A: The series reflects on
the human emotion of fear.
Not exact matches
«Despite the comfortable academic consensus
of market efficiency, financial markets will never be efficient because markets are, and will always be, driven by
human emotions: greed and
fear» Seth Klarman
These he accomplished despite his growing sense that larger forces — the riptide
of tribal feeling in a world that should have already shed its atavism; the resilience
of small men who rule large countries in ways contrary to their own best interests; the persistence
of fear as a governing
human emotion — frequently conspire against the best
of America's intentions.
«
Fear and greed, most notable among counterproductive
emotions where money is the object
of human desire, can and often do compromise the capacity for rational and orderly thought» Frank Martin
Faith (or belief without evidence) is more motivated by two basic
human emotions:
FEAR of dying and punishment and HOPE for an eternal afterlife.
Anger is a
human emotion that is a symptom
of fear.
@truth2power You said «Anger is a
human emotion that is a symptom
of fear.
The
human encounter with nature is far too ambiguous and complex to be subsumed under the single
emotion of fear.
But religious love is only man's natural
emotion of love directed to a religious object; religious
fear is only the ordinary
fear of commerce, so to speak, the common quaking
of the
human breast, in so far as the notion
of divine retribution may arouse it; religious awe is the same organic thrill which we feel in a forest at twilight, or in a mountain gorge; only this time it comes over us at the thought
of our supernatural relations; and similarly
of all the various sentiments which may be called into play in the lives
of religious persons.
We each have the full range
of human experience,
human emotion,
human need,
human fear,
human joy,
human love,
human everything.
And it takes a lot
of discipline to use rational thinking to overcome
fear, but
humans have
emotions and
emotions are messy.
As
humans and children, we are hardwired to experience anxiety since it is one
of the core
emotions, along with anger,
fear, happiness and surprise.
• The need to exercising self - compassion as you process
emotions • Emotional purging in a conscious way to move to an easier parenting journey • Moving passed mindfulness and consciousness to peacefulness • Functioning as a peaceful
human being • Moving from «doing» to «being» • The value
of peaceful presence, free
of emotional trigger, for your kids • Modelling ownership
of behavior for your kids • Peacefulness as a practice that takes time • Parenting as an extension
of nature: gradually forging new pathways in your relationships and being expansive, not staying «stuck» • The healing power
of authenticity with your kids • Aiming for perseverance and presence, not perfection • Exercising compassion for others and recognizing we don't know their struggles • Learning how not to try to control others and focus on self to remain peaceful • Journalling as a practice to release
emotions • Finding opportunities for stillness • Releasing others from the responsibility for reading your mind • Shifting to a solution focus to create momentum •
Fear: being curious about it to avoid being driven by it • Showing up in your own home to make a difference in the world • Practical ways to nourish yourself • Unconditional love — what does that look like?
Managing anxiety in order to tackle a big project, managing anger to work through a marital conflict, managing
fear to apply for a job — the ability
of a
human being to manage his or her
emotions in a healthy way will determine the quality
of his life in a much more fundamental way than his mental IQ.
Especially given that the Con Con - Cons have one
of the most powerful
human emotions on their side:
fear of loss.
True, the negative, but self - consuming,
emotions of disgust, anger,
fear, and envy have often allowed individual
humans to push other
humans away or to selfishly exploit them.
A new study from the University
of California, Berkeley, challenges a long - held assumption in psychology that most
human emotions fall within the universal categories
of happiness, sadness, anger, surprise,
fear and disgust.
«Emoji fans take heart: Scientists pinpoint 27 states
of emotion: New study challenges assumption that most
human emotions fall within the categories
of happiness, sadness, anger, surprise,
fear and disgust.»
By studying faces, researchers have matched subtle changes in the positioning
of the mouth, eyes and eyebrows to variations in six basic
human emotions — happiness, surprise, disgust, sadness, anger and
fear.
