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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Empirical development of a scale of patience

Dudley, Kenneth Curtis. January 2003 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--West Virginia University, 2003. / Title from document title page. Document formatted into pages; contains vi, 284 p. : ill. Includes abstract. Includes bibliographical references (p. 125-138).
2

The longsuffering of the Lord is salvation

Mittmann, Gerald. January 1986 (has links)
Thesis (M. Div.)--Talbot School of Theology, Biola University, 1986. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 103-108).
3

A translation of the Middle English poem Patience

Koertge, Ronald Boyd, 1940- January 1964 (has links)
No description available.
4

The Μακροθυμία of God and the Πραότης of Christ: St. John Chrysostom's Theology of Patience

Surrency, Dennis Scott January 2022 (has links)
Thesis advisor: Brian Dunkle / Thesis advisor: Margaret Schatkin / The patience of God is a predominant theme in the homilies of St. John Chrysostom. Indeed, for Chrysostom, patience is not simply a human virtue but a diving attribute, an expression or reflection of God's φιλανθρωπία; it must therefore be understood in such a way that goes beyond its usual association with suffering, passivity, and powerlessness. Whereas patience in English, like patientia in Latin, is a somewhat ambiguous term, having both an active and a passive sense, the Greek language allows both for more precision and for greater depth and richness. This thesis will offer first an elaboration of Chrysostom's understanding of God's patience and then an exploration of how patience as a diving attribute colors and transforms not only our appreciation of Christ's patience but also the importance of practicing the virtue of patience in our own lives. In the effort to articulate Chrysostom's theology of patience, the primary concern of this thesis lies with the philosophical and theological concept of patience rather than with the lexical exactitude for which the translator always strives. The first chapter is theological in emphasis as it considers the description of God as μακρόθυμος in the Septuagint and examines Chrysostom's discussion of God's μακροθυμία in a selection of his homilies on Genesis and the Psalms. The second chapter is christological in emphasis as it analyzes Chrysostom's use of the term πραότης - whch in a (pagan) philosophical context is synonymous with μακροθυμία but in a biblical context has a very different meaning - in his exegesis of Christ's Passion in his Homilies on Matthew. Finally, the third chapter is anthropological in emphasis as it takes up the question of the imitation of God's μακροθυμία and Christ's πραότης as the way to restore and strengthen the divine likeness in the human person. Far from being a mere intellectal construct or the topic of purely academic debate, Chrysostom's theology of patience has much to teach us in regards to approaching current social and cultural reality. / Thesis (STL) — Boston College, 2022. / Submitted to: Boston College. School of Theology and Ministry. / Discipline: Sacred Theology.
5

Medlares egenskaper : Hur påverkas förhandlingsparterna av medlarens envishet och tålamod?

Strandberg, Johanna, Hjalmarsson, Emma January 2015 (has links)
Abstract Title: The Mediator’s Qualities - How are the negotiating parties effected by the mediator's persistence and patience? Level: Final assignment for Bachelor Degree Author: Johanna Strandberg and Emma Hjalmarsson Supervisor: Jens Eklinder Frick and Jonas Molin Date: May 2015 Aim: Our aim is to create a greater understanding of the negotiating parties' experience of the mediator's persistence and patience. Method: We have chosen a deductive approach that we have based our empirical data on already existing research. Theoretical material has been gathered through literature, theses and scientific articles. With the background to our aim, we have chosen to use a qualitative approach where we have interviewed ten people who have been in contact with a real estate agent the last 24 months. The empirical data was then analysed and discussed in our analysis and conclusion. Result & Conclusions: We have found that the mediator's persistence and patience affect negotiating partners in various ways. Patient is seen as a positive quality while persistence can be perceived as negative. Our survey shows that when persistence and patience are combined, the result is successful. Our survey also showed that the main characteristics of the mediator were not at all persistence and patience, which earlier research has shown, but instead it was nice, impartial and knowledgeable. Suggestions for further research: What we think would be interesting for further research is to investigate the mediator's perspective because we only looked at the negotiating parties' perspective. We would encourage further research on qualities in general and also on the specific persistence and patience because we fount that it was a limited amount of research based on these qualities. Contribution of the thesis: The contribution of this study is that it has created a larger understanding for the characteristics that negotiation parties perceive as important for a real estate agent. This can be beneficial for real estate agents to know what properties the parties prefer and how they should act in their efforts to make the parties satisfied. Key words: Negotiation, mediation, characteristics, persistence, patience.
6

