POPULARITY
In this episode of the Leadership Spark Podcast, Sylvain interviews Jacques Neatby, a partner at MindLab, executive team advisor, author, and professor of leadership. The discussion delves into the dynamics of senior leadership teams, focusing on alignment, decision-making processes and the role of psychological safety. Key insights include the importance of power dynamics, the need for more structured meetings, the impact of team size on effectiveness, and the necessity of clear expectations. Jacques also highlights the value of process facilitation in leadership and shares practical strategies for fostering effective team interactions and decision-making.Show notes:Book “Leadership Team Alignment: From Conflict to Collaboration” by Frédéric Godart and Jacques NeatbyBook “Managing” by Henry MintzbergBook “Teams at the Top” by Jon R. Katzenbachsylvainnewton.com/podcast
November 17, 2024 | Give Thanks for This is the Will of God | Art Shepherd by Grace Church Waldorf
Jacques Neatby is a leadership team and corporate strategy expert.He began his career as a labour & litigation lawyer with one of Canada's elite international law firms.He was recruited into consulting in 1994 and soon after was hired by Canada's largest independent strategy consultancy (since acquired by KPMG). There he worked with the executive teams of industry-leading companies in North America and Europe, including Ubisoft, Sanofi, as well as Bureau Veritas, the no. 2 player in the global testing and inspection industry (currently 80 000 employees in 140 countries) who hired him to set up their corporate university and develop their flagship strategic alignment program targeting the organization's top 300 leaders.He was later asked to join Bureau Veritas full-time as a senior executive. Based in Europe and reporting to a member of the group's Executive Committee, he led a team that supported country and regional leadership teams in the USA, Europe and Asia-Pacific, notably with restructuring and strategic alignment, as well as with their post-merger integration of efforts (Note: during his time at Bureau Veritas, the company grew from 18 000 to 60 000 employees). In 2010, he returned to North America and his expertise with executive teams led Lafarge, now Holcim, the leading cement company in the world ($30 billion in revenues, 72 000 employees) to hire him as a special advisor to its executive teams in Europe, Asia and North America to address restructuring and alignment issues. Since that time, he has also been hired for strategic alignment support by many other industry-leading companies in North America and Europe including Marriott (global no. 1 in hospitality) and Randstad (global no.1 in recruitment).In addition to his consulting work, Jacques has taught at numerous business schools in North America and Europe since 2012. From 2015-2021, he taught the leadership team module in the world's no. 1 EMBA program as ranked by the Financial Times in London, where he was amongst the top-ranked professors.He also writes on executive teams and strategy, notably for the Harvard Business Review and Business Digest. He and INSEAD professor Frédéric Godart are the authors of Leadership Team alignment: From Conflict to Collaboration published by Stanford University Press in 2023.Link to claim CME credit: https://www.surveymonkey.com/r/3DXCFW3CME credit is available for up to 3 years after the stated release dateContact CEOD@bmhcc.org if you have any questions about claiming credit.
Cette semaine sont décernés les prix Nobel. Hier, le jury suédois a récompensé des physiciens pour leurs travaux sur l'intelligence artificielle. Mais eux alertent : face à "des systèmes qui pourraient être plus intelligents que nous, et prendre le contrôle". Les limites éthiques de l'intelligence artificielle, au programme de cette matinale. Elsa Godart est philosophe et psychanalyste, co-créatrice de l'Institut de recherche en Éthique du Numérique. Elle analyse les enjeux éthiques de l'IA, au lendemain du prix Nobel.
Comment la conception d'un objet s'intègre dans des projets territoriaux et comment cela peut bénéficier aux artisans ? Voilà la question à laquelle le designer Laurent Godart répond dans cet échange, rendu possible grâce à la French Craft Guild. Nous avons enregistré cette interview pour accompagner une réflexion sur la façon dont les artisans sont à l'avant-garde de la transition écologique. Cet atelier faisait partie du parcours Devenir Artisan que nous avons créé avec le Campus Versailles. Bonne écoute ! Si vous avez aimé l'épisode, n'oubliez pas les 5 étoiles sur Apple podcast ou Spotify ;) Tous les mois, nous proposons un nouveau thème de discussion, pour éclairer une spécificité de l'artisanat d'art. Nous diffusons l'échange ici, mais si vous voulez poser vos propres questions, inscrivez-vous à l'événement, nous le communiquons via notre newsletter, et nos réseaux sociaux. Enfin, si vous voulez décrypter l'artisanat d'art avec nous, inscrivez-vous à notre newsletter et rejoignez-nous sur les réseaux sociaux @artisansdavenir (Instagram, Facebook, Linkedin). Si vous voulez acheter le livre "Profession artisan d'art" que nous avons écrit, il est disponible dans toutes les librairies et peut se commander depuis notre site internet. Pour nous rejoindre, c'est par ici !
Found Energy is decarbonizing heavy industry by extracting clean energy from aluminum metal. Found's aluminum-thermal power systems are compact and modular, allowing energy to be extracted at double the energy density of diesel and at a competitive cost. Peter Godart, co-founder and CEO of Found Energy, is a former NASA scientist and MIT PhD whose background in developing aluminum-powered rocket landing systems positioned him to start Found Energy. Now, he is on a mission to address the climate crisis by turning waste materials into carbon-free, energy-dense replacements for fossil fuels. In this episode we cover... [1:10] The Found-ing story [3:45] The energy density of aluminum [5:10] How Found pulls energy from aluminum [8:10] The different applications for Found's platform technology [10:50] A deeper dive into Found's aluminum reaction [13:00] The scale of Found's technology today [13:55] The response to Found's technology from stakeholders and customers [17:20] Found's go-to-market strategy [19:20] The positive climate impact of Found's energy solution [22:00] The useful byproducts of Found's process [24:25] The biggest challenges for Found [27:25] What the next 12 months look like for Found [29:00] What geographies Found is going after [31:10] What Peter has learned starting Found [35:15] Found is hiring! + Found's humanitarian focus [37:00] Peter, the jazz musician Connect with us: Instagram | LinkedIn | X This episode was recorded on June 4, 2024.
