency Valtech and Managing Director for Southern Europe zone. Lubomira Rochet joined L’Oréal in March 2014 as Chief Digital Officer and member of the Group’s Executive Committee.
durée : 00:58:44 - Les Chemins de la philosophie - par : Adèle Van Reeth, Géraldine Mosna-Savoye - Quelles sont les conditions de légitimité non pas seulement de la violence exercée par la police mais aussi celle de la haine qu’elle suscite ? - réalisation : Olivier Bétard, Nicolas Berger - invités : Jean-Christophe Angaut maître de conférences de philosophie à l’Ecole Normale Supérieure de Lyon, spécialiste de Michel Bakounine et de la philosophie allemande du XIXe siècle et de l’anarchisme, membre du comité de rédaction de la revue Réfractions
durée : 00:59:08 - Les Chemins de la philosophie - par : Adèle Van Reeth, Géraldine Mosna-Savoye - Il y a beaucoup d'idées reçues sur l'anarchisme : casse, opposition violente, mort de l'ordre et des lois... Mais qu'est-ce qu'était l'anarchisme pour le philosophe Michel Bakounine ? En quoi sa remise en cause de l'Etat l'a-t-il opposé à Marx ? Quels mouvements incarnent sa pensée aujourd'hui ? - réalisation : Nicolas Berger, Laurence Malonda - invités : Jean-Christophe Angaut maître de conférences de philosophie à l’Ecole Normale Supérieure de Lyon, spécialiste de Michel Bakounine et de la philosophie allemande du XIXe siècle et de l’anarchisme, membre du comité de rédaction de la revue Réfractions
This month we discuss the effect of the body on the brain. Hannah Adams talks about the the breath and tuning into the body for postures such as handstand, and Catherine Tallon-Baudry the effect of the heart on the brain. Hannah Adams is an international yoga teacher and handstand enthusiast based in Boston. As a teacher, Hannah aims to facilitate her students’ gain of a greater somatic understanding of themselves, and a more refined sense of presence through the practice of movement and breath. Web: www.hannahadams.fit Instagram: @hannahadamsyoga Catherine Tallon-Baudry is a CNRS senior researcher in Cognitive Neuroscience at the Ecole Normale Supérieure in Paris. She examines links between the viscera and the brain, and how these connections may encode a sense of self.
durée : 00:33:50 - La Grande table idées - par : Olivia Gesbert, Maja Neskovic - L'amour, un objet mystérieux que non seulement l'art, mais aussi la science, tentent d’éclairer. On en parle avec le philosophe Francis Wolff et Astrid Aron, co-commissaire de l'exposition "De l’amour" au Palais de la découverte (9 octobre 2019 - 30 août 2020). - réalisation : Eric Lancien, Gilles Blanchard - invités : Francis Wolff professeur émérite à l’Ecole Normale Supérieure ULM.; Astrid Aron muséographe Universcience
Guillaume Victor-Thomas est l’un des pionniers européens des neurotechnologies. À la tête d’Open Mind Innovation et d’une équipe de 20 spécialistes en psychologie, mindfulness, game design, user experience, design, jeux sur mobile, dont 9 PhD en data-science, neurosciences cognitives et sociales, réalité virtuelle et musicologie. Ils vous observent en réalité virtuelle pour mieux comprendre vos réactions en situation de stress, choisir les soft-skills qui feront évoluer votre carrière ou vérifier si vous ne souffrez pas d’une psycho-pathologie. La startup teste actuellement un coach IA dont le rôle est d’inverser les effets délétères de la technologie sur votre travail et projette, à long terme, d’améliorer votre santé mentale.Raphaëlle Bertrand-Lalo est ingénieure, diplômée de l’Ecole Centrale (Nantes), titulaire d’un master 2 Science Cognitive de l’Ecole Normale Supérieure (Paris). Raphaëlle est un génie des maths et du machine learning, spécialisée dans l’analyse des signaux, dont les signaux cérébraux.Raphaëlle Bertrand-Lalo s’est spécialisée dans les interfaces cerveau machine ; en développant une télécommande par la pensée pour rendre l’autonomie à une personne paralysée au CHU de Nantes, l’entraînement de l’attention d’enfants hyperactifs à l’INSERM de Lyon, des modèles computationnels sur l’apprentissage implicite et classification des niveaux de conscience de personnes atteintes de coma au NCAN (National Central for Adaptive Neurotechnologies), Albany, NY. Raphaëlle est avant tout humaniste, déterminée et passionnée par les mathématiques et les neurosciences cognitives et tous les moyens de les mettre en œuvre pour développer des services qui amélioreront la vie humaine. Voir Acast.com/privacy pour les informations sur la vie privée et l'opt-out.
