Library

Video Player is loading.
 
Current Time 0:00
Duration -:-
Loaded: 0%
 
x1.00


Back

Games & Quizzes

Training Mode - Typing
Fill the gaps to the Lyric - Best method
Training Mode - Picking
Pick the correct word to fill in the gap
Fill In The Blank
Find the missing words in a sentence Requires 5 vocabulary annotations
Vocabulary Match
Match the words to the definitions Requires 10 vocabulary annotations

You may need to watch a part of the video to unlock quizzes

Don't forget to Sign In to save your points

Challenge Accomplished

PERFECT HITS +NaN
HITS +NaN
LONGEST STREAK +NaN
TOTAL +
- //

We couldn't find definitions for the word you were looking for.
Or maybe the current language is not supported

  • 00:01

    Happiness Happiness is a mental or emotional state of

  • 00:06

    well-being characterized by positive or pleasant emotions ranging from contentment to intense

  • 00:11

    joy.

  • 00:12

    A variety of biological, psychological, religious, and philosophical approaches have striven

  • 00:18

    to define happiness and identify its sources.

  • 00:22

    Various research groups, including positive psychology, endeavor to apply the scientific

  • 00:27

    method to answer questions about what "happiness" is, and how it might be attained.

  • 00:33

    It is of such fundamental importance to the human condition that "life, liberty and the

  • 00:37

    pursuit of happiness" were deemed to be unalienable rights by the United States Declaration of

  • 00:42

    Independence.

  • 00:45

    Philosophers and religious thinkers often define happiness in terms of living a good

  • 00:48

    life, or flourishing, rather than simply as an emotion.

  • 00:53

    Happiness in this sense was used to translate the Greek Eudaimonia, and is still used in

  • 00:57

    virtue ethics.

  • 01:01

    Definition Happiness is a fuzzy concept and can mean

  • 01:05

    many different things to many people.

  • 01:08

    Part of the challenge of a science of happiness is to identify different concepts of happiness,

  • 01:13

    and where applicable, split them into their components.

  • 01:17

    Related concepts are well-being, quality of life and flourishing.

  • 01:22

    Some commentators focus on the difference between the hedonistic tradition of seeking

  • 01:26

    pleasant and avoiding unpleasant experiences, and the eudaimonic tradition of living life

  • 01:31

    in a full and deeply satisfying way.

  • 01:34

    The 2012 World Happiness Report stated that in subjective well-being measures, the primary

  • 01:40

    distinction is between cognitive life evaluations and emotional reports.

  • 01:46

    Emotional reports can be distinguished as of positive or negative affect.

  • 01:50

    Many but not all commentators regard positive and negative affect as carrying different

  • 01:55

    information, and needing to be separately measured and analyzed.

  • 01:59

    Happiness is used in both life evaluation, as in “How happy are you with your life

  • 02:04

    as a whole?”, and in emotional reports, as in “How happy are you now?,” and people

  • 02:10

    seem able to use happiness as appropriate in these verbal contexts.

  • 02:17

    Research results Research has produced many different views

  • 02:21

    on causes of happiness, and on factors that correlate with happiness, but no validated

  • 02:26

    method has been found to substantially improve long-term happiness in a meaningful way for

  • 02:31

    most people.

  • 02:32

    Sonja Lyubomirsky concludes in her book The How of Happiness that 50 percent of a given

  • 02:37

    human's happiness level is genetically determined (based on twin studies), 10 percent is affected

  • 02:43

    by life circumstances and situation, and a remaining 40 percent of happiness is subject

  • 02:48

    to self-control.

  • 02:51

    The results of the 75 year Grant study of Harvard undergraduates show a high correlation

  • 02:56

    of loving relationship, especially with parents, with later life wellbeing.

  • 03:02

    In the 2nd Edition of the Handbook of Emotions (2000), evolutionary psychologists Leda Cosmides

  • 03:08

    and John Tooby say that happiness comes from "encountering unexpected positive events".

  • 03:14

    In the 3rd Edition of the Handbook of Emotions (2008), Michael Lewis says "happiness can

  • 03:20

    be elicited by seeing a significant other".

  • 03:23

    According to Mark Leary, as reported in a November 1995 issue of Psychology Today, "we

  • 03:29

    are happiest when basking in the acceptance and praise of others".

  • 03:33

    Sara Algoe and Jonathan Haidt say that "happiness" may be the label for a family of related emotional

  • 03:39

    states, such as joy, amusement, satisfaction, gratification, euphoria, and triumph.