In this sermon we encourage people to desire and express the creative flow that comes from God. God is the Master Creative-Artist. We learn that we are created in God's image, created to be creative. All of us can be creative in one or more ways. Creative expressions can serve many purposes including adoration, revelation, restoration, communication, and demonstration. We must desire, recognize, stir up, capture and express inspiration (or the creative flow) that comes from God. Desire the creative flow that comes from God to make a meaningful difference in whatever you do or are engaged in. Let the glory of God be revealed through creative expressions through the work you do. Watch our online Sunday Church service live stream every Sunday at 10:30am (Indian Time, GMT+5:30). Spirit filled, anointed worship, Word and ministry for healing, miracles and deliverance. YOUTUBE: https://youtube.com/allpeopleschurchbangalore WEBSITE: https://apcwo.org/live CHURCH: https://apcwo.org FREE SERMONS: https://apcwo.org/resources/sermons FREE BOOKS: https://apcwo.org/books/english DAILY DEVOTIONALS: https://apcwo.org/resources/daily-devotional JESUS CHRIST: https://examiningjesus.com BIBLE COLLEGE: https://apcbiblecollege.org E-LEARNING: https://apcbiblecollege.org/elearn COUNSELING: https://chrysalislife.org MUSIC: https://apcmusic.org MINISTERS FELLOWSHIP: https://pamfi.org CHURCH APP: https://apcwo.org/app CHURCHES: https://apcwo.org/ministries/churches
In this sermon we encourage people to desire and express the creative flow that comes from God. God is the Master Creative-Artist. We learn that we are created in God's image, created to be creative. All of us can be creative in one or more ways. Creative expressions can serve many purposes including adoration, revelation, restoration, communication, and demonstration. We must desire, recognize, stir up, capture and express inspiration (or the creative flow) that comes from God. Desire the creative flow that comes from God to make a meaningful difference in whatever you do or are engaged in. Let the glory of God be revealed through creative expressions through the work you do. Watch our online Sunday Church service live stream every Sunday at 10:30am (Indian Time, GMT+5:30). Spirit filled, anointed worship, Word and ministry for healing, miracles and deliverance. YOUTUBE: https://youtube.com/allpeopleschurchbangalore WEBSITE: https://apcwo.org/live CHURCH: https://apcwo.org FREE SERMONS: https://apcwo.org/resources/sermons FREE BOOKS: https://apcwo.org/books/english DAILY DEVOTIONALS: https://apcwo.org/resources/daily-devotional JESUS CHRIST: https://examiningjesus.com BIBLE COLLEGE: https://apcbiblecollege.org E-LEARNING: https://apcbiblecollege.org/elearn COUNSELING: https://chrysalislife.org MUSIC: https://apcmusic.org MINISTERS FELLOWSHIP: https://pamfi.org CHURCH APP: https://apcwo.org/app CHURCHES: https://apcwo.org/ministries/churches
In this sermon we encourage people to desire and express the creative flow that comes from God. God is the Master Creative-Artist. We learn that we are created in God's image, created to be creative. All of us can be creative in one or more ways. Creative expressions can serve many purposes including adoration, revelation, restoration, communication, and demonstration. We must desire, recognize, stir up, capture and express inspiration (or the creative flow) that comes from God. Desire the creative flow that comes from God to make a meaningful difference in whatever you do or are engaged in. Let the glory of God be revealed through creative expressions through the work you do. Watch our online Sunday Church service live stream every Sunday at 10:30am (Indian Time, GMT+5:30). Spirit filled, anointed worship, Word and ministry for healing, miracles and deliverance. YOUTUBE: https://youtube.com/allpeopleschurchbangalore WEBSITE: https://apcwo.org/live CHURCH: https://apcwo.org FREE SERMONS: https://apcwo.org/resources/sermons FREE BOOKS: https://apcwo.org/books/english DAILY DEVOTIONALS: https://apcwo.org/resources/daily-devotional JESUS CHRIST: https://examiningjesus.com BIBLE COLLEGE: https://apcbiblecollege.org E-LEARNING: https://apcbiblecollege.org/elearn COUNSELING: https://chrysalislife.org MUSIC: https://apcmusic.org MINISTERS FELLOWSHIP: https://pamfi.org CHURCH APP: https://apcwo.org/app CHURCHES: https://apcwo.org/ministries/churches
Previously on In the News, Irish Times Europe correspondent Naomi O'Leary explained how Dublin-based landlord Marc Godart deployed CCTV to monitor tenants in their homes, faced accusations of unlawful eviction and failed to pay compensation to former tenants as ordered by the Residential Tenancies Board.On today's episode Naomi shares a new cache of audio files and documents that show how Luxembourger Godart treats his employees, including summary dismissal and fines for minor infractions.The documents also reveal attempts to establish new companies under the identities of people unconnected with Godart and his family to avoid public scrutiny of his property operations, and the offering of payment to workers to find people willing to allow the use of their identity to set up an Airbnb account.Also on the podcast: Those working for Godart are hired as independent contractors, and their contracts stipulate that Luxembourg law applies to their relationship with Godart's companies.But as Claire Bruton, a barrister specialising in employment law, explains, the law is not on Godart's side when it comes to these arrangements.Presented by Bernice Harrison. Produced by Declan Conlon. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Landlord Marc Godart is being taken to court by Dublin City Council for allegedly breaking planning laws and breaching fire safety regulations in the running of his rental property empire. Former tenants and a former employee of Mr Godart spoke to The Irish Times' Naomi O'Leary about what they say were negative experiences with the controversial landlord. Plus: Colm Keena on Mr Godart's day in court. