ellauri142.html on line 903: Theophrastus Philippus Aureolus Bombastus von Hohenheim (11. marraskuuta tai 17. joulukuuta 1493 Sveitsi – 24. syyskuuta 1541 Salzburg, Itävalta) oli sveitsiläissyntyinen alkemisti, lääkäri, astrologi, psykologi ja okkultisti. Hänen nimensä oli alun perin Theophrastus Philippus Aureolus Bombastus von Hohenheim, mutta hän otti Para-Celsus (parempi kuin Celsius) -nimen roomalaisen lämpömittarin Celsuksen mukaan. Paracelsus halusi korvata skolastisen tieteentekemisen perinteen, jossa tutkimuksen ensisijaisina välineenä oli nojatuoli ja kohteena klassisten auktoriteettien opit, kuten galenoslainen lääketiede ja aristotelinen luonnonfilosofia, luonnon todellisia ilmiöitä ja vuorovaikutuksia tutkivalla kokeellisella tieteellä. Paracelsus painotti tutkimuksissa suoraan luonnosta tapahtuvaa ilmiöiden osallistuvaa havainnointia ilman harhaanjohtavia klassisia teorioita ja ajatuksia.
ellauri161.html on line 507: Over 30% of the American population does not believe in global warming and think it is a hoax, or fake news. What's more perilous though is the fact that governments worldwide are NOT taking the proposed measures that could curb global warming beneath 1.5 Celsius. Above that treshold of 1.5 degrees Celsius we get a runaway effect of increasing global warming, which would be nothing less than CATASTROPHIC.
ellauri285.html on line 753: The critical positivity ratio (also known as the "Losada ratio" or the "Losada line" [not verified in body]) is a largely discredited concept in positive psychology positing an exact ratio of positive to negative emotions which distinguishes "flourishing" people from "languishing" people.[citation needed] The ratio was proposed by psychologists Barbara Fredrickson and Marcial Losada, who believed that they had identified an experimental measure of affect whose model-derived positive-to-negative ratio of 2.9013 defined a critical separation between flourishing and languishing individuals, as reported in their 2005 paper in American Psychologist.[non-primary source needed] This concept of a critical positivity ratio was widely embraced by academic psychologists and the lay public; Fredrickson and Losada´s paper had been cited more than 320 times by January 2014, and Fredrickson wrote a popular book expounding the concept of "the 3-to-1 ratio that will change your life". In it she wrote, "just as zero degrees Celsius is a special number in thermodynamics, the 3-to-1 positivity ratio may well be a magic number in human psychology."
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