It’s been a long and uncertain road, with some groups shouldering a disproportionately greater burden of mental anguish from COVID-19. Yet now there’s a glimmer of hope. Has the page finally turned? The past two years have been a roller coaster, or, as University of Pennsylvania philosopher and psychology researcher James Pawelski describes it, an undulatingIt’s been a long and uncertain road, with some groups shouldering a disproportionately greater burden of mental anguish from COVID-19. Yet now there’s a glimmer of hope. Has the page finally turned? The past two years have been a roller coaster, or, as University of Pennsylvania philosopher and psychology researcher James Pawelski describes it, an undulating » The FINANCIAL Coronavirus
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European Humanities Conference, 5-7 May in Lisbon, hosted by Portugal and UNESCO
UNESCO and Portugal are organizing the European Humanities Conference from 5 to 7 May in Lisbon, which will focus on the need to take better account of the humanities in public policymaking.
This need is even more important at a time when the COVID-19 crisis has accentuated pre-existing inequalities throughout the world, particularly in terms of income, opportunities, socio-economic dignity, political freedom, access to knowledge and gender equality. The conference aims to put the humanities back at the heart of scientific strategies and public policies to address contemporary challenges such as, among others, climate and environmental change, migration, epidemics, and gender issues.
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Five Habits for Happiness
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All the things that are good in life (great relationships, thriving communities, virtuous achievements, happiness) are founded on what my professor Angela Duckworth called “the accretion of mundane acts.”
Eating your vegetables. Practicing kindness. Building the tiny elements of a skill. Cultivating your mind to be resilient and optimistic.
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