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Peter Godart could have been a jazz musician, but instead pursued his other passion: engineering. After garnering a few degrees at MIT and working on space tech at NASA, Peter set his sights on yet another passion: saving the climate. In 2022, he launched Found Energy, a startup decarbonizing transport with aluminum. As Peter says, “When you work for NASA and one of your daily tasks is, you know, let's figure out how to catch a one meter sphere orbiting Mars at Mach 2… These problems that we have on Earth feel not that difficult by comparison… We could totally do this.”Join us to hear how Peter brought space-sized innovation back down to Earth.Episode timestamps:00:00 - 00:52 Peter Godart on solving problems for NASA in space and on the Earth. 00:53 - 03:02 Conor Gaughan introduces Peter Godart of Found Energy.03:03 - 06:41 Growing up, interest in music, and engineering at MIT.06:42 - 15:10 Robotics, internships, NASA, and the Jet Propulsion Laboratory.15:11 - 22:20 The origin of Found Energy and using aluminum for energy storage.22:21 - 25:26 Use cases, decarbonizing difficult industries, and hydrogen hubs.25:27 - 31:30 Balancing roles, how engineering influences management, and lessons learned.31:31 - 37:42 Sustainability, what's at stake, the clean energy transition, and policy.37:43 - 43:21 Humanitarian programs, motivations, and exciting new innovations.43:22 - 45:40 How to learn more about Found Energy.45:41 - 46:23 Closing credits.If you liked this episode, listen to Seonghoon Woo of Amogy on Materials Science, Decarbonized Transport, and Alternative Fuels and Jay Bellows of KORE Power on Renewable Energy, Storage, and Basketball Wisdom.More on Peter Godart and Found Energy:FoundEnergy.comlinkedin.com/company/found-energy linkedin.com/in/petergodartAs mentioned in the podcast, Peter wrote a freely accessible book on climate change and thermodynamics. To read it, visit https://ocw.mit.edu/, type “Peter Godart” in the search bar, hit search, and click the first link titled “Thermodynamics and Climate Change.”Connect with Conor Gaughan on linkedin.com/in/ckgone and instagram.com/ckgone Have questions, feedback, or a great idea for a potential guest? Email us at CiC@consensus-digital.comIf you enjoyed the show, please leave a review – it really helps us out! Consensus in Conversation is a podcast by Consensus Digital Media produced in association with Reasonable Volume. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
In questo audio il prezioso incontro con Louis Godart storico, archeologo Ornella Bombaci ingegnere aerospaziale. L'intervista è in Contemporaneamente di Mariantonietta Firmani, il podcast divulgato da Artribune.com e Parallelo42.itIn 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.Louis Godart e Ornella Bombaci ci parlano di storia e satelliti, politica e sistemi radar di osservazione. I primi stati nascono in Mesopotamia, sotto forma di palazzo in cui confluiscono: funzione produttiva ed economica, potere redistributivo, e funzione religiosa. Il primo strumento di controllo è la scrittura, per millenni non accessibile alle masse, scrittura che fornisce al potere informazioni puntuali sulla gestione del territorio. Con i radar si studiano i pianeti ma anche il sottosuolo, per indagini spaziali come archeologiche. Cina e Italia condividono le origini nei due maggiori imperi della storia: l'impero romano e l'impero cinese. Il digital twin (gemello digitale), consentirà una “rappresentazione” costante della mappa terrestre, milioni di dati che andranno però gestiti nel rispetto dell'umanità, e molto altro.GUARDA IL VIDEO https://youtu.be/tPu_fsuCjyoBREVI NOTE BIOGRAFICHE DEGLI AUTORILouis Godart storico, archeologo, laurea in Lettere classiche presso l'Università Cattolica di Lovanio, dottorato all'Università di Bruxelles e poi alla Sorbonne di Parigi. Già membro della Scuola Archeologica Francese di Atene, è stato professore di Civiltà Egee all'Università Federico II di Napoli dal 1973 al 2002. Attualmente è docente all'Università telematica internazionale Uninettuno; membro del Consiglio scientifico della “Maison de l'histoire européenne” presso il Parlamento Europeo a Bruxelles. Indaga sulle origini della scrittura e dello Stato, studiando le scritture delle civiltà egee: minoica e micenea, geroglifica cretese; partecipa a missioni archeologiche. Già Consigliere per il Patrimonio Artistico dei Presidenti della Repubblica: Ciampi, Napolitano e Mattarella; consulente per l'organizzazione di eventi. Inoltre, è autore di 82 monografie, e 243 articoli scientifici. Infine, è socio di prestigiosi enti: Accademia Nazionale dei Lincei, Accademia di Francia “Académie des Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres”, Accademia di Atene, Accademia Pontaniana di Napoli. È anche socio della Società Nazionale di Scienze, Lettere e Arti di Napoli; membro del Deutsches Archäologisches Institut; riceve numerose onorificenze.Ornella Bombaci, siciliana, laurea in Ingegneria Elettronica, specializzazione Telerilevamento, all'Università La Sapienza di Roma, nel 1992. In Thales Alenia Space dal 1993, partecipa a molte missioni di esplorazione spaziale (CASSINI per la missione su Saturno e la sua luna Titano, EXOMARS per il landing sul pianeta rosso), prima come progettista di strumento, poi come responsabile del gruppo Sistemi Radar di Osservazione. E' nel team per la realizzazione della prima costellazione dell'Agenzia Spaziale Italiana di satelliti per l'osservazione della Terra, Cosmo SkyMed. Grazie alla partecipazione al progetto Radar Sounder MARSIS, imbarcato sulla sonda MARS EXPRESS dell'ESA, ha contribuito alla scoperta della presenza di laghi nel sottosuolo marziano, pubblicata in prima release su Science nel 2018. Madre di tre figli, è oggi responsabile del Gruppo “Bids and Future Business” e della gestione della linea di Prodotti Radar per l'Osservazione della Terra in Thales Alenia Space Italia.