  • 03:47

    It has been argued that money cannot effectively "buy" much happiness unless it is used in

  • 03:52

    certain ways.

  • 03:53

    "Beyond the point at which people have enough to comfortably feed, clothe, and house themselves,

  • 03:59

    having more money - even a lot more money - makes them only a little bit happier."

  • 04:04

    A Harvard Business School study found that "spending money on others actually makes us

  • 04:08

    happier than spending it on ourselves".

  • 04:12

    Meditation has been found to lead to high activity in the brain's left prefrontal cortex,

  • 04:17

    which in turn has been found to correlate with happiness.

  • 04:22

    Psychologist Martin Seligman asserts that happiness is not solely derived from external,

  • 04:26

    momentary pleasures, and provides the acronym PERMA to summarize Positive Psychology's correlational

  • 04:33

    findings: humans seem happiest when they have Pleasure (tasty food, warm baths, etc.),

  • 04:40

    Engagement (or flow, the absorption of an enjoyed yet challenging activity),

  • 04:46

    Relationships (social ties have turned out to be extremely reliable indicator of happiness),

  • 04:52

    Meaning (a perceived quest or belonging to something bigger), and

  • 04:56

    Accomplishments (having realized tangible goals).

  • 04:59

    There have also been some studies of how religion relates to happiness.

  • 05:04

    Causal relationships remain unclear, but more religion is seen in happier people.

  • 05:09

    This correlation may be the result of community membership and not necessarily belief in religion

  • 05:14

    itself.

  • 05:16

    Another component may have to do with ritual.

  • 05:19

    Abraham Harold Maslow, an American professor of psychology, founded humanistic psychology

  • 05:25

    in the 1930s.

  • 05:26

    A visual aid he created to explain his theory, which he called the hierarchy of needs, is

  • 05:32

    a pyramid depicting the levels of human needs, psychological, and physical.

  • 05:37

    When a human being ascends the steps of the pyramid, he reaches self-actualization.

  • 05:43

    Beyond the routine of needs fulfillment, Maslow envisioned moments of extraordinary experience,

  • 05:49

    known as peak experiences, profound moments of love, understanding, happiness, or rapture,

  • 05:55

    during which a person feels more whole, alive, self-sufficient, and yet a part of the world.

  • 06:02

    This is similar to the flow concept of Mihály Csíkszentmihályi.

  • 06:07

    Self-determination theory relates intrinsic motivation to three needs: competence, autonomy,

  • 06:13

    and relatedness.

  • 06:16

    Religious perspectives Buddhism

  • 06:22

    Happiness forms a central theme of Buddhist teachings.

  • 06:26

    For ultimate freedom from suffering, the Noble Eightfold Path leads its practitioner to Nirvana,

  • 06:31

    a state of everlasting peace.

  • 06:34

    Ultimate happiness is only achieved by overcoming craving in all forms.

  • 06:39

    More mundane forms of happiness, such as acquiring wealth and maintaining good friendships, are

  • 06:44

    also recognized as worthy goals for lay people (see sukha).

  • 06:49

    Buddhism also encourages the generation of loving kindness and compassion, the desire

  • 06:53

    for the happiness and welfare of all beings.

  • 06:58

    Catholicism The primary meaning of "happiness" in various

  • 07:02

    European languages involves good fortune, chance or happening.

  • 07:07

    The meaning in Greek philosophy, however, refers primarily to ethics.

  • 07:12

    In Catholicism, the ultimate end of human existence consists in felicity, Latin equivalent

  • 07:18

    to the Greek eudaimonia, or "blessed happiness", described by the 13th-century philosopher-theologian

  • 07:24

    Thomas Aquinas as a Beatific Vision of God's essence in the next life.

  • 07:29

    Human complexities, like reason and cognition, can produce well-being or happiness, but such

  • 07:35

    form is limited and transitory.

  • 07:37

    In temporal life, the contemplation of God, the infinitely Beautiful, is the supreme delight

  • 07:43

    of the will.

  • 07:45

    Beatitudo, or perfect happiness, as complete well-being, is to be attained not in this

  • 07:50

    life, but the next.

  • 07:54

    Philosophical views The Chinese Confucian thinker Mencius, who

  • 07:59

    2300 years ago sought to give advice to the ruthless political leaders of the warring

  • 08:04

    states period, was convinced that the mind played a mediating role between the "lesser

  • 08:09

    self" (the physiological self) and the "greater self" (the moral self) and that getting the

  • 08:14

    priorities right between these two would lead to sage-hood.

