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terracalm-us

LeanBiome® | OFFICIAL SITE & 100% All Natural Ingredients! - 0 views

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    LeanBiome™ About How it Works? Ingredients Order Now LeanBiome Hurry Up! Offer Expires in: 00 HOUR 24 MINUTE 50 SECOND LeanBiome Attention! Get Special 84% Discount Today Faster fat burning and weight loss Healthy cholesterol and sugar levels Boost energy levels Regular price: $129 Only for: 39$ Buy Now payment_intro What Is LeanBiome? LeanBiome Supplement LeanBiome is a natural dietary supplement available on the market by Lean for Good. This dietary supplement has been designed for women above 18 years of age to support weight loss. The LeanBiome formula is based on the latest Ivy Research and real-world results. It is made using beneficial gut bacteria strains, lean bacteria species, and Phytosome green tea extract. The LeanBiome weight loss formula is helpful in losing weight accumulated in different parts of your body, thus supporting a completely healthy body. The presence of beneficial bacteria in this formula makes it better than other weight loss supplements on the market as these healthy bacteria (good bacteria) help you lose weight, maintain proper gut health, and support healthy digestion through a healthy digestive system. How Does LeanBiome Work? If you're a woman above 18 years old struggling with weight loss, LeanBiome could be the supplement for you. It contains nine beneficial bacteria strains and natural green tea extract. The way LeanBiome operates is by first promoting a healthy stomach. When your stomach is healthy, it contains beneficial bacteria that aid in the digestion and absorption of nutrients from food. The presence of harmful bacteria in your stomach can cause weight gain. LeanBiome promotes the growth of beneficial bacteria and reduces harmful bacteria in your gut, leading to improved digestion and a healthier stomach.Next in the action line is Inulin - a prebiotic fiber that strides hand in hand with these probiotics. It nourishes the friendly bacteria in your gut, promoting better digestion and stable blood sugar levels.
descendants1 descendants1

annon. Sac de Voyage Longchamp L pas cher - 0 views

sacs cuir longchamps Elle m'a regardé en passant, et quoique je ne sois point peureux, son regard immobile et froid m'a figé le sang dans les veines. Estelle joliedemanda Philippe. Je ne sais pas. ...

Sac de Voyage Longchamp L pas cher

started by descendants1 descendants1 on 14 Dec 13 no follow-up yet
Mike Wesch

its learning - Brukerkonferansen 2009 - 0 views

  • From Knowledgeable to Knowledge-able: Harnessing and Leveraging New Media for Learning Professor Michael Wesch, Kansas State University, USA. Michael Wesch forklarer hvordan det er mulig å lage en god kultur for læring vha. Web 2.0-verktøy og hvordan dette kan gjøres i harmoni med en læringsplattform.Foredraget holdes på engelsk.
Mike Wesch

Joyce on Esthetic Arrest - 0 views

  • the feeling which arrests the mind in the presence of whatsoever is grave and constant in human sufferings and unites it with the human sufferer
  • You see I use the word ARREST. I mean that the tragic emotion is static. Or rather the dramatic emotion is. The feelings excited by improper art are kinetic, desire or loathing. Desire urges us to possess, to go to something; loathing urges us to abandon, to go from something. The arts which excite them, pornographical or didactic, are therefore improper arts. The esthetic emotion (I used the general term) is therefore static. The mind is arrested and raised above desire and loathing.
  • It means certainly a stasis and not a kinesis
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  • force of generalization which would make the esthetic image a universal one
  • The instant wherein that supreme quality of beauty, the clear radiance of the esthetic image, is apprehended luminously by the mind which has been arrested by its wholeness and fascinated by its harmony is the luminous silent stasis of esthetic pleasure, a spiritual state very like to that cardiac condition which the Italian physiologist Luigi Galvani, using a phrase almost as beautiful as Shelley's, called the enchantment of the heart.
  • If you bear this in memory you will see that art necessarily divides itself into three forms progressing from one to the next. These forms are: the lyrical form, the form wherein the artist presents his image in immediate relation to himself; the epical form, the form wherein he presents his image in mediate relation to himself and to others; the dramatic form, the form wherein he presents his image in immediate relation to others.
  • It awakens, or ought to awaken, or induces, or ought to induce, an esthetic stasis, an ideal pity or an ideal terror, a stasis called forth, prolonged, and at last dissolved by what I call the rhythm of beauty.
laguna loire

Mood Rocking Bed for Welcoming Summer - 0 views

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    This is a design that inspires peace and luxury. The atmosphere rocking mattress was created by Joe Manus from Shiner Worldwide and it is suited to both inside and outdoors. Don't let this design fool you. This rocking mattress can be used as sweet rocking meditation time or like a steady unit by using rubber corks, in an inclination the consumer feels at ease with.
descendants1 descendants1

Sac à Epaule Longchamp Pliage Planètes ..Y - 0 views

Notre ancêtre n'est d'ailleurs pas pour rien dans cette disparition, puisqu'il prend de plus en plus de place.»Un million d'années plus tard, tandis que s'achève pour les paléoanthropologues l'hist...