On this episode, we're pleased to speak with Antoine Tirard and Claire Harbour. Claire Harbour is a coach and global talent expert, the founder of Culture Pearl and a speaker, consultant, and writer about all things to do with optimizing talent across borders. Antoine Tirard is a talent management advisor and the founder of NexTalent. He is the former head of talent management of Novartis and LVMH. Antoine and Claire are thought leaders in the space of talent. Together they co-authored the book- Disrupt Your Career- How to Navigate Unchartered Career Transitions and Thrive. They are also frequent contributors to INSEAD Business School's knowledge portal- INSEAD Knowledge, as well as other journals and publications. In addition, they also run a successful podcast, Disrupt Your Careers. In this episode, we discuss how the linear career path has been disrupted. Antoine and Claire offer some practical tips about how we can prepare ourselves better for the inevitable disruptions that occur throughout our career lifespan. Recommended readings: “Disrupt Your Career : How to Navigate Uncharted Career Transitions and Thrive”, by Antoine Tirard and Claire Harbour-Lyell, Lulu Publishing, October 2017. “Reinventing Yourself After a Setback” by Frédéric Godart, Claire Harbour and Antoine Tirard, Career article in INSEAD Knowledge, May 2023.“From Adversity to Advantage: Building Careers After a Setback”, by Claire Harbour and Antoine Tirard, with Frédéric Godart, April 2023. “The Power of Career Conversations: How to Foster Growth and Retention in the Workplace”, by Winnie Jiang, Claire Harbour and Antoine Tirard, April 2023.“The Hidden Power of Workers From Humble Backgrounds”, by Claire Harbour, Winnie Jiang and Antoine Tirard, Career Blog in INSEAD Knowledge, October 2022. Listen to the Disrupt Your Career PodcastConnect with us on LinkedIn: · Vanessa Iloste (Host) · Vanessa Teo (Host) · Aaron Wu (Producer)
In this episode of Hardware to Save a Planet, Dylan welcomes Peter Godart, Co-Founder and CEO of Found Energy, a company that turns aluminum into a source and carrier of carbon-free energy that competes with fossil fuels on price and energy density. Join us as we delve into Found Energy's innovative approach to generating carbon-free energy while tackling waste and recycling challenges and explore the potential of using aluminum as a sustainable energy source. Discover how Found Energy aims to revolutionize energy storage using recycled aluminum and reframing the aluminum supply chain.
How did controversial landlord Marc Godart build his extensive portfolio of properties, owned and managed, in Ireland?Europe correspondent Naomi O'Leary followed the money back to the Godart family home in a leafy suburb in Luxembourg.Dublin correspondent Olivia O'Kelly explains what might happen next in the disputes between the prolific landlord and tenants who have lodged complaints against him.Plus: Irene Hayden and Frank Kavanagh expected nothing out of the ordinary when they rented their own property to Mr Godart. They got more than they bargained for.This episode was originally published in April 2023. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
J'aimerais être Moravia pour écrire, ou Godart pour filmer L'ennui, qui serait le contrepoint du Mépris, l'histoire d'un couple où nul n'aurait rien à reprocher à l'autre, mais qui se déferait pourtant sous la lente et irrésistible morsure de l'ennui. Cet article Quitter le paradis est apparu en premier sur Improvisations.
Économie des institutions, de l'innovation et de la croissance - Philippe Aghion
Philippe AghionCollège de FranceÉconomie des institutions, de l'innovation et de la croissanceAnnée 2022-2023Colloque - Entrepreneurship, Risk, Talent and Innovation : Mobility Shocks and Organizational Creativity: The Benefits of Cultural Toolkits with Highly Affiliated ElementsIntervenant(s)Frédéric Godart, INSEADEntrepreneurs are the chief source of innovation in modern economies, as illustrated by iconic figures like Bill Gates, Steve Jobs, Elon Musk, or Derrick Rossi, the co-founder of Moderna and several subsequent biotech companies. Success at this level hinges on idiosyncratic characteristics of the potential entrepreneur such as talent, inventiveness, and the propensity to take risks, on social origins, parental education, and family influence more generally, and on the environment: in particular the extent to which society favors risk-taking by forgiving early failure while rewarding talent and long-term success.The semantics of talent have spread at an accelerated rate in the world of work and in human resources management since the end of the 1990s. Today, we no longer talk about personnel management or "human resources" so much as talent management. The concept has been diluted as it has spread across the entire professional skills space, but its core meaning has never been stable.What exactly are we talking about when we speak of talent? The question is ceaselessly asked in all the scientific and professional publications devoted to talent management. It has been both a persistent enigma and a resource for plasticity in redefining the qualities required to recruit staff, to manage their careers and to find a balance in the competition for the best talent, since poaching by a competitor threatens each employer's investment in recruitment and career development. It is too often forgotten that the notion of talent, which was originally coined metaphorically in the "parable of the talents" in Matthew's gospel, can be read as a praise of risk-taking, which is rewarded, and a criticism of risk-aversion, which is discredited.This conference will gather economists and sociologists working on talent, risk, entrepreneurship, and innovation, with the goal of improving our understanding of the underpinnings of innovative entrepreneurship and of how entrepreneurship can be favored by appropriate institutions and policies.Isaiah Berlin once suggested a division of the world between hedgehogs and foxes, where foxes are individuals that engage in multiple projects simultaneously to pool risks, whereas hedgehogs put all their eggs into one basket and are ready to take maximum risk. One view of entrepreneurship is as hedgehogs who pursue a single innovation project, no matter how risky this project might be. This conference will analyze how social norms, the education system, competition, tax incentives and talent reward, and the financial system affect individuals' choice to be hedgehogs rather than foxes and selects the best talents into becoming innovative entrepreneurs. Colloque coorganisé par les Prs Philippe Aghion et Pierre-Michel Menger avec le soutien de LVMH et de la Fondation du Collège de France.