  • 08:18

    He argued that if we did not feel satisfaction or pleasure in nourishing one's "vital force"

  • 08:23

    with "righteous deeds", that force would shrivel up (Mencius,6A:15 2A:2).

  • 08:29

    More specifically, he mentions the experience of intoxicating joy if one celebrates the

  • 08:36

    practice of the great virtues, especially through music.

  • 08:40

    Al-Ghazali (1058–1111) the Muslim Sufi thinker wrote the Alchemy of Happiness, a manual of

  • 08:47

    spiritual instruction throughout the Muslim world and widely practiced today.

  • 08:52

    The Hindu thinker Patanjali, author of the Yoga Sutras, wrote quite exhaustively on the

  • 08:58

    psychological and ontological roots of bliss.

  • 09:02

    In the Nicomachean Ethics, written in 350 BCE, Aristotle stated that happiness (also

  • 09:09

    being well and doing well) is the only thing that humans desire for its own sake, unlike

  • 09:14

    riches, honor, health or friendship.

  • 09:17

    He observed that men sought riches, or honor, or health not only for their own sake but

  • 09:22

    also in order to be happy.

  • 09:23

    Note that eudaimonia, the term we translate as "happiness", is for Aristotle an activity

  • 09:29

    rather than an emotion or a state.

  • 09:32

    Thus understood, the happy life is the good life, that is, a life in which a person fulfills

  • 09:37

    human nature in an excellent way.

  • 09:40

    Specifically, Aristotle argues that the good life is the life of excellent rational activity.

  • 09:46

    He arrives at this claim with the Function Argument.

  • 09:49

    Basically, if it's right, every living thing has a function, that which it uniquely does.

  • 09:55

    For humans, Aristotle contends, our function is to reason, since it is that alone that

  • 10:01

    we uniquely do.

  • 10:03

    And performing one's function well, or excellently, is one's good.

  • 10:07

    Thus, the life of excellent rational activity is the happy life.

  • 10:12

    Aristotle does not leave it that, however.

  • 10:15

    For he argues that there is a second best life for those incapable of excellent rational

  • 10:20

    activity.

  • 10:22

    This second best life is the life of moral virtue.

  • 10:25

    Many ethicists make arguments for how humans should behave, either individually or collectively,

  • 10:31

    based on the resulting happiness of such behavior.

  • 10:34

    Utilitarians, such as John Stuart Mill and Jeremy Bentham, advocated the greatest happiness

  • 10:40

    principle as a guide for ethical behavior.

  • 10:44

    Also according to St. Augustine and Thomas Aquinas, man's last end is happiness: "all

  • 10:49

    men agree in desiring the last end, which is happiness."

  • 10:53

    However, where utilitarians focused on reasoning about consequences as the primary tool for

  • 10:58

    reaching happiness, Aquinas agreed with Aristotle that happiness cannot be reached solely through

  • 11:04

    reasoning about consequences of acts, but also requires a pursuit of good causes for

  • 11:09

    acts, such as habits according to virtue.

  • 11:11

    In turn, which habits and acts that normally lead to happiness is according to Aquinas

  • 11:17

    caused by laws: natural law and divine law.

  • 11:20

    These laws, in turn, were according to Aquinas caused by a first cause, or God.

  • 11:27

    According to Aquinas, happiness consists in an "operation of the speculative intellect":

  • 11:32

    "Consequently happiness consists principally in such an operation, viz. in the contemplation

  • 11:37

    of Divine things."

  • 11:39

    And, "the last end cannot consist in the active life, which pertains to the practical intellect."

  • 11:45

    So: "Therefore the last and perfect happiness, which we await in the life to come, consists

  • 11:51

    entirely in contemplation.

  • 11:53

    But imperfect happiness, such as can be had here, consists first and principally in contemplation,

  • 11:59

    but secondarily, in an operation of the practical intellect directing human actions and passions."

  • 12:07

    Economic views Common market health measures such as GDP

  • 12:12

    and GNP have been used as a measure of successful policy.

  • 12:16

    On average richer nations tend to be happier than poorer nations, but this effect seems

  • 12:21

    to diminish with wealth.

  • 12:22

    This has been explained by the fact that the dependency is not linear but logarithmic,

  • 12:27

    i.e., the same percentual increase in the GNP produces the same increase in happiness

  • 12:33

    for wealthy countries as for poor countries.

  • 12:36

    Libertarian think tank Cato Institute claims that economic freedom correlates strongly

  • 12:41

    with happiness preferably within the context of a western mixed economy, with free press

  • 12:46

    and a democracy.