Sac à Epaule Longchamp Pliage Planètes,Sac Dos Tour Eiffel,Longchamp Cuir

started by descendants1 descendants1 on 31 Dec 14 no follow-up yet
descendants1 descendants1

basket lacoste pas cher chine Mais - 0 views

«Je suis arrivé en Angleterre en 1960, se souvient l'écrivain. Mon père, océanographe, avait été recruté par le gouvernement britannique. Notre séjour devait être de courte durée. Finalement, nous ...

basket lacoste missouri pas cher chine femme

started by descendants1 descendants1 on 04 Sep 14 no follow-up yet
Mike Wesch

The Internet and Social Life (Annual Review of Psychology 2004) - 1 views

  • However, the Internet is not merely the Swiss army knife of communications media. It has other critical differences from previously available communication media and settings (see, e.g., McKenna & Bargh 2000), and two of these differences especially have been the focus of most psychological and human-computer interaction research on the Internet. First, it is possible to be relatively anonymous on the Internet, especially when participating in electronic group venues such as chat rooms or newsgroups. This turns out to have important consequences for relationship development and group participation. second, computer-mediated communication (CMC) is not conducted face-to-face but in the absence of nonverbal features of communication such as tone of voice, facial expressions, and potentially influential interpersonal features such as physical attractiveness, skin color, gender, and so on. Much of the extant computer science and communications research has explored how the absence of these features affects the process and outcome of social interactions.
  • Sproull & Kiesler (1985) considered CMC to be an impoverished communication experience, with the reduction of available social cues resulting in a greater sense or feeling of anonymity. This in turn is said to have a deindividuating effect on the individuals involved, producing behavior that is more self-centered and less socially regulated than usual. This reduced-information model of Internet communication assumes further that the reduction of social cues, compared to richer face-to-face situations, must necessarily have negative effects on social interaction (i.e., a weaker, relatively impoverished social interaction).
  • The relative anonymity of the Internet can also contribute to close relationship formation through reducing the risks inherent in self-disclosure. Because selfdisclosure contributes to a sense of intimacy, making self-disclosure easier should facilitate relationship formation. In this regard Internet communication resembles the "strangers on a train" phenomenon described by Rubin (1975; also Derlega & Chaikin 1977). As Kang (2000, p. 1161) noted, "Cyberspace makes talking with strangers easier. The fundamental point of many cyber-realms, such as chat rooms, is to make new acquaintances. By contrast, in most urban settings, few environments encourage us to walk up to strangers and start chatting. In many cities, doing so would amount to a physical threat."Overall, then, the evidence suggests that rather than being an isolating, personally and socially maladaptive activity, communicating with others over the Internet not only helps to maintain close ties with one's family and friends, but also, if the individual is so inclined, facilitates the formation of close and meaningful new relationships within a relatively safe environment.
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  • STIGMATIZED IDENTITIES McKenna & Bargh (1998) reasoned that people with stigmatized social identities (see Frable 1993, Jones et al. 1984), such as homosexuality or fringe political beliefs, should be motivated to join and participate in Internet groups devoted to that identity, because of the relative anonymity and thus safety of Internet (compared to face-to-face) participation and the scarcity of such groups in "real life." Moreover, because it is their only venue in which to share and discuss this aspect of their identity, membership in the group should be quite important to these people, and so the norms of such groups should exert a stronger than usual influence over members' behavior. This prediction was confirmed by an archival and observational study of the frequency with which stigmatized-group members posted messages to (i.e., participated in) the group: Unlike in other Internet groups, participation increased when there was positive feedback from the other group members and decreased following negative feedback (McKenna & Bargh 1998, Study 1).
  • ON-LINE SUPPORT In harmony with these conclusions, Davison et al. (2000) studied the provision and seeking of social support on-line by those with grave illnesses, and found that people used Internet support groups particularly for embarrassing, stigmatized illnesses such as AIDS and prostate cancer (and also, understandably, for those illnesses that limit mobility such as multiple sclerosis). The authors point out that because of the anxiety and uncertainty they are feeling, patients are highly motivated by social comparison needs to seek out others with the same illness (p. 213), but prefer to do this on-line when the illness is an embarrassing, disfiguring, or otherwise stigmatized one, because of the anonymity afforded by Internet groups (p. 215).