Philippe AghionCollège de FranceÉconomie des institutions, de l'innovation et de la croissanceAnnée 2022-2023Colloque - Entrepreneurship, Risk, Talent and Innovation : Mobility Shocks and Organizational Creativity: The Benefits of Cultural Toolkits with Highly Affiliated ElementsIntervenant(s)Frédéric Godart, INSEADEntrepreneurs are the chief source of innovation in modern economies, as illustrated by iconic figures like Bill Gates, Steve Jobs, Elon Musk, or Derrick Rossi, the co-founder of Moderna and several subsequent biotech companies. Success at this level hinges on idiosyncratic characteristics of the potential entrepreneur such as talent, inventiveness, and the propensity to take risks, on social origins, parental education, and family influence more generally, and on the environment: in particular the extent to which society favors risk-taking by forgiving early failure while rewarding talent and long-term success.The semantics of talent have spread at an accelerated rate in the world of work and in human resources management since the end of the 1990s. Today, we no longer talk about personnel management or "human resources" so much as talent management. The concept has been diluted as it has spread across the entire professional skills space, but its core meaning has never been stable.What exactly are we talking about when we speak of talent? The question is ceaselessly asked in all the scientific and professional publications devoted to talent management. It has been both a persistent enigma and a resource for plasticity in redefining the qualities required to recruit staff, to manage their careers and to find a balance in the competition for the best talent, since poaching by a competitor threatens each employer's investment in recruitment and career development. It is too often forgotten that the notion of talent, which was originally coined metaphorically in the "parable of the talents" in Matthew's gospel, can be read as a praise of risk-taking, which is rewarded, and a criticism of risk-aversion, which is discredited.This conference will gather economists and sociologists working on talent, risk, entrepreneurship, and innovation, with the goal of improving our understanding of the underpinnings of innovative entrepreneurship and of how entrepreneurship can be favored by appropriate institutions and policies.Isaiah Berlin once suggested a division of the world between hedgehogs and foxes, where foxes are individuals that engage in multiple projects simultaneously to pool risks, whereas hedgehogs put all their eggs into one basket and are ready to take maximum risk. One view of entrepreneurship is as hedgehogs who pursue a single innovation project, no matter how risky this project might be. This conference will analyze how social norms, the education system, competition, tax incentives and talent reward, and the financial system affect individuals' choice to be hedgehogs rather than foxes and selects the best talents into becoming innovative entrepreneurs. Colloque coorganisé par les Prs Philippe Aghion et Pierre-Michel Menger avec le soutien de LVMH et de la Fondation du Collège de France.
How did controversial landlord Marc Godart build his extensive portfolio of properties, owned and managed, in Ireland? Europe correspondent Naomi O'Leary followed the money back to the Godart family home in a leafy suburb in Luxembourg.Dublin correspondent Olivia O'Kelly explains what might happen next in the disputes between the prolific landlord and tenants who have lodged complaints against him. Plus: Irene Hayden and Frank Kavanagh expected nothing out of the ordinary when they rented their own property to Mr Godart. They got more than they bargained for. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Pierre-Édouard Deldique reçoit dans son magazine Idées, sous le thème du besoin de reconnaissance : Elsa Godart, philosophe et psychanalyste, auteure de : « Les vies vides, notre besoin de reconnaissance est impossible à rassasier », un essai publié chez Armand Colin.
Pierre-Édouard Deldique reçoit dans son magazine Idées, sous le thème du besoin de reconnaissance : Elsa Godart, philosophe et psychanalyste, auteure de : « Les vies vides, notre besoin de reconnaissance est impossible à rassasier », un essai publié chez Armand Colin.
Elodie qui a vécu le drame de perdre l'homme qu'elle aimait nous explique les phrases qu'elle n'a pas supporté entendre et nous donne les clés pour être selon elle un.e bon.ne allié.e. quand quelqu'un dans notre entourage vit un deuil. Bonne écoute!
Bright on Buddhism Episode 57 - Why do some say that Buddhism is not a religion? What evidence have they for that claim? What are the historical roots of this debate? Resources: The Making of Buddhist Modernism, David L. McMahan. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2008.; Buddhism and Science, Donald S Lopez Jr, 2008, University of Chicago Press; How the Swans Came to the Lake: A Narrative History of Buddhism in America, Rick Fields, 1992. Shambhala Publications; https://web.archive.org/web/20050204223509/http://web.otani.ac.jp/EBS/dts.html; http://www.azenlife-film.org/top.htm; Zen Buddhism : selected writings of D.T. Suzuki, translated by William Barrett; Mysticism: Christian and Buddhist by Suzuki, Daisetz Teitaro; Godart, Gerard Clinton. “‘Philosophy' or ‘Religion'? The Confrontation with Foreign Categories in Late Nineteenth-Century Japan.” Journal of the History of Ideas 69, no. 1 (2007): 71–91. https://doi.org/10.1353/jhi.2008.0008.; Inoue, Enryō. “Against Materialism.” In Inoue Enryō Senshū, edited by Inoue Enryō Kinen Gakujutsu Sentā, Vol. 7. Tokyo: Toyo Daigaku, 1987.; Inoue, Enryo. “Prolegomena to A Living Discourse of Buddhism.” In Buddhism and Modernity: Sources from Nineteenth Century Japan, edited by Orion Klautau and Hans Martin Krämer, translated by Joseph Ananda Josephson, 163–71. Honolulu, HI: University of Hawai'i Press, 2021.; Josephson, Jason Ānanda. “When Buddhism Became a ‘Religion': Religion and Superstition in the Writings of Inoue Enryō.” Japanese Journal of Religious Studies 33, no. 1 (2006): 143– 68.; Klautau, Orion. “(Re)Inventing ‘Japanese Buddhism': Sectarian Reconfiguration and Historical Writing in Meiji Japan.” The Eastern Buddhist 42, no. 1 (2011): 75–990.; Kopf, Gereon. “Between Identity and Difference Three Ways of Reading Nishida's Non- Dualism.” Japanese Journal of Religious Studies 31, no. 1 (2004): 73–103.; Kopf, Gereon. “Temporality and Personal Identity in the Thought of Nishida Kitarō.” Philosophy East and West 52, no. 2 (2002): 224–45.; McMahan, D. L. “Modernity and the Early Discourse of Scientific Buddhism.” Journal of the American Academy of Religion 72, no. 4 (December 1, 2004): 897–933. https://doi.org/10.1093/jaarel/lfh083.; Snodgrass, Judith. “The Deployment of Western Philosophy in Meiji Buddhist Revival.” The Eastern Buddhist 30, no. 2 (1997): 173–98. Do you have a question about Buddhism that you'd like us to discuss? Let us know by finding us on email or social media! https://linktr.ee/brightonbuddhism Credits: Nick Bright: Script, Cover Art, Music, Voice of Hearer, Co-Host Proven Paradox: Editing, mixing and mastering, social media, Voice of Hermit, Co-Host --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/brightonbuddhism/message
Le grand amour est ce qu'on sait vraiment ce que c'est ? Elodie Godart n'y croyait presque plus après avoir vécu plusieurs déceptions amoureuses. Elle commençait à penser que ce n'était peut être tout simplement pas pour elle. Mais ça c'était avant qu'un homme incroyablement beau et merveilleux en tous points ne croise son chemin sur une plage en Thaïlande un soir de pleine lune et qu'il ne lâche plus sa main. Il vivait en Allemagne, elle habitait Paris mais ce n'était pas un obstacle aux projets familiaux qu'ils avaient ensemble . Malheureusement un drame s'est abattu sur eux et Kasper, cet homme qu'elle a attendu si longtemps est mort tragiquement sous ses yeux. Elodie est dévastée , elle n'est alors plus que l'ombre d'elle même. Elle pense que le bonheur n'est juste pas fait pour elle et que pour une raison qu'elle ignore elle n'y a pas droit. Son témoignage est beau et fort, il parle de résilience , de reconstruction et d'espoir. Elodie nous raconte comment elle a réussi à croire à nouveau en l'amour et en la vie après une telle épreuve . Bonne écoute !