  • 12:48

    According to certain standards, East European countries (ruled by Communist parties) were

  • 12:54

    less happy than Western ones, even less happy than other equally poor countries.

  • 13:00

    It has been argued that happiness measures could be used not as a replacement for more

  • 13:04

    traditional measures, but as a supplement.

  • 13:08

    According to professor Edward Glaeser, people constantly make choices that decrease their

  • 13:13

    happiness, because they have also more important aims.

  • 13:16

    Therefore, the government should not decrease the alternatives available for the citizen

  • 13:20

    by patronizing them but let the citizen keep a maximal freedom of choice.

  • 13:25

    It has been argued that happiness at work is one of the driving forces behind positive

  • 13:30

    outcomes at work, rather than just being a resultant product.

  • 13:36

    Measures of happiness Several scales have been used to measure happiness:

  • 13:42

    The Subjective Happiness Scale (SHS) is a four-item scale, measuring global subjective

  • 13:48

    happiness.

  • 13:49

    The scale requires participants to use absolute ratings to characterize themselves as happy

  • 13:54

    or unhappy individuals, as well as it asks to what extent they identify themselves with

  • 14:00

    descriptions of happy and unhappy individuals.

  • 14:03

    The Positive and Negative Affect Schedule (PANAS) is used to detect the relation between

  • 14:09

    personality traits and positive or negative affects at this moment, today, the past few

  • 14:14

    days, the past week, the past few weeks, the past year, and generally (on average).

  • 14:21

    PANAS is a 20-item questionnaire, which uses a five-point Likert scale (1 = very slightly

  • 14:28

    or not at all, 5 = extremely).

  • 14:31

    A longer version with additional affect scales is available in a manual.

  • 14:36

    The Satisfaction with Life Scale (SWLS) is a global cognitive assessment of life satisfaction.

  • 14:43

    The SWLS requires a person to use a seven-item scale to state their agreement or disagreement

  • 14:49

    (1 = strongly disagree, 4 = neither agree nor disagree, 7 = strongly agree) with five

  • 14:56

    statements about their life.

  • 14:58

    The UK began to measure national well being in 2012, following Bhutan which already measured

  • 15:04

    gross national happiness.

  • 15:07

    Happiness and health Richard Davidson's 2012 bestseller The Emotional

  • 15:13

    Life of Your Brain argues that positive emotion and happiness benefit your long-term health.

  • 15:19

    From a study conducted in 2005 by Andrew Steptow and Michael Marmot, findings have found that

  • 15:25

    happiness is clearly related to biological markers that play an important role in health.

  • 15:31

    At University College London, Steptow and Marmot collected health and well-being data

  • 15:36

    from 116 men and 100 women.

  • 15:39

    All 216 participants were middle-aged, British civil servants between the ages of 45 and

  • 15:46

    59.

  • 15:47

    The researchers aimed to analyze whether there was any association between well-being and

  • 15:51

    three biological markers: heart rate, cortisol levels, and plasma fibrinogen levels.

  • 15:58

    Interestingly, the participants who rated themselves the least happy had cortisol levels

  • 16:03

    that were 48% higher than those who rated themselves as the most happy.

  • 16:08

    The least happy subjects also had a large plasma fibrinogen response to two stress-inducing

  • 16:14

    tasks: the Stroop test, and tracing a star seen in a mirror image.

  • 16:19

    In Happy People Live Longer, Frey reports that happy people live 14% longer, increasing

  • 16:25

    longevity 7.5 to 10 years.

  • 16:29

    Steptow and Marmot furthered their studies by using their participants three years later

  • 16:33

    to repeat the physiological measurements.

  • 16:36

    They found that participants who scored high in positive emotion continued to have lower

  • 16:41

    levels of cortisol and fibrinogen, as well as a lower heart rate.

All

The example sentences of LOGARITHMIC in videos (15 in total of 17)