Sharon Hewitt Rawlette has a PhD in philosophy from New York University and wrote her dissertation at the Ecole Normale Supérieure in Paris. She was Florence Levy Kay Fellow in Ethics at Brandeis University before leaving academia to pursue writing and cottage farming. Her essays have appeared in Salon and Orion, as well as in peer-reviewed scholarly publications. She now lives in rural Virginia, in the county where she grew up.
Sharon Hewitt Rawlette has a PhD in philosophy from New York University and wrote her dissertation at the Ecole Normale Supérieure in Paris. She was Florence Levy Kay Fellow in Ethics at Brandeis University before leaving academia to pursue writing and cottage farming. Her essays have appeared in Salon and Orion, as well as in peer-reviewed scholarly publications. She now lives in rural Virginia, in the county where she grew up.
104. Pauline Laigneau (Gemmyo / Le Gratin): La meilleure façon de se distinguer Pauline Laigneau est une ancienne élève de l’Ecole Normale Supérieure et d’HEC, elle a fondé fin 2011, avec son mari Charif Debs et son beau-frère Malek Debs la marque de joaillerie Gemmyo. Gemmyo incarne un nouveau type de luxe : plus authentique, plus accessible, avec une pointe de décalage. Pauline propose avec Gemmyo des créations entièrement fabriquées en France, dans le respect des meilleurs savoir-faire. En plus de son activité de dirigeante chez Gemmyo, notre invitée est aussi la créatrice du podcast Le Gratin qui traite d’entrepreneuriat et se classe régulièrement dans les premières marches de l’Apple store. Avec elle nous parlons de travail en couple (et des pièges à éviter), de personnalisation produits (business model du sur-mesure), de chaton rose (
Hélène Landemore is an Associate Professor of Political Science at Yale University. Her research and teaching interests include democratic theory, political epistemology, theories of justice, the philosophy of social sciences (particularly economics), constitutional processes and theories, and workplace democracy. Her first book (in French) Hume. Probabilité et Choix Raisonnable (PUF: 2004) was a philosophical investigation of David Hume’s theory of decision-making. Her second book (in English) Democratic Reason won the Montreal Manuscript Workshop Award in 2011; the Elaine and David Spitz Prize in 2015; and the 2018 APSA “Ideas, Knowledge, and Politics” section book award. Hélène’s third book–Open Democracy: Reinventing Popular Rule for the 21st Century (under contract with Princeton University Press)–develops a new paradigm of democracy in which the exercise of power is as little gated as possible, even as it depends on representative structures to make it possible. In this version of popular rule, power is equally open to all, as opposed to just those who happen to stand out in the eyes of others (as in electoral democracies). The book centrally defends the use of non-electoral yet democratic forms of representation, including “lottocratic,” “self-selected,” and “liquid” representation. Hélène is also co-editor with Jon Elster of Collective Wisdom: Principles and Mechanisms (Cambridge University Press 2012), and is currently working on a new edited volume project on Digital Technology and Democratic Theory, together with Rob Reich and Lucy Bernholz at Stanford. Her articles have been published in, among others, Journal of Political Philosophy; Political Theory; Politics, Philosophy, and Economics; Political Psychology; Social Epistemology; Synthese; the Swiss Review of Political Science: and the Journal of Politics. Her research has been featured in the New York Times, the Boston Review, Slate, and L’Humanité. Before joining Yale, Hélène lectured at Brown University and MIT. She is also an alumna from the Sorbonne, the Ecole Normale Supérieure (Ulm), and Sciences-Po in Paris. In the past Hélène has taught various courses, including “Introduction to Political Philosophy,” “Justice in Western Thought,” “Directed Studies,” “Beyond Representative Government,” “Deliberative Democracy and Beyond,” “Political Epistemology,” and “Political Authority.” In 2014 she won a National Endowment for the Humanities grant for her interdisciplinary lecture course “How Do We Choose, and Choose Well.” To learn more about liquid democracy visit http://liquid.us
Une émission produite et réalisée par David Christoffel avec les créations d’Elise Legendre, Elodie Hervier, Jean Droin, Axel-François Ruiz, Violette Kamal, Ondine Marin, Iola Hodges, Antoine Girard et Zoé Mary. Sur une invitation de Marion Chénetier-Alev au Département d’Histoire et Théories des Arts de l’Ecole Normale Supérieure de Paris.
