944 resultados para economics of Happiness and happiness
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"Chiefly the work of Arbuckle, though Francis Hutchison, Samuel Boyse, and the poet Parnell made a few contributions. This collection of papers, which first appeared in a Dublin journal, came to be known under the pen-name of the main contributor."--Cf. Halkett and Laing: Dictionary of anonymous and pseudonymous English literature, v. 3, p. 36.
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Published in 1843 under the title: Association, or, A concise exposition of the practical part of Fourier's social science.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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"Printed by George H. Evans, 40 Thompson Street"--colophon, p. 202.
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"America printed."
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Mode of access: Internet.
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"In this edition there are five new chapters, viz, the 13, 19, 20, 21, and 26." -- preface.
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Kress Lib.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Half-titles, also special title-pages; v. 1: An ethical treatise on the passions ... Bath, 1810. v. 2: Ethical questions; or, Speculations on the principal subjects of controversy in moral philosophy ... London, 1817. v. 3: An ethical treatise on the passions ... Bath, 1807. v. 4: Theological disquisitions ... London, 1812. v. 5: A theological disquisition, on the characteristic excellencies of Christianity ... London, 1813.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Patients with depersonalization disorder have shown attenuated responses to emotional unpleasant stimuli, hence supporting the view that depersonalization is characterised by a selective inhibition on the processing of unpleasant emotions. It was the purpose of this study to establish if autonomic responses to facial emotional expressions also show the same blunting effect. The skin conductance responses (SCRs) of 16 patients with chronic DSM-IV depersonalization disorder, 15 normal controls and 15 clinical controls with DSM-IV anxiety disorders were recorded in response to facial expressions of happiness and disgust. Patients with anxiety disorders were found to have greater autonomic responses than patients with depersonalization, in spite of the fact that both groups had similarly high levels of subjective anxiety as measured by anxiety scales. SCR to happy faces did not vary across groups. The findings of this study provide further support to the idea that patients with depersonalization have a selective impairment in the processing of threatening or unpleasant emotional stimuli.