Sentences with phrase «emotional nature of»

Readers respond to coverage of property defects, drone laws, and the emotional nature of letters from buyers.
Shapiro says effective negotiators not only keep an even keel but also set a positive tone by using strategies that acknowledge the emotional nature of conflict.
The emotional nature of a buyer's letter to sellers might help win the home, but it could be the biggest drawback at the negotiating table.
In a recent study, ANS responses were triggered by positive couple interactions (as compared to neutral interactions; Nealey - Moore et al., 2007), an effect which was attributed to the emotional nature of the task.
«On the cognitive nature of emotions and the emotional nature of cognitions,» in Emotions in Research and Practice, eds F. Pons, M. de Rosnay, and P. - A.
Given the demanding and emotional nature of fostering, there may be times when you have a difference of opinion with your child's foster carer or your child's caseworker.
Family court staff members have the training to handle the emotional nature of these types of cases and to help parents and children through the litigation process as much as possible.
Plus there's something to be said for the emotional nature of the female disposition.
Driven by my personal foundation and dedication to relationship - based, collaborative work with young children, I felt it paramount to recognize the emotional nature of teaching and the need for collegiality as cornerstones of effective reflective practices.
For example, Laurel Fletcher and Harvey Weinstein write that clinical law supervisors must acknowledge the highly emotional nature of clinical law work for many students.
All parties to an employment law mediation need to address the emotional nature of the dispute before they can hope to reach a settlement, Toronto mediator and settlement... Read more
Family law attorneys take on a significant risk because of the emotional nature of their cases, Snyder said.
It takes both skills to successfully litigate, and in cases of employment disputes that expertise counterbalances the often emotional nature of the suit.
They argue that the awards are arbitrary and juries lack objectivity due to the emotional nature of the subject.
Adrian Paci's videos concern the emotional nature of origins.
Her work is increasingly characterized by a disarmingly inviting and humorous aesthetic which masks the intensely emotional nature of her subject matter.
Burton, an advocate for making art personal and social, once said of the experience he desired for the seated audiences of his Behavior Tableaux works, ``... what I want people to become aware of is the emotional nature of the number of inches between them.»
No topic exemplifies the emotional nature of grading discussions quite like a discussion about using zeros.
That may be the point of the film, showing both the trapped nature of the physical characters while showing the emotional nature of confinement.
An appreciation for the amoral, emotional nature of states and their vulnerability to circumstance complicates traditional interpretations of IR, including some game - theoretic accounts where rationally self - interested — and therefore predictable — actors are taken as given.
Because of the emotional nature of identity issues, identity construction has to be authentic to each group itself and will be rejected if defined by others.
Those working in this field need to have a strong support base to enable them to cope with the emotional nature of our work, and develop a network of other birth professionals who come from diverse backgrounds and cultures to give us a breadth of knowledge and perspectives.

Not exact matches

I knew my son's emotional nature and lack of experience were leading him into a bad decision.
Because of their emotional nature, these actions can accurately be used as a heuristic to judge which branding efforts are resonating with your audience, and which aren't.
Starbucks also succeeds at fostering an emotional connection with customers, due in large part to the emotional connection most people have with coffee — drinking it with friends, cozying up to a hot drink in the winter time and enjoying the inherent social nature of «going out for coffee.»
The nature of the discussions changed dramatically, and it made it far less of an emotional negotiation that he's dealt with before, he said.
And questions pertaining to the nature of a physical, emotional or mental handicap can only be asked if an applicant will need special accommodations for performing a specific job.
«At first you're emotional and sentimental; that's the nature of starting a business,» her son reflects.
The amazing appeal of Chateaubriand derives from his ability to turn the privileging of nature (the great innovation at the end of the eighteenth century) into an argument for sacrality, and to legitimize the spheres of the emotional and the aesthetic as valid replacements for those of the rational and the social.
But any attempt to justify violence (by emotional considerations, by a doctrine, a theology, etc.) is a supplementary perversion of fallen nature at the hands of man.
My atheist friends who are emotional and highly sensitive react in awe to the beauty, mystery and complexity of nature, whereas my atheist friends who are cerebral dissect «nature» in a much more detached and analytical way.
Human nature, in the sense of man's basic physical, emotional, impulsive and intellectual constitution, somehow moral at the core, seemed plainly more fundamental than any particular sort of human behavior, even economic; and human nature itself emerges in a world order far more ancient and more fundamental still.
They are fully aware that no one can have sexual intercourse outside of a committed monogomous relationship, that being marriage, and not endure sufferings of a physical, emotional or spiritual nature.
Since Christianity does not depend on either the nature or the historicity of the resurrection, this should allow for a less emotional and therefore more fruitful consideration of the subject.
Despite the emotional appeal of two people of the same sex who love each other in a way that imitates a married couple, their union can not effect the true purposes of marriage and family, and this can be demonstrated abstractly with reason and concretely through nature, even to non-believers.
So, what you have experienced is purely of an emotional nature, right?
The group's chairman, Don E. Saliers, professor of theology at Emory, has for many years investigated the philosophical as well as theological nature of emotional experience; many of his views on the topic appear in his book The Soul in Paraphrase: Prayer and the Religious Affections (Seabury, 1980).
The carefully crafted appeals to come forward at a crusade are often emotional in nature, based on success stories of people who converted, or tales of woe about people who did not.
What if your worldview leads you to having a high chance of unwanted pregnancies, STD's, and emotional scaring and people like Ethridge are trying to save you from that world of heart instead of just following your animalistic nature?
I know that both while I was drinking and in periods of sobriety I have trouble in personal relationships, I can't control my emotional nature [not to be confused with my emotions], I was a prey to misery and depression, I couldn't make a living [a life worth living], I had a feeling of uselessness, I was full of fear, I was unhappy and I couldn't seem to be of real help to other people.
To make matters more complicated, friendships and family ties rarely function with predictable tidiness; rather, they inject an irrationality into life which flows from the haphazard nature of emotional commitments.
My emotional nature was stirred to its depths; confessions of depravity and pleading with God for salvation from sin made me oblivious of all surroundings.
Accordingly, he understands electrons and atoms in terms of «an analogy between the transference of energy from particular occasion to particular occasion in physical nature and the transference of affective tone, with its emotional energy, from one occasion to another in any human personality.
One aspect of human nature is our sexuality, largely a matter of physiology but (as we now increasingly understand) involving emotional, psychological, and spiritual qualities as well.
Sufism, or mysticism, and particularly pantheistic mysticism, found fertile soil in Indonesian spiritual and emotional life from the very beginning because of the nature of the Indonesian mind and because of the age - old influence of Hinduism and Buddhism.
Emotional maturity is judged by such criteria as sense of proportion, correspondence of feelings with reality, unity of purpose, and flexibility — all of which are of an esthetic nature.
It is introduced by the following preamble: «The word heart is used in Scripture as the seat of life or strength; hence it means mind, soul, spirit, or one's entire emotional nature and understanding...» The word «thought» does have about 110 entries but close inspection reveals that these are «thoughts of the heart».
Appeal to the emotional side of those values when you name your product; brand names like Organic Valley, Nature's Path or Eden Foods evoke an immediate response among natural and organic consumers.
They open the door to a deeper conversation about values, human nature and the fragility of eros, and force us to grapple with some of the most unsettling questions: How do we negotiate the elusive balance between our emotional and our erotic needs?
Children's emotional and affective values of nature develop earlier than their abstract, logical and rational perspectives (Kellert 2002).
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