Au mois de mai 1798, Napoléon Bonaparte s'engage dans une expédition qui participera de sa légende. En effet, la campagne d'Egypte porte avec elle un mythe qui fascine: les noms des Pyramides, du Mont Thabor ou d'Aboukir raisonnent dans l'imaginaire d'un public séduit autant par l'histoire -celle des Pharaons ou celle d'Alexandre- que par les charmes de l'Orient. Campagne militaire, mais aussi expédition scientifique, la présence française sur cette terre inconnue reste pourtant un échec. Pourquoi la France de la Révolution française s'est-elle engagée si loin de l'Europe? Comment la population arabo-musulmane va t'elle accueillir ces hommes et ces femmes. Quelles furent les grandes heures de cette campagne mais aussi ses heures sombres? Auteur de La Campagne d'Egypte, Jacques-Olivier Boudon répond à Christophe Dickès. L’invité: Jacques-Olivier Boudon, ancien élève de l’Ecole Normale Supérieure, est professeur à Sorbonne Université, président de l’Institut Napoléon et directeur scientifique de la Bibliothèque Marmottan. Il a publié une trentaine d’ouvrages essentiellement consacrés à l’histoire napoléonienne et à l’histoire du XIXe siècle dont chez Belin Les Naufragés de la Méduse (2016) et Le plancher de Joachim. L’histoire retrouvée d’un village français (2017). Dans une nouvelle série de nos [Cours d’Histoire], Arnaud Fossier présente la réalité du pouvoir des papes et de l’Eglise à l’époque médiévale, notamment dans ses rapports avec le pouvoir séculier et donc le pouvoir des rois. Ce deuxième volet est consacré à la réforme grégorienne. Arnaud Fossier, interrogé par Christophe Dickès, répond aux questions suivantes: - Qu’est-ce que la Réforme grégorienne, quand intervient-elle et pourquoi mettre une majuscule au mot « Réforme » ? - D’où vient cette Réforme ? Quelles en sont les raisons, contextuelles, mais aussi plus structurelles ? Et quels en sont les inspirateurs ? - Cette Réforme a-t-elle rencontré des oppositions, de la part de l’empereur notamment ? Et que nous dit-elle du rôle politique de l’Église à cette époque ? - Peut-on aller jusqu’à dire qu’elle est le moment de l’instauration d’une « théocratie » pontificale à l’échelle de la Chrétienté ? - Cette Réforme n’est-elle qu’une réforme de la tête de l’Église, in capite comme on le dit à l’époque ? Ses effets se sont-ils faits sentir à d’autres échelles ou d’autres niveaux ? - Comment ont évolué les rapports entre le clergé et les fidèles suite à cette réforme ? L’invité: Normalien et ancien membre de l’École française de Rome, Arnaud Fossier est actuellement Maître de conférences en histoire à l’université de Bourgogne. Ses recherches portent sur le gouvernement de l’Église et l’Italie médiévale. Il a publié à l’Ecole française de Rome: Le bureau des âmes, Écritures et pratiques administratives de la Pénitencerie apostolique (XIIIe-XIVe siècle). ____________________________________________________ - Retrouvez nous sur www.storiavoce.com/ - Notre compte Twitter: twitter.com/Storiavoce - Notre page Facebook: www.facebook.com/storiavoce/
Actuellement doctorantes en biologie à l’Ecole Normale Supérieure et à l’Institut Pasteur, Flora Vincent et Aude Bernheim sont co-présidentes de l’association Wax Science, dont l’objectif est de promouvoir une science sans stéréotypes auprès des jeunes et la mixité hommes-femmes dans les sciences. Convaincues que la science souffre de nombreux préjugés concernant ses formations et débouchés, elles aspirent à promouvoir une science où les femmes ont, elles aussi, leur place. Les deux jeunes femmes proposent un outil innovant : l’application ItCounts, permettant de collecter des données sur les ratios hommes-femmes dans le domaine de la science grâce à la participation citoyenne.➡️ En savoir plus sur https://fr.boma.global Voir Acast.com/privacy pour les informations sur la vie privée et l'opt-out.