Faut-l être plus sévère avec les usagers des trottinettes ? Faut-il légiférer davantage autour des trottinettes ? Un permis pour les usagers devient-il indispensable ? Quid des "drop zones", ces zones de stationnement, destinées aux trottinettes en libre-service ? Dans le Duel de + d'Actu, Fabrice Grosfilley lance le débat autour de ces questions avec Benoît Godart, porte-parole de l'Institut VIAS, et Marien Jomier, directeur général Europe du Nord chez Dott.
Dans le 146e épisode du podcast Le bulleur, on vous présente Lucille, album que l'on doit au scénario d'Ilaria Ferramosca, au dessin de Chiara Abastanotti et aux éditions Paquet. Cette semaine aussi, on revient sur l'actualité de la bande dessinée et des sorties avec : - La sortie de l'album Hayat, d'Alep à Bruxelles, un titre que l'on doit à Anaële Hermans, aidée de Manal Halil pour le scénario, de Delphine Hermans pour la partie dessin et c'est édité chez La boite à bulles - La sortie de l'album Le royal fondement que l'on doit au scénario de Philippe Charlot, au dessin d'Eric Hübsch et c'est édité chez Grand angle - La sortie de l'album Nazi killers, le nouvel album que l'on doit à Amazing Améziane et aux éditions du Rocher - La sortie de Glaise, album adapté d'un roman de Franck Bouysse par Fabrice Colin, mis en dessin par Loïc Godart et édité chez Marabulles - La réédition de Ghost World, album de Daniel Clowes qui est sorti chez Delcourt dans La bibliothèque de Daniel Clowes
The Life I Now Live
The Life I Now Live
Lamb of God drummer Art cruz called in to talk about their new album "Omens" (out 10/7/22) as well as their tour hitting YouTube Theater on 10/13/22. Here's what we talked about: "Omens" album (0-7) "Wake Up Dead" cover with Megadeth (7-10) FFAA cover of "Walk With Me In Hell" (10-12) "Omens" tour w/Killswitch Engage (12-14) Suicide Silence drum tech back in the day (14-15) Mandatory Metallica (15-end)
durée : 00:04:05 - La chronique d'Hippolyte Girardot - par : Hippolyte Girardot - Adieu à la grande silencieuse, adieu au grand parleur...
durée : 00:04:05 - La chronique d'Hippolyte Girardot - par : Hippolyte Girardot - Adieu à la grande silencieuse, adieu au grand parleur...
Theologian Francis Schaeffer once posed the question, "What is the place of art in the Christian life?" How would you answer that question?
Domestic Abuse Survivor Story, Recognizing Your Calling from God, Art Therapy & more with Author Marva J. EdwardsGet 20% OFF @manscaped + Free Shipping with promo code THP at MANSCAPED.com! #ad #manscapedpod#thehighestpointpodcastPurchase Author Marva J. Edwards Art:https://www.etsy.com/shop/MarvaEArt?ref=shop_suggAvailable on all podcast streaming services:https://thehighestpointpodcast.buzzsprout.com/The Highest Point Apparel/Merch:https://highestpointent.com/merch/Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thehighestpointpodcast/Support the show: https://www.cash.app/$highestpointenthttps://www.paypal.com/paypalme/highestpointpodcastInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/thehighestpointpodcastTwitter: https://twitter.com/highestpointpod/Intro and Outro beat prod by Mazarati Breeze @realmazarati_muzikwebsite: https://highestpointent.com/podcasts/Amongst friends we're sharing diverse points of view on family dynamics, society, relationships, hip hop, current events and more!This is a Podcast for those who know they deserve the best & willing to put in the work for progress to reach The Highest Point!Tune in and let's build together!!Facebook:https://www.facebook.com/authormarva.edwardsSupport the show (https://www.cash.app/$highestpointent)
From codependency to a more interconnected way to relate to reality
C'est parce qu'elle en a fait l'intime expérience à plusieurs périodes de sa vie qu'Harmonie Godart est si apte à parler du processus de deuil dans la profondeur de ce que cela signifie et d'offrir un accompagnement autour de ce moment vulnérable de la vie appelant à un processus de réparation. Avec le temps, le deuil prend une autre forme beaucoup plus apaisée. Harmonie définit l'étape de sidération qui s'ensuit comme « une sorte de matelas de protection pour ne pas imploser, comme si le cerveau débranchait un câble pour pouvoir survivre ». Certaines couches peuvent mettre des années avant de se libérer. Un long processus commence par rapport à la solitude face à ces pertes qui n'étaient pas dans l'ordre des choses. Le deuil est un trajet qui change de forme chaque année : « la relation avec les personnes disparues n'a de cesse de se transformer. Pour moi, ce n'est pas quelque chose de lugubre, ni un ennemi. Heureusement que ce processus est là en tant qu'étape nécessaire et salutaire. Cela demande un grand travail sur les émotions qui nous chamboulent et, en les travaillant, on ne les subit plus. Cela mène à une sacrée renaissance. Lors d'un premier deuil, on ne sait pas qu'il y a des étapes, on ne sait pas combien de temps ça va durer. C'est comme si le corps entrait dans un marathon. Le corps peut complétement décompenser, des maladies auxquelles on est prédisposé peuvent sortir. En consultation, mon rôle c'est d'aider la personne qui vient me consulter à traverser le nuage d'émotions qu'elle vit et lui donner l'opportunité de se sentir comprise dans ce qu'elle vit. » En plus d'accompagner aussi des gardiens qui vivent le deuil de leur animal de compagnie ou qui passent par la décision de l'euthanasie. Aujourd'hui, ses disparus occupent une place bien à eux dans la vie d'Harmonie. Chaque deuil est un chemin unique où le prochain pas est à choisir dans le juste ressenti des choses. Harmonie Godart, +32 496 49 83 41, Gembloux facebook.com/deuilenharmonie & deuilenharmonie.com Rendez-moi visite sur ariapersei.com
