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Found 25 text references: |  |
| 1. | " The emotions are feelings that affect judgment and are
attended by pain or pleasure (Rhetoric 1370a)."
| Source: | Cua, Antonio S. "The ethical significance of shame: insights of Aristotle and Xunzi" Philosophy East and West 53.2 Apr. 1 2003: 147-203  |
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| 2. | "... do not inhere in our actions but are ascribed to them by us:
"The knowledge of good and evil is nothing else but the emotions of
pleasure and pain, in so far as we are conscious thereof" (Pt. IV.
Prop."
| Source: | Wyschogrod, Edith. "Ethics as First Philosophy: Levinas Reads Spinoza" Eighteenth Century: Theory and Interpretation 40.3 Sept. 22 1999: 195-207  |
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| 3. | " It is essential that the real emotions are evoked
as the Positive Action Statement is being established or the new
Pain/Pleasure Anchors will not take hold."
| Source: | CLARK, TIMOTHY. "Emotional Quotient Management as a Dynamic Approach to Challenges" AORN Journal 70.2 Aug. 1 1999: 277  |
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| 4. | " The more hedonistic sometimes looked back in old age at their
lives with a mixed emotions; pleasure and perhaps regret, a feeling
typified by Wilkinson's two books of..."
| Source: | Huggins, Mike J. "MORE SINFUL PLEASURES? LEISURE, RESPECTABILITY AND THE MALE MIDDLE CLASSES IN VICTORIAN ENGLAND" Journal of Social History 33.3 Mar. 22 2000: 585  |
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| 5. | "
When I press people about the positive emotion underlying their
experience of pleasure, they tend to describe a felt, conscious,
positive feeling."
| Source: | Seligman, Martin E.P. "Can happiness be taught?" Daedalus 133.2 Mar. 22 2004: 80-88  |
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| 6. | " A
refreshingly pungent critique of the pain and pleasure of losing
one's life to marriage and maternity, Davida Allen's Feeling
Sexy dead-ended too soon in safe silliness."
| Source: | Murphy, Kathleen. "Festivals: Toronto" Film Comment 35.6 Nov. 1 1999: 37  |
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| 7. | "... the city is an ambivalent experience,
something which generates pleasure and pain, feelings of security as
well as of fear, familiarity as well as or disorientation."
| Source: | . "The Evaluative Image of the City" Urban Studies 35.11 Nov. 1 1998: 2165-2167  |
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| 8. | "
Grievous Bodily Harm)
Heroin (dope, smack, Reduces ability to feel pain, while
H, brown sugar, bringing on intense pleasure.
downtown)
Inhalants..."
| Source: | VILBIG, PETER. "New Highs, New Risks" New York Times Upfront 132.18 May 8 2000: 10  |
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| 9. | "
This principle of substitution of society by the individual
constitutes the major premise of neoclassical theory: "A true
theory of economy can only be attained by going back to the great
springs of human action--the feelings of pleasure and pain...."
| Source: | MILIOS, JOHN. "Social Classes in Classical and Marxist Political Economy" American Journal of Economics and Sociology 59.2 Apr. 1 2000: 283  |
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| 10. | " 803(3) (excepting from the hearsay
rule statements of the declarant's "then existing state of
mind, emotion, sensation, or physical condition (such as intent, plan,
motive, design, mental feeling, pain,..."
| Source: | Hudders, Neal A. "The problem of using hearsay in domestic violence cases: Is a new exception the answer?" Duke Law Journal 49.4 Feb. 1 2000: 1041  |
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| 11. | "... prompt, and
passionate; are all of weak Nerves; have a great deal of Sensibility;
are quick Thinkers, feel Pleasure and Pain the most readily, and are of
most lively Imagination' (1733: 105)."
| Source: | Dolan, Elizabeth A. "British Romantic melancholia: Charlotte Smith's Elegiac Sonnets, medical discourse and the problem of sensibility" Journal of European Studies 33.3-4 Dec. 1 2003: 237-254  |
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| 12. | "... care for living things, particularly if they are
sentient and can feel pain; and (2) the principle that we ought to leave
to our descendants a world that makes lives of fulfillment and pleasure
possible."
| Source: | Dutton, Denis. "Skeptical Environmentalism: The Limits of Philosophy and Science" Wilson Quarterly 26.4 Sept. 22 2002: 126-128  |
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| 13. | "
8. Enhancing our capacity to play, to experience joy and pleasure,
to honor our emotions and the emotions of others, to educate the next
generation with love and compassion, and to experience solitude and
silence."
| Source: | Lerner, Michael. "EMANCIPATORY SPIRITUALITY" Tikkun 15.3 May 1 2000: 33  |
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| 14. | " Those actions, or discursive
practices, regulate and control ideas about conduct of the body, mind,
emotions, desires, and pleasures deemed acceptable within the discourse."