The
emotion primitives analyzed in the fly study can be understood in the context
of a stimulus associated with
human fear: the sound
of a gunshot.
Human - behavior researcher and author
of I Thought It Was Just Me (2007), Brown has made a career out
of studying difficult
emotions such as
fear and shame.
part horror part comedy is what The Cabin in the wood tries to be.the horror was an
emotion of fearing the unknown that lies beyond
human knowledge while the comedy is a satire on the young generation that was depicted with the killing
of
part horror part comedy is what The Cabin in the wood tries to be.the horror was an
emotion of fearing the unknown that lies beyond
human knowledge while the comedy is a satire on the young generation that was depicted with the killing
of typical american teenager.
'' «There are no two stronger
human emotions than
fear and love,» says Dexter at the start
of last night's episode.»
Maybe it's the director's fault, but seeing so many bad performances all lined up in a row made me consider that few actors go for big, brave choices and raw, aggressive, messy
human emotion, and that there's a similar
fear of the Spalding Gray approach where one does as little as possible, as well as
of the strange vibe we catch from actors working under the spell
of David Lynch.
Letters contain the full array
of human emotions, from love to hate, from
fear to excitement.
Working with indie authors does mean that we're privy to all kinds
of emotions and
fears and raw
human neuroses!
We are our biggest obstacle to making money as fast as possible in the market; no matter how you slice it, trading failure always comes down to
human errors born out
of emotions like greed,
fear and revenge.
Think
of it as the
human equivalent
of goose bumps; it can signal several
emotions, including
fear, anger and extreme excitement.
In a recent published article Dr. Meghan E. Herron, a veterinarian who runs the Behavioral Medicine Clinic at Ohio State's College
of Veterinary Medicine was quoted» animals feel
emotions the same way
humans do — their limbic system, which controls feelings such as anger,
fear and pleasure, is very similar to ours.»
Humans have two kinds
of emotions: primary
emotions like
fear, joy, grief and anger, and secondary
emotions including hatred, anxiety, insecurity, and jealousy.
In all
of these cases, we
humans can rationalize how the dog's safety is not threatened — but the dog's
emotion (
fear) is very real to him.
See a partial list
of classesCanine Ethology History
of Dog Training Canine Cognition Learning Theory Overview Building Trust and Positive Relationships with Dogs The «Positively» Philosophy Self - Care & Burnout Prevention Canine
Emotion and Behavior Canine Communication Canine Body Language Behavior Observation & Discussion Positive Training Tools & Methods Demonstrations & Hands - on Practice
of Tools
Human Communication Living with Dogs Preventing and Addressing Canine
Fear and Stress Mock Group Classes Interpersonal Skills — Working with the Client Dog Trainer as Agent
of Human Change Dog Bite Prevention Aggression Working Dogs Positive Training with Other Species Teaching Group Classes Teaching Private lessons Veterinarian Relationships Behavioral Medicine Medical Handling Lab When to Refer / Ethics Dog Law Business Marketing for Dog Trainers And more... taught during the in - person intensives.
Fear is one
of the strongest
human emotions.
The rooms that make up the Pavilion
of Joys and
Fears are a pointed and moving exploration
of human emotion.
An intensely personal artist, Bourgeois creates works that often draw on her own life experience: her vulnerability and
fear, and the mystery and beauty
of human emotions.
Kerr goes deep into the biological and scientific definitions
of fear, rather than dismissing the experience solely as an
emotion... «Every organism, from the fruit fly to the
human, has a defense or threat response,» she reminds.
A few swatches
of paper plus a dash
of ink or marker, and suddenly living bodies emerge: shoulders slump, necks crane, and spines slouch, a vast array
of human emotions —
fear, indifference, laziness, lust — conveyed through his craft.
Common societal misconceptions are at play here, as well as basic
human psychology: parents often
fear losing control
of themselves or allowing their children to lose control
of their negative
emotions, and it is easy to fall into the trap
of using distraction techniques to pacify a child who is upset.