An English mission to Japan arrives in 1613 with all the standard English commodities, including wool and cloth: which the English hope to trade for Japanese silver. But there's a gift for the Shogun among them: a silver telescope. As Timon Screech explains in his latest book, The Shogun's Silver Telescope: God, Art, and Money in the English Quest for Japan, 1600-1625 (Oxford University Press, 2020), there was a lot of meaning behind that telescope. It represented an English state trying to chart its own part as a Protestant country, denoting their support for science and a more open culture in the face of a more backward Catholic Europe. Screech's book charts the background behind this simple gift and what it meant for both Japan and England. In this interview, Timon and I follow the English journeys to Japan, the reasons for these trips, and what the English encountered when they got there. And we'll think about what we learn from this—ultimately failed—effort to start a trading relationship between these two islands. Professor Timon Screech is Professor at Nichibunken or the International Research Center for Japanese Studies in Kyoto, after thirty years at SOAS. He is the author of at least a dozen books on the visual culture of the Edo period, including perhaps his best-known work Sex and the Floating World: Erotic Images in Japan, 1700-1820 (University of Hawaii Press, 1999). His other most recent book (and previous interview subject) is Tokyo Before Tokyo: Power and Magic in the Shogun's City of Edo (Reaktion Books: 2020). In 2019, he was elected as a Fellow of the British Academy. You can find more reviews, excerpts, interviews, and essays at The Asian Review of Books, including its review of The Shogun's Silver Telescope. Follow on Facebook or on Twitter at @BookReviewsAsia. Nicholas Gordon is an associate editor for a global magazine, and a reviewer for the Asian Review of Books. He can be found on Twitter at @nickrigordon. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
An English mission to Japan arrives in 1613 with all the standard English commodities, including wool and cloth: which the English hope to trade for Japanese silver. But there's a gift for the Shogun among them: a silver telescope. As Timon Screech explains in his latest book, The Shogun's Silver Telescope: God, Art, and Money in the English Quest for Japan, 1600-1625 (Oxford University Press, 2020), there was a lot of meaning behind that telescope. It represented an English state trying to chart its own part as a Protestant country, denoting their support for science and a more open culture in the face of a more backward Catholic Europe. Screech's book charts the background behind this simple gift and what it meant for both Japan and England. In this interview, Timon and I follow the English journeys to Japan, the reasons for these trips, and what the English encountered when they got there. And we'll think about what we learn from this—ultimately failed—effort to start a trading relationship between these two islands. Professor Timon Screech is Professor at Nichibunken or the International Research Center for Japanese Studies in Kyoto, after thirty years at SOAS. He is the author of at least a dozen books on the visual culture of the Edo period, including perhaps his best-known work Sex and the Floating World: Erotic Images in Japan, 1700-1820 (University of Hawaii Press, 1999). His other most recent book (and previous interview subject) is Tokyo Before Tokyo: Power and Magic in the Shogun's City of Edo (Reaktion Books: 2020). In 2019, he was elected as a Fellow of the British Academy. You can find more reviews, excerpts, interviews, and essays at The Asian Review of Books, including its review of The Shogun's Silver Telescope. Follow on Facebook or on Twitter at @BookReviewsAsia. Nicholas Gordon is an associate editor for a global magazine, and a reviewer for the Asian Review of Books. He can be found on Twitter at @nickrigordon. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/asian-review
An English mission to Japan arrives in 1613 with all the standard English commodities, including wool and cloth: which the English hope to trade for Japanese silver. But there's a gift for the Shogun among them: a silver telescope. As Timon Screech explains in his latest book, The Shogun's Silver Telescope: God, Art, and Money in the English Quest for Japan, 1600-1625 (Oxford University Press, 2020), there was a lot of meaning behind that telescope. It represented an English state trying to chart its own part as a Protestant country, denoting their support for science and a more open culture in the face of a more backward Catholic Europe. Screech's book charts the background behind this simple gift and what it meant for both Japan and England. In this interview, Timon and I follow the English journeys to Japan, the reasons for these trips, and what the English encountered when they got there. And we'll think about what we learn from this—ultimately failed—effort to start a trading relationship between these two islands. Professor Timon Screech is Professor at Nichibunken or the International Research Center for Japanese Studies in Kyoto, after thirty years at SOAS. He is the author of at least a dozen books on the visual culture of the Edo period, including perhaps his best-known work Sex and the Floating World: Erotic Images in Japan, 1700-1820 (University of Hawaii Press, 1999). His other most recent book (and previous interview subject) is Tokyo Before Tokyo: Power and Magic in the Shogun's City of Edo (Reaktion Books: 2020). In 2019, he was elected as a Fellow of the British Academy. You can find more reviews, excerpts, interviews, and essays at The Asian Review of Books, including its review of The Shogun's Silver Telescope. Follow on Facebook or on Twitter at @BookReviewsAsia. Nicholas Gordon is an associate editor for a global magazine, and a reviewer for the Asian Review of Books. He can be found on Twitter at @nickrigordon. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
