Аннотация

Почему у многих из нас есть внутренняя неудовлетворённость своей жизнью? Почему нам трудно найти себя, понимать свои истинные желания, призвание? Откуда берутся наши страхи и неуверенность в себе? О причинах желания впасть в детство и как быть, если у родителей нет времени, об особенностях современных подростков и способности к обучаемости поколения 45+ рассказывает психолог Александр Федорович.

Аннотация

О причинах эмоционального выгорания и кто подвержен ему больше, а также как профилактировать выгорание, – рассказал Константин Кунах, психолог-консультант, лектор проекта Level One, автор Телеграм-канала «Страдай с толком», преподаватель ИПМП им. Карвасарского.

Аннотация

Психолог Екатерина Юдина вместе с Маргаритой Митрофановой рассуждала о причинах женского одиночества. Как родители влияют на выбор будущего супруга? Какие бывают браки по расчёту? И как работать с семьёй, которая началась по принципу «так вышло»?

Аннотация

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Аннотация

Уверенность в себе может быть, как психологическое состояние и уверенность в себе может быть, как поведение – демонстрация определенной уверенности, – рассказывает психолог Екатерина Юдина. Что такое уверенный человек? Откуда берется неуверенность? Как вселить уверенность в ребенка? На эти и другие вопросы ответила психолог. Расскажите о своей проблеме, примите участие в программе

Аннотация

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Аннотация

Для того, чтобы сепарация от родителей произошла должна быть материальная и психологическая независимость, – убеждена психолог Ева Весельницкая. Если вы обеспечиваете себя сами, если вы можете справиться с ситуацией сами, если не можете, тогда ваши родители имеют право на то, чтобы вы договорились с ними так же, как вы договорились бы с другим человеком.

Аннотация

Henry George on free trade! The dismal science is being reclaimed, its swamp lands drained, its jungles cleared, sunshine and free air let in; and the cheap publishers are establishing a prosperous settlement on the bogs where the owl but lately was wont to hoot its wisdom to unlistening ears. The singular success of Mr. George is that he has made Political Economy interesting. A vast deal of heresy might well be pardoned to the author who has set the average man thinking over the urgent problems which were recently supposed to constitute the dreariest of the sciences. No writer on Political Economy has approached him in the power of clothing its dry bones with life. Those who deny him the title of a social architect cannot refuse him the claim of being an economic artist. This book has much of the charm which characterized his first great work. 'Protection or Free Trade' takes a grip of the reader such as 'Progress and Poverty' laid upon hosts of men in all walks of life. Those of us who knew that Mr. George has been for a year or more engaged on a book upon this well-handled theme have awaited its appearance with curious wonder, to see whether this threshed-out subject could take on new life at his touch. The miracle is wrought. He has written a book which, whether it convince the reader or not, cannot fail to interest him, and allure him on through its pages with a zest that never flags from title-page to finis. He is really a master of words. This, however, is because he is a master of ideas. He has his subject well in hand when he begins to write. He thinks clearly, and thus speaks clearly. He knows what he means, sees his thought vividly in the sunshine, and thus puts it upon paper so that he who runs may read. He goes straight for the point which he has in view, and strides along in a good, honest Saxon gait which leaves it easy for the plainest man of the people to keep in his footsteps.

Аннотация

This book by the author of 'Progress and Poverty' will doubtless be read with much interest on this side of the Atlantic. The name of Mr. Henry George is now a familiar one to both sections of the Anglo-Saxon race, and they really have no reason to be ashamed of so robust and genial a son, sadly mis guided on many points though he is. Enthusiasts there will always be with an easy method of curing social discontent – men who do not take sufficient account of the difficulties and real conditions by which life is circumscribed, and who dream that by uttering a new formula the gathering evils of the world can be charmed away. Naturally, it is to be regretted that such men have not more of the judicial faculty, which can see all the sides of a complicated question. But enthusiasm and the judicial faculty are seldom associated in the same mind ; and, as we cannot do without the enthusiast, let us be thankful for Mr. George, who is a sincere and noble man, proclaiming earnestly what he believes to be saving truth. For those who may think of reading this book, we hope it is unnecessary to state that Mr. George has no sympathy with the blood-red anarchy which seeks to overturn altar and family and all the existing institutions of civilized society. Instead of disturbing the sacred traditions, Mr. George is evidently a man of strong religious faith, who in all sincerity supports his theories of social reform with quotations from Scripture. Throughout his book there runs a vein of cheerful optimism ; of the cynicism and scepticism which mark so many of the revolutionary class there is scarcely a trace. Nor can we agree with those who think that Mr. George's pet idea, which here reappears, of the nationalization of land by the confiscation of rent is a dangerous one. In a country like ours such a proposal is so extravagant and unpractical that it may be dismissed as harmless. The real danger seems to be of a very different kind – the danger, namely, that the colossal blunder of Mr. George may hide from us the valuable truths or suggestions of truth that may undoubtedly be found in this book. 'Social Problems' consists of twenty-two chapters, each of which treats of a phase of our social condition. It is written from the American standpoint, and a number of questions are discussed which can be rightly appreciated only by those who have an intimate acquaintance with American affairs. But most of it will be quite as interesting to Englishmen as to Americans. The treatment is more popular than in Progress and Poverty ; it is less labored and controversial, and, it must be said, less sophistical. The book is marked by the same eloquence, the same sympathy with the claims of labor, and the same wide and often true insight into the great industrial movements of our time. In these qualities, and not in his theory of the land, lies the strength of Mr. George. He has evidently been a shrewd and sympathetic observer of the social condition of his own country and of ours. He is inspired with the poetry of labor, often tragic to a terrible degree; he has felt its pathos, and knows its dreary monotony, and its subjection to vast economic influences over which it has no control – all the anarchy, in short, that results from the free play of individualism and of unrestricted competition. Mr. George has watched with his own eyes the effects of the most extraordinary development of industry and population that the world has ever seen.

Аннотация

Книга представленная вниманию является сборником историй из жизни автора в разные периоды времени. Некоторые из них являются размышлениями о жизни, другие – наблюдениями, а третьи представляют художественную интерпретацию каких-то событий или явлений, оказавших влияние на личность автора. Продолжение следует… Содержит нецензурную брань.