If writers were paid per unit of meaningfulness rather than per word or per page, he would have been one of the richest. |
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The meaningfulness of this distinction awaits validation by external correlates. |
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He focuses on the meaningfulness and pleasure of the act of making by magnifying and expanding it. |
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Jung's three definitions of synchronicity all involve an affective and psychic component, an uncanny sense of the meaningfulness of an event. |
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I don't think that I am the only one who couldn't help but wonder about the meaningfulness of his job and his mission in life. |
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I am of the opinion that the meaningfulness of a European label which is tailored to the European internal market is beyond dispute. |
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An important criterion in determining the appropriate categorization is understandability and meaningfulness to the user of the information. |
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Focusing on life in the workplace means questioning the meaningfulness and value of our work. |
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Just to give some meaningfulness to that, what would be the lowest ranking in the world of the human development index? |
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This question does not address the meaningfulness of participation for either the staff or the patient. |
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These are all controls that check for correctness, meaningfulness and security of data that are input to the system. |
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Alongside pleasure, another contributor to happiness is a sense of meaningfulness. |
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In the development-policy debate, the meaningfulness of cash crops is widely regarded with scepticism. |
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You can increase the meaningfulness of the generated diagram by removing anything that does not help explain the sequence of operations. |
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It is possible that one may not be able to account for the meaningfulness or logical behavior of certain sentences simply on the basis of the denotations in the sentence. |
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The story is messy and weighed down by its attempts at meaningfulness. |
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He captivated the audience, artfully segueing from songs that made you laugh, to ones that stilled the crowd with their meaningfulness, their power. |
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If not for meaningfulness, what other reason is there to watch a movie that makes you feel bad? |
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Job role stressors include task demands which include task complexity, task meaningfulness and overspecialization. |
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Finally, we would urge those responsible for programs such as this one to think a bit more carefully about the meaningfulness and the appropriateness or effectiveness of many of the sanctions that are imposed on youths. |
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They also watch films for insight, enlightenment, and meaningfulness. |
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Jennifer Senior's article in New York magazine covers some of the same lines as Mr Wilkinson's paper, namely, that there's a difference between happiness and meaningfulness, that gratification isn't the same thing as reward. |
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If we take operationalism as a commitment to increase empirical content, Bridgman was not so much a high-handed judge who pronounced upon the meaningfulness of concepts in a black-and-white manner. |
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Traditionally, meaningfulness of stimuli has been defined in terms of their denotative and connotative properties. |
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To further increase the meaningfulness of virtual worlds, the user has to be able to physically interact with the virtual surroundings. |
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Work dimensions create three critical psychological aspects that are meaningfulness, accountability for results and knowledge of results. |
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These analyses show that the meaningfulness and sense of purpose that older people have in their lives are also related to survival. |
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She seeks out ways to honour the meaningfulness of her son's life that reflect the distinctiveness of who he was in all his uniqueness. |
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Bulgakov identified the meaningfulness of this intercommuning society with the dynamic theophanies of Divine Wisdom, Sophia. |
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Unfortunately, these measures do not adequately describe effects in terms of clinical meaningfulness and relevance to the everyday lives of patients and caregivers. |
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But in fact, one might suppose that the proponent of EC would disavow the meaningfulness of the latter question, if it is intended to be one which admits of some acontextual answer. |
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In view of the above, Mr President, I do not share the doubts expressed in numbered paragraph two of the report about the meaningfulness of the ENP's geographic scope. |
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Focusing on the quality of working life raises the question of the meaningfulness and value of our work, which the company sees as crucial to nuclear safety. |
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Showing several variables allows comparison, which adds to the meaningfulness of the map. |
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Knowing that meaningfulness analytically concerns a variable and gradient final good in a person's life that is conceptually distinct from happiness, rightness, and worthwhileness provides a certain amount of common ground. |
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In our opinion, the deviations outlined below result from a desire for administrative ease and not from concerns about the meaningfulness of the information reported. |
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The name 'Paul Gauguin' is practically synonymous with the region, and those who have sailed on the ship recognize the meaningfulness of the experience. |
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Inam ul Haq javed's poetry is the quality of humor and its meaningfulness, the wit and wisdom which highlight the serious social malaise in a lighter vein. |
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However, when the extreme emotions are interknitted too frequently in the film, the meaningfulness and remarkableness of the stories may consequently decrease. |
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Meaningfulness tries to replace structures, standards and disciplines with self-regarding emotion. |
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