An English mission to Japan arrives in 1613 with all the standard English commodities, including wool and cloth: which the English hope to trade for Japanese silver. But there's a gift for the Shogun among them: a silver telescope. As Timon Screech explains in his latest book, The Shogun's Silver Telescope: God, Art, and Money in the English Quest for Japan, 1600-1625 (Oxford University Press, 2020), there was a lot of meaning behind that telescope. It represented an English state trying to chart its own part as a Protestant country, denoting their support for science and a more open culture in the face of a more backward Catholic Europe. Screech's book charts the background behind this simple gift and what it meant for both Japan and England. In this interview, Timon and I follow the English journeys to Japan, the reasons for these trips, and what the English encountered when they got there. And we'll think about what we learn from this—ultimately failed—effort to start a trading relationship between these two islands. Professor Timon Screech is Professor at Nichibunken or the International Research Center for Japanese Studies in Kyoto, after thirty years at SOAS. He is the author of at least a dozen books on the visual culture of the Edo period, including perhaps his best-known work Sex and the Floating World: Erotic Images in Japan, 1700-1820 (University of Hawaii Press, 1999). His other most recent book (and previous interview subject) is Tokyo Before Tokyo: Power and Magic in the Shogun's City of Edo (Reaktion Books: 2020). In 2019, he was elected as a Fellow of the British Academy. You can find more reviews, excerpts, interviews, and essays at The Asian Review of Books, including its review of The Shogun's Silver Telescope. Follow on Facebook or on Twitter at @BookReviewsAsia. Nicholas Gordon is an associate editor for a global magazine, and a reviewer for the Asian Review of Books. He can be found on Twitter at @nickrigordon. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Trixy shares her childfree journey and how she came to be at peace with her decision. You won't want to miss this episode! Connect with Trixy on Instagram: @trixy_beatrice and don't miss her adorable bunnies @doubletrouble_bunbuns --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/anna-marie-olson/message
In Darwin, Dharma, and the Divine. Evolutionary Theory and Religion in Modern Japan (University of Hawaii Press, 2017), G. Clinton Godart (Associate Professor at Tohoku University's Department of Global Japanese Studies) brings to life more than a century of ideas by examining how and why Japanese intellectuals, religious thinkers of different faiths, philosophers, biologists, journalists, activists, and ideologues engaged with evolutionary theory and religion. How did Japanese religiously think about evolution? What were their main concerns? Did they reject evolution on religious grounds, or - as was more often the case - how did they combine evolutionary theory with their religious beliefs? These are some of the questions the book tries to answer, in a tour de force that takes the reader from the Meiji Restoration to the contemporary period. And in doing so, the book makes a significant contribution to two of the most debated topics in the history of evolutionary theory: religion and the political legacy of evolution. Since the introduction of evolutionary theory in the nineteenth century, Japanese intellectuals - including Buddhist, Shinto, Confucian, and Christian thinkers - struggled to formulate a meaningful worldview after Darwin. They often had opposing agendas, and so the debate was quite heated and long-lived: as Godart argues in his book, it took a hundred years of appropriating, translating, thinking, and debating to reconsider the natural world and the relation between nature, science, and the sacred in light of evolutionary theory. Eventually, the drive to find goodness and the divine within nature and evolution shaped much of Japan's modern intellectual history and changed Japanese understandings of nature, society, and the sacred. Roman Paşca is Assistant Professor at Kyoto University's Graduate School of Letters, Department of Japanese Philosophy. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In Darwin, Dharma, and the Divine. Evolutionary Theory and Religion in Modern Japan (University of Hawaii Press, 2017), G. Clinton Godart (Associate Professor at Tohoku University's Department of Global Japanese Studies) brings to life more than a century of ideas by examining how and why Japanese intellectuals, religious thinkers of different faiths, philosophers, biologists, journalists, activists, and ideologues engaged with evolutionary theory and religion. How did Japanese religiously think about evolution? What were their main concerns? Did they reject evolution on religious grounds, or - as was more often the case - how did they combine evolutionary theory with their religious beliefs? These are some of the questions the book tries to answer, in a tour de force that takes the reader from the Meiji Restoration to the contemporary period. And in doing so, the book makes a significant contribution to two of the most debated topics in the history of evolutionary theory: religion and the political legacy of evolution. Since the introduction of evolutionary theory in the nineteenth century, Japanese intellectuals - including Buddhist, Shinto, Confucian, and Christian thinkers - struggled to formulate a meaningful worldview after Darwin. They often had opposing agendas, and so the debate was quite heated and long-lived: as Godart argues in his book, it took a hundred years of appropriating, translating, thinking, and debating to reconsider the natural world and the relation between nature, science, and the sacred in light of evolutionary theory. Eventually, the drive to find goodness and the divine within nature and evolution shaped much of Japan's modern intellectual history and changed Japanese understandings of nature, society, and the sacred. Roman Paşca is Assistant Professor at Kyoto University's Graduate School of Letters, Department of Japanese Philosophy. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Wild Nectar Practice™ Live Workshop: https://nikkakarli.com/tour (https://nikkakarli.com/tour) Find all episodes & bonuses here:https://nikkakarli.com/podcast (https://nikkakarli.com/podcast) For erotic musings, BTS, and shenanigans, follow/subscribe:Blog: https://nikkakarli.com/blog (https://nikkakarli.com/blog)Free Creative Project: https://nikkakarli.com/impact (https://nikkakarli.com/impact)Instagram: https://instagram.com/nikkakarli (https://instagram.com/nikkakarli)YouTube: https://youtube.com/nikkakarli (https://youtube.com/nikkakarli) About the show:The {Re}Wilding Experience™ is a podcast for the Mystics, Mavericks, and Medicine People who howl at the moon… the Creators who are no longer content to mass produce “content” because they're here to produce change… the Edge Walkers and Truth Bringers on the front lines of planetary healing and liberation for all. This podcast is a call to arms for The Ones Who Once Were Wild… and will be again.
Isaiah: The Messianic Poem