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COLLèGE DE FRANCE

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Courtyard of the Collège de France.

The 'Collège de France' is a higher education and research establishment (''Grand établissement'') located in Paris, France, in the 5th arrondissement, or Latin Quarter, across the street from the historical campus of La Sorbonne at the intersection of Rue Saint-Jacques and Rue des Ecoles. It also provides teaching, but to professors and researchers.
It was created in 1530 at the request of King Francis I of France. Of humanist inspiration, this school was established as an alternative to the Sorbonne to promote such disciplines as Hebrew language, Ancient Greek and Mathematics. Initially called ''Collège Royal'', and later ''Collège des Trois Langues'' (Latin: Collegium Trilingue), ''Collège National'', ''Collège Impérial'', it was named ''Collège de France'' in 1870.
What makes it unique is that attendance is free and open to anyone, even though some high-level courses are out of reach for the general public. The school's goal is to "''teach science in the making''" and therefore the professors are chosen among the foremost researchers of the day, with no requisite other than being at the top of their field, in a variety of disciplines, both in science and the humanities. Even though the motto of the ''Collège'' is "''Docet Omnia''," Latin for "''It teaches everything''," its goal can be best summed up by Maurice Merleau-Ponty's phrase: "''Not preconceived notions, but the idea of free thought''" which is burned in golden letters above the main hall of the ''Collège'' building.
The ''Collège'' does not grant degrees, but has research laboratories, as well as one of the best research libraries of Europe, with sections focusing on history with rare books, humanities, social sciences, but also chemistry or physics. Gresham College is perhaps the London equivalent.

Contents
Faculty
External links

Faculty


The faculty of the Collège de France currently comprises fifty-two Professors elected by the Professors from amongst eminent French scholars in a wide range of subjects. Chairs cover a wide range of subjects, including mathematics, physics, chemistry, biology, history, archaeology, linguistics, oriental studies, philosophy, the social sciences and so on. In addition, two chairs are reserved for foreign scholars who are invited to give lectures.
Present Chairs
Chairs, College of France (French)
Past faculty include:

Raymond Aron

Jean François Boissonade de Fontarabie

Etienne Baluze

Émile Benveniste

Henri Bergson

Claude Bernard

Marcelin Berthelot

Yves Bonnefoy

Pierre Boulez

Pierre Bourdieu

Fernando Henrique Cardoso

Jean-François Champollion

Georges Cuvier

Marie Henri d'Arbois de Jubainville

Jean Darcet

Jacques-Arsène d'Arsonval

Pierre-Gilles de Gennes

Émile Deschanel

Georges Dumézil

Lucien Febvre

Oronce Fine

Michel Foucault

Ferdinand André Fouqué

Etienne Fourmont

Jean-Baptiste Gail

Charles Gide

Ian Hacking

Eugène Auguste Ernest Havet

Françoise Héritier

Frédéric Joliot

Stanislas Julien

Sylvestre François Lacroix

René Laënnec

Paul Langevin

René Leriche

Emmanuel Le Roy Ladurie

Claude Lévi-Strauss

André Lichnerowicz

Edmond Malinvaud

Henri Maspero

Louis Massignon

Maurice Merleau-Ponty

Jules Michelet

Jean-Baptiste Morin

Alexis Paulin Paris

Paul Pelliot

François Pétis de la Croix

Guillaume Postel

Edgar Quinet

Petrus Ramus

Henri Victor Regnault

Jean-Pierre-Abel Rémusat

Jean-Baptiste Say

Jean-Pierre Serre

François Simiand

Paul Valéry

Jean-Pierre Vernant

External links



Collège de France (French)

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