| Source: | ALVERMANN, DONNA E.,HAGOOD, MARGARET C. "Critical Media Literacy: Research, Theory, and Practice in "New Times"" Journal of Educational Research 93.3 Jan. 1 2000: 193  |
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| 15. | " Successful poetry, Coleridge believed, constitutes just that
sympathetic exchange of emotion he attempts to explain in his sonnet to
Bowles, that "strange mysterious PLEASURE" he describes in
this volume's version of the poem."
| Source: | ROBINSON, DANIEL. ""Work Without Hope": Anxiety and Embarrassment in Coleridge's Sonnets" Studies in Romanticism 39.1 Mar. 22 2000: 81  |
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| 16. | " Suddenly it didn't sound so much like the family was more
important than politics.
"Schadenfreude is a nasty, spiteful emotion," wrote
columnist Minette Marrin in the London Daily Telegraph, defining the
German word for taking pleasure in another's misfortune."
| Source: | Fields, Suzanne. "Late baby syndrome" Washington Times July 13 2000: 19  |
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| 17. | "... immediate pleasure often comes to control our choice
behavior is sadly lacking, as is an account of how reason may prevail
over emotion (but see Overskeid, 1995b, for a short sketch)."
| Source: | OVERSKEID, GEIR. "Why Do We Think? Consequences of Regarding Thinking as Behavior" Journal of Psychology 134.4 July 1 2000: 357  |
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| 18. | " No, everything grasped by our other senses
through our whole human consciousness and which has the capacity to
communicate desire, pleasure, or emotions can also be..."
| Source: | Pallasmaa, Juhani. "HAPTICITY AND TIME" Architectural Review 207.1239 May 1 2000: 78  |
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| 19. | "
But the reverse was true in other key parts of the brain involved
in memory, emotion and pleasure: the amygdala, the thalamus and the
nucleus accumbens."
| Source: | . "First Evidence That Smoking Affects Same 'Feel Good' Brain Chemical System as Heroin; Brain Scan Study Suggests Nicotine Alters Smokers' Brain Chemistry in Ways That Could Help Explain Craving, Satisfaction" AScribe Health News Service Oct. 26 2004  |
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| 20. | "
Research on the structure of emotions and mood has shown that
affective well-being consists of several different major classes of
affective experience, such as anxiety-comfort, depression-pleasure,
boredom-enthusiasm, tiredness-vigour and anger-placidity (Daniels,
2000)."
| Source: | van Horn, Joan E.,Taris, Toon W.,Schaufeli, Wilmar B.,Schreurs, Paul J.G. "The structure of occupational well-being: a study among Dutch teachers" Journal of Occupational and Organizational Psychology 77.3 Sept. 1 2004: 365-376  |
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| 21. | "
Positive emotions (explained variance = 12.46%) consisted of 11
items (joy, pride, sympathy, happiness, contentment, excitement,
surprise, comfort, pleasure, trust and satisfaction with life)."
| Source: | Glu-Aygun, Zahide Karakitapo. "Self, identity, and emotional well-being among Turkish university students" Journal of Psychology 138.5 Sept. 1 2004: 457-479  |
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| 22. | " With the exception of being described as
"superficially charming," her history includes the expression
of a range of negative emotions (fear, anger, defiance, and jealousy)
without the balance of pleasure and joy."
| Source: | Stein, Martin T.,Faber, Scott,Berger, Susan P.,Kliman, Gilbert. "International adoption: a 4-year-old child with unusual behaviors adopted at 6 months of age *" Pediatrics 114.5 Nov. 1 2004: 1425-1432  |
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| 23. | " A rhetorical
critic, therefore, may elect to evaluate a rhetor's prudence and
decorum as judged against "aesthetic propriety, the rhetorical
practice of image management that stimulates the spectator's
aesthetic responses (emotions such as pleasure, joy, awe,
wonderment)" (Hariman, 1995, p. 140)."
| Source: | Erickson, Keith V.,Thomson, Stephanie. "Seduction theory and the recovery of feminine aesthetics: implications for rhetorical criticism" Communication Quarterly 52.3 June 22 2004: 300-320  |
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| 24. | " I was alternately stupefied and aroused ... [Ono]
concluded the work with amplified sighs, breathing, gasping, retching,
screaming, many tones of pain and pleasure mixed with a gibberish of
foreign sounding language..."
| Source: | BOURDON, DAVID. "A Letter to Charlotte Moorman" Art in America 88.6 June 1 2000: 80  |
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| 25. | " I have found joy, sorrow, pleasure, pain, love,
dislike, and many other things in life, but every supposed "meaning
of life" that I have encountered has failed to convince me of its
claimed status."
| Source: | . "LETTERS" Free Inquiry 20.3 June 22 2000: 27  |
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