Comment être un homme libre dans un monde où les femmes sont soumises ? Pourquoi dit-on que les femmes préfèrent les bad boys ? Dans quelle mesure peut-on choisir d’être, ou non, un homme dominant ? Dans les relations amoureuses et sexuelles, comment la socialisation des femmes à être soumises influe-t-elle sur le comportement, les conceptions, et les possibilités des hommes ?Réponses avec la philosophe Manon Garcia, agrégée de philosophie, diplômée de Sciences Po Paris, de Polytechnique et de l’Ecole Normale Supérieure. Elle vient de publier « On ne naît pas soumise, on le devient » aux éditions Climat, qui est extrait de la thèse qu’elle vient de soutenir : « Consentir à la soumission : un problème philosophique. »RÉFÉRENCESLe compte Instagram Tu Bandes, et le compte instagram T’as joui.L’émission “Répliques” sur France Culture, présentée par Alain Finkielkraut, où Manon Garcia était invitée face à Eugénie Bastié (et où elle a prononcé le mot “clitoris”).Revolutionary Road (Noces Rebelles), de Sam Mendes, avec Kate Winslet et Leonardo Di Caprio (2008).RECOMMANDATIONSManon Garcia recommande d’aller voir le film Le Grand Bain de Gilles Lelouche (même si le film ne passe pas le test de Bechdel), et la pièce de théâtre Abeilles, mise en scène par Magali Léris au théâtre de Belleville, sur la difficulté d’être un homme de classe populaire face à ses enfants.CRÉDITSLes couilles sur la table est un podcast de Victoire Tuaillon produit par Binge Audio. Réalisation : Quentin Bresson. Générique : Théo Boulenger. Chargée de production : Juliette Livartowski. Chargée d’édition : Camille Regache. Identité graphique : Seb Brothier (Upian). Direction des programmes : Joël Ronez. Direction de la rédaction : David Carzon. Direction générale : Gabrielle Boeri-Charles. Direction artistique : Julien Cernobori. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Jean-Joseph Boillot est agrégé de sciences économiques et sociales et docteur en économie, et il a notamment enseigné à l’Ecole Normale Supérieure. Grand voyageur, il s’est intéressé de près aux grands pays émergents, en particulier l’Inde et la Chine dès les années 80, et à ce titre a travaillé pour le gouvernent français dans différents pays. Je parle avec Jean-Joseph du grand basculement économique, géopolitique et culturel en cours pour mieux comprendre l’impact que ces grandes puissances nouvelles peuvent avoir sur la marche du monde qui vient. Sujets abordés dans l'épisodeChine, Inde, Afrique, Europe, économie, géopolitique, pays émergents, écologie, climat et sagesse.Pour s'y retrouver...2'' - Le parcours de Jean-JosephGlobe trotteur, enseignant chercheur, économiste, sociologue, géographe mathématicien, ambassades et finalement expert indépendant.5'' - Vivons-nous un basculement géopolitique du monde ? Les transformations silencieuses : la renaissance des monde chinois, indien et africains, avec comme point de départ la transition démographique.La 3e/4e révolution industrielle La crise de 2008 est celle des pays développés.Crise du modèle de développement occidental.13'' - Le miracle chinoisTout a commencé avec Mao : "le miracle chinois s'explique par la politique Maoiste" (transition démographique, travail des femmes, éducation).Malgré ses extrêmes, "les 30 années de maoisme réunissent les conditions de l'entrée de la Chine sur la scène internationale avec tous les atouts d'une réussite économique"Confucianisme, taoisme, boudhisme : les piliers de l'écosystème idéologique chinois."Nous allons vers un très rapide vieillissement de la Chine", "Le modèle indien est beaucoup plus autocentré"Afrotopia , livre de Felwine Sarr19'' - Qu'est-ce qu'un pays émergent ? Les BRIC et nouvelles organisations alternatives.La métaphore de l'iceberg qui apparaît à l'horizon et qui devient un continent à mesure que l'on s'approche."Un pays a émergé lorsque dans les affaires mondiales il est à parité avec les autres pays développés"BRICS (Brésil, Russie, Inde, Chine, Afrique du sud)"Les sommets des BRIC sont devenus les grands sommets internationaux"La Russie après avoir été "trahie" par les occidentaux a rejoint le camp des alternatifs."Chaque sommet