269 search results for “lcn2 seminar” in the Public website
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LCCP Working Seminar "The Unconscious and the Transcendental: Husserlian Phenomenology in Intersubjective Systems Theory"
Lecture
- GTGC Lunch Seminar: Issue Complexity, Strategic Construct and Cooperation Among International Organisations
- GTGC lunch seminar: Nina Hall on Transnational Advocacy in the Digital Era
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LCCP Research Seminar: After the Universal - On the Language of Co-Existence
Lecture
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Armenian across the millennia: seminar on the occasion of Rasmus Thorsø's PhD defence
Lecture
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LCCP Working Seminar: Elements of ecotechnical existence in Heidegger’s Introduction to Metaphysics (1935)
Lecture
- Seminar 4: The Formation of Discourse Communities in the Early Middle Ages
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LCCP Research Seminar: Thinking the in-between. World and alienness in Waldenfels and Merleau-Ponty
Lecture
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LCCP Working Seminar with Susanna Lindberg: "From Technological Humanity to Bio-Technical Existence"
Lecture
- SAILS Lunch Time Seminar: Machine learning for spatio-temporal datasets + SAILS data observatory
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Seminar: High yield vesicle packaged recombinant protein production from E. coli
Lecture
- GTGC lunch seminar: Dr. Sarah Giest on Digital Access, Data-Driven Policymaking and Public Service Delivery
- SAILS Lunch Time Seminar: Applications of Artificial Intelligence in Early Drug Discovery
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LCCP Working Seminar with Marita Tatari: The “we” and the human condition. Arendt, Jacobi, Nancy.
Lecture
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LCCP Seminar "The phenomenology of perception. Before and after Merleau-Ponty’"
Conference
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the past and present, thoughts for the future. A Blue-Sky thinking seminar
Conference, A Blue-Sky thinking seminar
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A History of East Baltic through Language Contact: A Seminar on the Occasion of Anthony Jakob’s Defense
Conference
- Research Seminar: Between Myth and Reality: Rules Of Observance As Texts Of Life In The High Middle Ages (RUG, 11 March 2024)
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Discovering the physics of banks, the economy and financial crisis
Physicist Diego Garlaschelli co-authored an extensive review in the journal Nature Reviews Physics. Surprisingly, the subject wasn't physics at all, but the networks of banks and other financial institutions, and the way their structure relates to financial crises.