Tuesday 10 March, 12:30

Mark Hunyadi: Mind and Data – Humanity’s Digital Future

Mark Hunyadi, born in Geneva in 1960 and professor of social, moral and political philosophy at the Université catholique de Louvain, examines the digital future of humanity. A specialist in trust and social bonds, he is author of Au début est la confiance, Faire confiance à la confiance and La Déclaration universelle de l’esprit humain. This lecture explores ethical and political challenges posed by digital technologies and AI, and his proposal to recognise the human mind as a common heritage of humanity.

In French.

Grand-Rue 11,
1204 Genève
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Bruno Marchand, professor emeritus at EPFL, leads this five-part lecture series designed for newcomers to architectural history. He brings his academic experience to introduce key figures and approaches in Geneva’s twentieth-century modernity.

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Programme:

– Monday 2 February, 12:15: Maurice Braillard and the early foundations of Genevan modernity
– Monday 2 March, 12:15: The architecture of Marc-Joseph Saugey: technology and progress
– Monday 16 March, 12:15: The architecture of Jean-Marc Lamunière: the legacy of Mies and postmodernity
– Monday 20 April,12:15: The architecture of André Gaillard, in the wake of Eugène Beaudouin
– Monday 11 May, 12:15: The architecture of Georges Brera: the influence of Le Corbusier and the plasticity of concrete

Monday 2 March, 19:00

Lionel Gauthier, a PhD in geography and director of the Musée du Léman in Nyon, previously taught at the University of Geneva and led the Médiathèque Valais-Martigny.

The lecture examines two millennia of mapping the lake, from the Tabula Peutingeriana to the 2014 multibeam sonar bathymetry. Gauthier investigates how place-names evolved, how the lake’s borders were drawn, why some old maps depict it ‘upside down’, and how cartography shaped local narratives.

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Monday 2 March, 18:30

Marlène Laruelle, PhD, professor at Luiss University and director of the Illiberalism Studies Program, presents an analytical lecture on the changing normative foundations of Western democracies. Drawing on her edited volume The Oxford Handbook of Illiberalism (Oxford University Press, 2024) and comparative research, she examines why illiberal ideas gain traction, exploring socioeconomic inequality, technocratic governance, cultural dislocation and weakening narratives of progress. Laruelle assesses whether liberalism is being reformed, reconfigured, or replaced, and considers implications for democratic norms and international order.

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Tuesday 3 March, 18:30

Lucy Lagier, specialist in early modern history and author of a bachelor’s thesis on ceremonial display and royal image in the sixteenth century, will begin a Master’s in General History at the University of Neuchâtel.

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