exprime une vision totalement alternative de la conduite des affaires mondiale dans les 20 prochaines années"25'' - Pourquoi notre point de vue d'occidentaux est-il si biaisé ? Crise asiatique de 1997 : c'est celle des petits pays asiatiques qui ne supportent plus le choc de productivité du modèle chinois, cela marque donc le début de l'émergence de la Chine.Arrivée à Hong Kong en 1997, Jean-Joseph "découvre" le 21e siècle.La politique de l'autruche des occidentaux, plus facile que de remettre à plat un vieux modèle."China bashing" : rejet de la Chine."Nos élites ne parlent pas anglais". La méconnaissance du monde commence là. "Les grands groupes français qui sont des champions mondiaux ne sont pas entendus dans les media.""L'Inde ne reproduira jamais le modèle occidental". Les pays emergents utilisent la modernité sans avoir à passer par les étapes de développement que nous avons connu en occident."Le rattrapage est déjà dépassement.""Un homme ne court par après un PIB, il court après la vie.""Il n'y a pas d'occidentalisation du monde, contrairement à ce que l'on pensait."38'' - Quelles seront les puissances de demain ? "La chine n'est pas destinée à devenir la nouvelle puissance du monde". La Chine n'a pas l'ambition de voir son modèle devenir un modèle pour les autres. "Je ne vois pas les Etats-unis décliner". Ils disposent de ressorts importants et attirent les élites du monde en entier. "Peu de chinois faisant leurs études eux Etats-unis reviennent". NB : cette affirmation est inexacte, aujourd'hui plus de 80% des chinois faisant leurs études aux USA reviennent travailler en Chine ensuite.Le nombre de jeunes indiens a dépassé celui de la Chine depuis 10 ans."3 milliards d'habitants en Afrique dans 30 ans ?"Pensez-vous que les africains vont se laisser marcher sur les pieds par les chinois?"Nous allons vers une multipolarité du monde. "La France n'est déjà plus une grande puissance"."Je prévois un éclatement de la construction européenne.""L'Afrique va peser très lourd dans l'évolution du monde"45'' - Chine, Inde, AfriqueLe rôle stratégique du moyen-orient au coeur du triangle Chine-Inde-AfriquePeut-on parler d'une Afrique monolithique ? Non, mais la Chine et l'Inde ne sont pas non plus monolithiques. Xi Jinping et la tradition d'un pouvoir central fort en Chine pour gérer une Chine "multiple.""Les africains ont le sentiment d'avoir une communauté de destin."En Europe nous n'arrivons pas à casser l'idée d'état-nation."Il y a des synergies positives entre les 3 blocs.Nouvelle route de la soie : une excuse pour vendre du matériel chinois ? Empire de Tamerlan57'' - La place de l'Europe dans ces évolutions du mondeOpportunité pour l'Europe d'être partie prenante de ces nouvelles synergies"Il y a une inculture complète vis à vis de ces mondes.""On ne voit qu'en antagonisme, et c'est ce qui est train de fissurer l'Europe.""Où entend-on parler de la jeunesse de l'Europe? C'est un projet de vieux et il consiste à se protéger."1'01" - La question écologique et ses conséquences géopolitiques"Lorsque tu ne sais pas où tu vas, regardes d'où tu viens." - proverbe africain"Lorsque les lions auront leurs historiens, les récits de chasse ne tourneront plus à l'avantage des chasseurs." - proverbe africainAnthropocène"Je crois à la théorie de la catastrophe.""Derrière ce scénario de stabilité, arrive la catastrophe climatique.""On va justifier des régimes dictatoriaux un peu partout.""Arrêtons de dire que les pays riches seront moins touchés par le réchauffement climatique.""Il y a une plus grande résilience dans les pays pauvres.""Où va être l'humain dans un monde menacé par la crise climatique ?"1'10" - Se préparer à demain ?Apprendre 10 langues..."Vis comme si tu devais mourir demain, apprends comme si tu devais vivre toujours." - Gandhi"Il est important d'accorder ses actes à ce que l'on pense.""La démarche individuelle est importante, il faut se préparer."Travailler sur la notion de sagesse."Les démocraties européennes vont vaciller dans les prochaines années"Les fables du Pantcha-TantraLes livres recommandés par Jean-Joseph:ChindiafriqueEffondrement - Jared DiamondVers de nouveaux systèmes de mesure - Amartya Sen, Joseph Stiglitz, Jean-Paul Fitoussi Et pour compléter le tout, découvrez le récent débat entre Pierre Rabhi et Jean-Joseph Boillot sur le changement climatique : ici Si vous avez aimé, abonnez-vous à la newsletter sur le site et au podcast sur votre plateforme préférée et laissez un avis et une note (sur Apple podcast), ça m’aide beaucoup :Apple PodcastsOvercastDeezerSpotifyYoutube Voir Acast.com/privacy pour les informations sur la vie privée et l'opt-out.