constant adjective rate noun, singular or mass an determiner exponential adjective or coordinating conjunction logarithmic adjective or coordinating conjunction log noun, singular or mass increase noun, singular or mass doubling verb, gerund or present participle then adverb doubling verb, gerund or present participle again adverb and coordinating conjunction on preposition or subordinating conjunction and coordinating conjunction
this determiner has verb, 3rd person singular present been verb, past participle explained verb, past participle by preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner fact noun, singular or mass that preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner dependency noun, singular or mass is verb, 3rd person singular present not adverb linear verb, base form but coordinating conjunction logarithmic adjective ,
an determiner enormous adjective range noun, singular or mass , we personal pronoun have verb, non-3rd person singular present to to use verb, base form a determiner logarithmic adjective scale noun, singular or mass to to define verb, base form loudness noun, singular or mass when wh-adverb working verb, gerund or present participle with preposition or subordinating conjunction
because preposition or subordinating conjunction of preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner form noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction this determiner equation noun, singular or mass , true adjective strain noun, singular or mass is verb, 3rd person singular present also adverb known verb, past participle as preposition or subordinating conjunction logarithmic adjective strain noun, singular or mass ,
so adverb , when wh-adverb i personal pronoun say verb, non-3rd person singular present semi noun, singular or mass - log noun, singular or mass , half noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner graph noun, singular or mass is verb, 3rd person singular present a determiner logarithmic adjective graph noun, singular or mass or coordinating conjunction half noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner scale noun, singular or mass and coordinating conjunction that wh-determiner 's verb, 3rd person singular present the determiner y proper noun, singular axis noun, plural is verb, 3rd person singular present logarithmic adjective
this determiner scale noun, singular or mass is verb, 3rd person singular present logarithmic adjective and coordinating conjunction set verb, past participle so adverb that preposition or subordinating conjunction every determiner 5 cardinal number steps noun, plural equals verb, 3rd person singular present a determiner 100 cardinal number times noun, plural decrease verb, non-3rd person singular present
it personal pronoun 's verb, 3rd person singular present measured verb, past participle on preposition or subordinating conjunction a determiner logarithmic adjective scale noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction 0 cardinal number to to 14 cardinal number , with preposition or subordinating conjunction 7 cardinal number being verb, gerund or present participle neutral adjective because preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner activity noun, singular or mass
those determiner of preposition or subordinating conjunction you personal pronoun who wh-pronoun are verb, non-3rd person singular present mathematically adverb inclined verb, past participle will modal also adverb notice verb, base form that preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner scale noun, singular or mass is verb, 3rd person singular present logarithmic adjective ,
this determiner is verb, 3rd person singular present sometimes adverb easier adjective, comparative to to see verb, base form if preposition or subordinating conjunction we personal pronoun put verb, past tense the determiner y proper noun, singular - axis noun, plural on preposition or subordinating conjunction a determiner logarithmic adjective scale noun, singular or mass , meaning noun, singular or mass
and coordinating conjunction saint proper noun, singular vincent proper noun, singular concluded verb, past tense that preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner relation noun, singular or mass between preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner distance noun, singular or mass and coordinating conjunction the determiner area noun, singular or mass is verb, 3rd person singular present logarithmic adjective .
as preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner y proper noun, singular - axis noun, plural is verb, 3rd person singular present logarithmic adjective , this determiner causes verb, 3rd person singular present the determiner red adjective dot noun, singular or mass to to shift verb, base form from preposition or subordinating conjunction here adverb to to here adverb .
scale noun, singular or mass here adverb on preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner y proper noun, singular - axis noun, plural is verb, 3rd person singular present logarithmic adjective , so preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner higher adjective, comparative up preposition or subordinating conjunction you personal pronoun go verb, non-3rd person singular present , the determiner bigger adjective, comparative the determiner differences noun, plural are verb, non-3rd person singular present .
our possessive pronoun eyes noun, plural are verb, non-3rd person singular present logarithmic adjective to to light verb, base form , but coordinating conjunction if preposition or subordinating conjunction you personal pronoun made verb, past tense it personal pronoun 20 cardinal number times noun, plural wider adjective, comparative in preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner sky noun, singular or mass it personal pronoun would modal
it personal pronoun simply adverb allows verb, 3rd person singular present us personal pronoun to to convert verb, base form or coordinating conjunction transform verb, base form a determiner logarithmic adjective expression noun, singular or mass from preposition or subordinating conjunction one cardinal number format noun, singular or mass into preposition or subordinating conjunction
and coordinating conjunction i personal pronoun know verb, non-3rd person singular present you personal pronoun have verb, non-3rd person singular present the determiner power noun, singular or mass rule noun, singular or mass the determiner product noun, singular or mass rule noun, singular or mass the determiner inclusive adjective differentiation noun, singular or mass the determiner logarithmic adjective

Use "logarithmic" in a sentence | "logarithmic" example sentences

How to use "logarithmic" in a sentence?

  • I was lucky because logarithmic plots are a device of the devil.
    -Charles Francis Richter-

Definition and meaning of LOGARITHMIC

What does "logarithmic mean?"

/ˌlôɡəˈriT͟Hmik/

adjective
Concerning or using logarithms.