  • Accordingly, Kang (2000) has argued that one potential social benefit of the Internet is to disrupt the reflexive operation of racial stereotypes, as racial anonymity is much easier to maintain on-line than off-line. For example, studies have found that African Americans and Hispanics pay more than do white consumers for the same car, but these price differences disappear if the car is instead purchased on-line (Scott Morton et al. 2003).
  • Yet racism itself is socially stigmatized-especially when it comes to extreme forms such as advocacy of white supremacy and racial violence (see McKenna & Bargh 1998, Study 3). Thus the cloak of relative anonymity afforded by the Internet can also be used as a cover for racial hate groups, especially for those members who are concerned about public disapproval of their beliefs; hence today there are more than 3000 websites containing racial hatred, agendas for violence, and even bomb-making instructions (Lee & Leets 2002). Glaser et al. (2002) infiltrated such a group and provide telling examples of the support and encouragement given by group members to each other to act on their hatreds. All things considered, then, we don't know yet whether the overall effect of the Internet will be a positive or a negative one where racial and ethnic divisions are concerned.
  • People are not passively affected by technology, but actively shape its use and influence (Fischer 1992, Hughes & Hans 2001). The Internet has unique, even transformational qualities as a communication channel, including relative anonymity and the ability to easily link with others who have similar interests, values, and beliefs. Research has found that the relative anonymity aspect encourages self-expression, and the relative absence of physical and nonverbal interaction cues (e.g., attractiveness) facilitates the formation of relationships on other, deeper bases such as shared values and beliefs. At the same time, however, these "limited bandwidth" features of Internet communication also tend to leave a lot unsaid and unspecified, and open to inference and interpretation.
  • As Lea & Spears (1995) and O'Sullivan (1996) have noted, studying how relationships form and are maintained on the Internet brings into focus the implicit assumptions and biases of our traditional (face-to-face) relationship and communication research literatures (see Cathcart & Gumpert 1983)-most especially the assumptions that face-to-face interactions, physical proximity, and nonverbal communication are necessary and essential to the processes of relating to each other effectively. By providing an alternative interaction setting in which interactions and relationships play by somewhat different rules, and have somewhat different outcomes, the Internet sheds light on those aspects of face-to-face interaction that we may have missed all along. Tyler (2002), for example, reacting to the research findings on Internet interaction, wonders whether it is the presence of physical features that makes face-to-face interaction what it is, or is it instead the immediacy of responses (compared to e-mail)? That's a question we never knew to ask before.
  • Spears et al. (2002) contrasted the engineering model with the "social science" perspective on the Internet, which assumes instead that personal goals and needs are the sole determinant of its effects. [In the domain of communications research, Blumler & Katz's (1974) "uses and gratifications" theory is an influential version of this approach.] According to this viewpoint, the particular purposes of the individuals within the communication setting determine the outcome of the interaction, regardless of the particular features of the communication channel in which the interaction takes place.The third and most recent approach has been to focus on the interaction between features of the Internet communication setting and the particular goals and needs of the communicators, as well as the social context of the interaction setting (see Bargh 2002, McKenna & Bargh 2000, Spears et al. 2002). According to this perspective, the special qualities of Internet social interaction do have an impact on the interaction and its outcomes, but this effect can be quite different depending on the social context. With these three guiding models in mind, we turn to a review of the relevant research.
ingvia

Sparkling Water and Other Carbonate Beverages - 1 views

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    Beverages and sparkling water with sweetener 110 times the sucrose, and low energy, flavored sparkling water with stevia can completely replace sucrose and fructose and reduce energy intake and the risk of obesity while ensuring a sweet taste. Easily soluble in sparkling water, it has no bad aftertaste, but a fresh and harmonious taste. Flavored sparkling water made with stevia as one of the natural high intensity sweeteners, is suitable for patients with diabetes and obesity, and people with different physical conditions. If you are looking for a reliable natural sweetener manufacturer, please contact us.
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