15 October 2018 - 18:30 pm - 19:30 pm River Room, King's College London, Strand, London WC2R 2LS As Brexit negotiations proceed, all eyes are on the actions and perspectives of the UK government and the European Commission – but how do the perspectives of other major EU member nations feed into the process? British history has often been deployed by participants in the debate, but how might other national histories have brought us to this moment? And what does the political class in France make of the post-Brexit future? SPEAKER: Dr Sophie Loussouarn is an Assistant Professor in British History at the University of Amiens and a Visiting Professor at the University of Alicante in Spain where she gives a seminar on Brexit. She is an alumna of the Ecole Normale Supérieure (Ulm) and Oxford (Wadham College). She graduated from the Institute of Political Science in Paris and published a biography of Tony Blair (2009) and of David Cameron (2010). Sophie is often interviewed on British politics and Brexit on French television and radio. She organized an international conference on the 800th anniversary of Magna Carta in Amiens in December 2015. Her article on “Gillray and the French Revolution” was published in National Identities in June 2015. RESPONDENT: The Rt Hon. Dominic Grieve QC MP is Conservative Member of Parliament for Beaconsfield and has taken a prominent role in the Brexit debate both within and outside Parliament. He is President of the Franco-British Society and a recipient of the Légion d'honneur. Note: Mr Grieve has unfortunately had to withdraw from the event and has sent his apologies. CHAIR: Michael Jay, Baron Jay of Ewelme is a crossbench member of the House of Lords, and previously served as the UK Ambassador to France and Permanent Under Secretary at the Foreign and Commonwealth Office.
15 October 2018 - 18:30 pm - 19:30 pm River Room, King's College London, Strand, London WC2R 2LS As Brexit negotiations proceed, all eyes are on the actions and perspectives of the UK government and the European Commission – but how do the perspectives of other major EU member nations feed into the process? British history has often been deployed by participants in the debate, but how might other national histories have brought us to this moment? And what does the political class in France make of the post-Brexit future? SPEAKER: Dr Sophie Loussouarn is an Assistant Professor in British History at the University of Amiens and a Visiting Professor at the University of Alicante in Spain where she gives a seminar on Brexit. She is an alumna of the Ecole Normale Supérieure (Ulm) and Oxford (Wadham College). She graduated from the Institute of Political Science in Paris and published a biography of Tony Blair (2009) and of David Cameron (2010). Sophie is often interviewed on British politics and Brexit on French television and radio. She organized an international conference on the 800th anniversary of Magna Carta in Amiens in December 2015. Her article on “Gillray and the French Revolution” was published in National Identities in June 2015. RESPONDENT: The Rt Hon. Dominic Grieve QC MP is Conservative Member of Parliament for Beaconsfield and has taken a prominent role in the Brexit debate both within and outside Parliament. He is President of the Franco-British Society and a recipient of the Légion d'honneur. Note: Mr Grieve has unfortunately had to withdraw from the event and has sent his apologies. CHAIR: Michael Jay, Baron Jay of Ewelme is a crossbench member of the House of Lords, and previously served as the UK Ambassador to France and Permanent Under Secretary at the Foreign and Commonwealth Office.
