Suchergebnisse
Zi you liu yue: 2019 nian xiang gang "Fan song zhong" yu zi you yun dong de kai duan
In: Xue li shi 161
In: 血歷史 161
Our political nature: the evolutionary origins of what divides us : with a new epiloque by the author
The burning man of Tunisia -- The universal political animal -- What economics can and cannot predict -- The invention of the political litmus test -- Unearthing the three roots of political orientation -- Tribalism on the political spectrum -- Ethnocentrism vs. xenophilia -- Religiosity vs. secularism -- Attitudes toward sexuality, homosexuality, and gender roles -- The biology of tribalism -- When outbreeding is fit and inbreeding isn't -- When inbreeding is fit and outbreeding isn't -- How optimal mating happens -- Why gender inequality and fertility change across human history -- The biology of war and genocide -- Do we live in a just world? -- Attitudes toward inequality and authority in society -- Attitudes toward inequality and authority within the family -- The biology of family conflict -- Why sibling conflict occurs and polarizes political personalities -- Are people by nature cooperative or competitive? -- Sages through the ages -- Do perceptions of human nature change as we age? -- Illuminating our true human nature -- The conservative altruism : kin-selection -- The liberal altruism : reciprocity -- Altruism across the lifespan : the neurological development of -- Cynicism -- The altruism that isn't : self-deception among people and -- Politicians -- The enigmatic altruism of heroic rescuers.
Der Schülermord von Steglitz und 22 weitere Verbrechen
In: Blutiger Osten - die grössten authentischen Kriminalfälle
In: SuperIllu
Narrative economics: how stories go viral & drive major economic events : with a new preface by the author
"From Nobel Prize-winning economist and New York Times bestselling author Robert Shiller, a groundbreaking account of how stories help drive economic events-and why financial panics can spread like epidemic viruses. Stories people tell-about financial confidence or panic, housing booms, or Bitcoin-can go viral and powerfully affect economies, but such narratives have traditionally been ignored in economics and finance because they seem anecdotal and unscientific. In this groundbreaking book, Robert Shiller explains why we ignore these stories at our peril-and how we can begin to take them seriously. Using a rich array of examples and data, Shiller argues that studying popular stories that influence individual and collective economic behavior-what he calls "narrative economics"-may vastly improve our ability to predict, prepare for, and lessen the damage of financial crises and other major economic events. The result is nothing less than a new way to think about the economy, economic change, and economics. In a new preface, Shiller reflects on the major challenges facing narrative economics."
Ci pensiamo noi: dieci proposte per far spazio ai giovani in Italia
In: Cultura e società
Storming Vicksburg: Grant, Pemberton, and the Battles of May 19-22, 1863
In: Civil War America
They are upon us: May 17 -- On the war-path for Vicksburg: May 18 -- A long dreadful day: Fifteenth Corps, May 19 -- I hope every man will follow me: Seventeenth and Thirteenth Corps, May 19 -- This will be a hard place to take: May 20-21 -- Dismay and bewilderment: Blair, May 22 -- Now, boys, you must do your duty: McPherson, May 22 -- The horror of the thing bore me down like an avalanche: McClernand and Osterhaus, May 22 -- Boys, you have just fifteen minutes to live: 2nd Texas Lunette, May 22 -- A thousand bayonets glistened in the sunlight: railroad redoubt, May 22 -- I don't believe a word of it: Grant, Sherman, and McClernand, May 22 -- Am holding position but suffering awfully: Blair, Ransom, and Tuttle, May 22 -- It made the tears come to my eyes: Steele, May 22 -- Boys, don't charge those works: Logan and Quinby, May 22 -- It is absolutely necessary that they be dislodged: reclaiming railroad redoubt, May 22 -- An ardent desire to participate in the capture of Vicksburg: Grant, Pemberton, Porter, and McArthur, May 22 -- I feel sad but not discouraged: making sense of May 22 -- I am surfeited, sick, and tired of witnessing bloodshed: casualties, wounded, prisoners -- No one would have supposed that we were mortal enemies: burial, mourning -- They ought to be remembered: honors, infamy, life stories -- Eventful on the page of history: commemoration.