Previous events - Page 23
Welcome to this seminar on China's role in Africa and Latin America.
?ystein Linnebo is a Professor of Philosophy at the University of Oslo. His main research interests are in the philosophies of logic and mathematics, metaphysics and the philosophy of science. He is particularly interested in questions concerning ontology, individuation, essence, reference (especially to abstract objects), necessity and of necessary truths. He has recently published two books, Philosophy of Mathematics (Princeton University Press, 2017) and Thin Objects: An Abstractionist Account (Oxford University Press, 2018).
Dr. Katie Overy, senior lecturer at University of Edinburgh, will speak at RITMO's Seminar Series.
Can Artificial Intelligence (AI) provide solutions to multiple challenges of our time? And what is the future of work in the AI era?
Sustainable cancer care using molecular tests - from a prostate cancer perspective
NCMM Associate Investigator Professor John-Bjarne Hansen, KG Jebsen – Thrombosis Research and Expertise Centre (TREC), Department of Clinical Medicine, University of Troms?, and University Hospital of Northern Norway, will present his research as part of the NCMM Tuesday Seminar Series.
Open lectures by Catherine (Katie) Peichel and Dag Undlien. The topic covers reconciling Mendelian genetics and Darwinian evolution, and how genetics is used in modern medicine.
Green Frontiers Festival and the Zapffe Prize ceremony.
Featuring the Nobel Prize Winner in Literature, Olga Tokarczuk as the Arne N?ss Professor.
What is the impact of the pandemic for how we study and understand change in everyday consumption?
NCMM Associate Investigator Professor Thomas Arnesen, Department of Molecular Biology, University of Bergen and Department of Surgery, Haukeland University Hospital, will present his research as part of the NCMM Tuesday Seminar Series.
NCMM Associate Investigator Professor Rolf Skotheim, Department of Molecular Oncology, Institute for Cancer Research, Oslo University Hospital and University of Oslo, will present his research as part of the NCMM Tuesday Seminar Series.
Welcome to this public event on the role of smartphones in health with Daniel Miller, Thomas Hylland Eriksen, and a panel discussion on the role of smartphones in the COVID-19 response.
Welcome to this one-day webinar conference that will explore the multifaceted connections between ‘green extractivism’ and violent conflicts.
Welcome to this international seminar on Europe's alternative futures.
In this lecture, the Medical Humanities and the Environmental Humanities meet. Associate Professor Eben Kirksey from the Alfred Deakin Institute at Deakin University, Australia, will introduce us to the "virosphere".
Medical science and society during the covid-19 pandemic. What have we learned?
Are you writing your MA or Ph.D. thesis on Chinese cities, global urban studies, infrastructure, Special economic zone, urbanism, or the Belt and Road initiative?
Lara Keuck is a historian and philosopher of medicine. She leads the Max Planck Research Group “Practices of Validation in the Biomedical Sciences” at the Max Planck Institute for the History of Science in Berlin.
Her research examines the making and changing of knowledge about disease in modern medicine, and has focused on medical classification systems, animal models of human disease, vagueness in psychiatry, and the question of validity. She is particularly interested in so-called borderline cases that in some way or the other fall in-between health and disease and challenge or alter their demarcations.
Welcome to this breakfast seminar on China's role in Africa and Latin America.
NCMM Associate Investigator Professor Christine Hanssen Rinaldo, Department of Clinical Medicine, University of Troms? and University Hospital North Norway, will present her research as part of the NCMM Tuesday Seminar Series.
Welcome to the eighth and final Thon Award lectures.