Hinshelwood Lectures 2018 - Soft Interfaces: A Journey Across Scales
4th lecture in the 2018 Hinshelwood lecture series delivered by Professor Lydéric Bouquet, Directeur de Recherche, CNRS, and Professor of Physics, Ecole Normale Supérieure, Paris
A research fellow at the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS) in Paris since 1979, François Recanati has taught in several major universities around the world, including Berkeley, Harvard, Geneva, and St Andrews. In addition to his CNRS job, he is a ‘directeur d’études’ at EHESS and the Director of Institut Jean-Nicod, a research lab in philosophy, linguistics and cognitive science hosted by the Ecole Normale Supérieure. His publications in the philosophy of language and mind include more than one hundred articles, many edited books, and a dozen monographs, the most recent of which are Mental Files (Oxford University Press, 2012) and Mental Files in Flux (Oxford University Press, 2016). He was the first President of the European Society for Analytic Philosophy (1990-93), and the Principal Investigator of a research project on Context, Content and Compositionality funded by the European Research Council (Advanced Grant, 2009-2013). He was elected a Foreign Honorary Member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 2012, and was awarded the CNRS Silver Medal in 2014 and a Honorary Doctorate from Stockholm University (also in 2014). He is the general editor of the Jean-Nicod book series published by MIT Press and of the Context and Content series published by Oxford University Press. This podcast is an audio recording of Professor Recanati's talk - 'Fictional, Metafictional, Parafictional' - at the Aristotelian Society on 16 October 2017. The recording was produced by the Backdoor Broadcasting Company.
Avec Nadeije Laneyrie-Dagen, professeure d’histoire de l’art à l’Ecole Normale Supérieure.
Interview de Simon Massei, auteur de "L’esquisse du genre, les longs métrages Disney et leur réception par le jeune public au prisme des rapports sociaux de sexe" La question du genre, les stéréotypes sexuels, en particulier dans les publications pour la jeunesse, voilà un sujet que nous n’avons pas fini d’épuiser dans cette émission et sur lequel nous revenons souvent, surtout à propos des albums pour enfants ; et d’autant plus en cette période d’attaques régressives et réactionnaires. Il faut dire que les études et les initiatives sont aujourd’hui assez nombreuses qui pointent et démontent tous ces stéréotypes à l’œuvre dans les bouquins, ou même dans les jouets. En revanche, peu encore se sont penchées sur les films, et encore moins sur la façon dont les enfants perçoivent, reçoivent, voire décryptent ces stéréotypes. Comment les enfants les repèrent-il dans les dessins animés ? La princesse qui rêve d’épouser le prince charmant, celle qui rêve et chante un balai à la main, la méchante marâtre, le cavalier toujours habile et entreprenant : images de fictions ou représentations de la réalité ? Aussi c’est à ce double titre, une analyse du contenu des films et une analyse de la réception par les enfants, que le travail de recherche mené par Simon Massei, dans le cadre d’un master en sciences sociales, nous a particulièrement intéressés. Quelles sont les représentations de sexe et de rapports de sexe, ainsi que leur évolution, dans les longs métrages d’animation des studios Disney, depuis le premier en 1937, Blanche Neige et les sept nains, jusqu’à 2012, année de sortie sur les écrans de Rebelle ? Comment les enfants entre 8 et 11 ans, les regardent-ils et les reçoivent-ils ? Neuf films, anciens ou récents, sont ainsi passés au crible, tant du point de vue de la description physique, comportementale, interrelationnelle des personnages masculins ou féminins que de la façon de les mettre en scène, de les faire dialoguer, bouger ou agir. On ne s’étonnera pas alors que même dans les films plus récents, et sous couvert de personnages féminins plus dégourdis et moins passifs, les stéréotypes ont toujours la vie dure ! Pour autant, les enfants spectateurs que Simon Massei a interrogés ne sont pas dupes et savent faire la part des choses entre fiction et réalité, mais de façon différente s’ils sont un garçon ou une fille, selon leur âge ou leur milieu social, et surtout selon leur habitudes culturelles ou leurs croyances personnelles, certains s’identifiant beaucoup plus aisément que d’autres aux héros ou héroïnes. Intitulé L’esquisse du genre, les longs métrages Disney et leur réception par le jeune public au prisme des rapports sociaux de sexe, le mémoire de recherche de Simon Massei, passionnant, invite, avec beaucoup de pertinence et de précision, à poser un regard attentif sur les films Walt Disney, mais aussi à tendre une oreille attentive aux enfants qui aiment les voir et les revoir. "L’esquisse du genre. Les longs métrages Disney et leur réception par le jeune public au prisme des rapports sociaux de sexe". Mémoire de Simon Massei. Ecole Normale Supérieure/Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales, mai 2013 - 195 pages. Pour des commentaires, plus d’infos, demandes de précisions, etc., n’hésitez pas à écrire à Simon Massei : simonmassei@hotmail.fr Site d'Aligre FM : aligrefm.org Facebook de l'émission : unelephantdanslejardin
Baladi, V (CNRS and Ecole Normale Supérieure, Paris) Tuesday 12 November 2013, 10:00-11:00
Conférence de F. Worms : « Pour une extension critique du concept de soin » Dans le cadre du Séminaire du CRPMS, séance du 26 février 2013, présentée par Bernard Pachoud et Benjamin Levy F. Worms est philosophe, professeur à l’université de lille 3 et à l’Ecole Normale Supérieure, où il dirige le Centre international d’etude […]
Prof. Gerard WEISBUCH, Ecole Normale Supérieure Paris, France. We discuss the possible World patterns of economic activity after the transition to a sustainable and stationary economy. Our main concern is the economy of energy, most probably the limiting factor of economic development. Should we expect a strongly contrasted world with of economic activity after one or several economically active regions as nowadays? Or a more equitable repartition of wealth and economic activity? We here demonstrate how computations can reduce the set of possible scenarios and conclude that energy transportation cost is the most influential factor.
Prof. Gerard WEISBUCH, Ecole Normale Supérieure Paris, France. We discuss the possible World patterns of economic activity after the transition to a sustainable and stationary economy. Our main concern is the economy of energy, most probably the limiting factor of economic development. Should we expect a strongly contrasted world with of economic activity after one or several economically active regions as nowadays? Or a more equitable repartition of wealth and economic activity? We here demonstrate how computations can reduce the set of possible scenarios and conclude that energy transportation cost is the most influential factor.
Speaker/Performer: Claude Cohen-Tannoudji, Nobel Laureate and Honorary Professor, Collège de France and Ecole Normale Supérieure Our ability to control and to manipulate atomic systems has considerably increased during the last few years. We will review in this lecture a few recent advances in this field, emphasizing in particular the new fruitful dialogue which is being established between atomic physics and other disciplines like statistical physics, condensed matter physics, molecular physics and quantum information. Very precise measurements with ultracold atoms provide now more refined tests of fundamental theories like general relativity. The possibility to control all experimental parameters of an ultracold atomic sample, like the temperature, the density, the strength of the interactions, allows one to realize simple models of more complex systems found in other fields of physics and to get a better understanding of their behavior.
Speaker/Performer: Claude Cohen-Tannoudji, Nobel Laureate and Honorary Professor, Collège de France and Ecole Normale Supérieure Our ability to control and to manipulate atomic systems has considerably increased during the last few years. We will review in this lecture a few recent advances in this field, emphasizing in particular the new fruitful dialogue which is being established between atomic physics and other disciplines like statistical physics, condensed matter physics, molecular physics and quantum information. Very precise measurements with ultracold atoms provide now more refined tests of fundamental theories like general relativity. The possibility to control all experimental parameters of an ultracold atomic sample, like the temperature, the density, the strength of the interactions, allows one to realize simple models of more complex systems found in other fields of physics and to get a better understanding of their behavior.