GOOD THINGS COME TO THOSE WHO (PEACEFULLY) WAIT: TOWARD A THEORY OF PATIENCE

Lavelock, Caroline R. 01 January 2015 (has links)
Patience is among the most common colloquially known virtues, and yet its empirical attention is among the smallest of all virtues. In this dissertation, I focused on the conscientiousness-based virtue of patience in terms of theory and intervention. In my first study, I examined the effects of a preliminary intervention workbook designed to promote patience. In my second study, I examined a number of correlates informed by patience literature as potential antecedents, mechanisms, and outcomes of patience and, using structural equation modeling, present a theory of patience. Finally, in my third study, I beta tested the patience intervention workbook along with outcome measures posited in my proposed theory of patience in order to examine this theory under experimental and longitudinal design. In Study 1, the patience workbook did indeed produce higher patience outcomes at post-test relative to the control condition but was not significantly different from a positivity workbook condition. Participants in the patience workbook condition also improved in trait self-control, trait forgivingness, and trait negativity. In Study 2, familiarity with an identified stressor and perceived stress related to that stressor predicted state patience for that stressor, consistent with an ego-depletion model of patience. Additionally, patience predicted mental (resilience, anxiety, satisfaction with life, depression, positive affect, and negative affect), physical, relational (communicative competence and perceived social support), and spiritual (spiritual attitudes and involvement) health outcomes. Study 3 replicated the support for an ego-depletion model of patience, and those in the patience intervention workbook improved in trait and state patience, anxiety, and depression, extending and partially supporting the outcomes found in Study 2. The present studies support the use of a workbook intervention to promote patience and additional virtue and mental health outcomes. Implications of these results and future research directions are discussed.
7

Conflict, Patience, and Evolution

Yu, Ming-huei 24 June 2009 (has links)
Preference is an important element in economic analysis, but usually regarded an inborn and exogenous characteristic. By the concept of natural selection, evolutionary game theory can explain lots of animal characteristics, including humans. With this idea, this paper extends the classical Hawk-Dove game to a two-period-life model, in which fights can cause deaths. We derive the population dynamics and the evolutiona-rily stable strategy. The competitive attitude and patience are determined by resource value and cost. And under a given common patience level, the evolutionarily stable strategy is a mixed strategy. But if the ¡§announcement effect,¡¨ an extra benefit from showing the winning record, is large enough, all-hawk may be the equilibrium. In ad-dition, under variable patient levels, the model can determine the equilibrium patience, and numerical simulation shows that dove-strategy accompanies a higher patient level than hawk.
8

Do Yourself a Favor: We Help Our Future Selves for the Same Reasons We Help Others

Burum, Bethany Anne 04 June 2016 (has links)
As humans we have a remarkable capacity to sacrifice for the future, and an equally remarkable capacity to shortchange it, leaving our future selves to pay the price. The research in this dissertation suggests that sacrifice for the future (patience) may be governed by the same rules that govern sacrifice for others (altruism). Studies found that (1) patience was positively correlated with altruism, and (2) patience was positively correlated with empathic accuracy, a measure that predicted altruism. A third set of studies found that (3) a pervasive influence on altruism--group membership--also influenced patience. Participants who expected to switch groups in the future felt less connected to their future selves and left more than twice as much unpleasant work to the future. This research provides converging support for the hypothesis that common factors promote altruism and patience, suggesting that we may be able to draw on the decades of research studying kindness toward others to promote a little more kindness toward our future selves. / Psychology
9

A iconoclastia nas pinturas da capela do antigo Convento do Cristo da Paciência de Madri (século XVII) / The iconoclasm in Chapel paintings of the old Capuchin Convent of Patience Christ of Madrid (century XVII)

Amaral, Debora Gomes Pereira 31 March 2016 (has links)
Em nossa dissertação de Mestrado analisamos o conjunto de quatro pinturas retabulares encomendadas na década de 40 do século XVII para ornar a capela do hoje extinto Convento dos Capuchinhos da Paciência de Cristo de Madri (1651-1836). Estas pinturas narram a lenda que ficou conhecida como a do Santo Cristo da Paciência ou do Cristo das Injurias, e figuram o ataque de um grupo de pessoas a um crucifixo que, enquanto sofre tal desacato, expressa o seu poder milagroso através da fala e do jorro de sangue. Nosso objetivo foi, por meio da análise dessas pinturas, entender o significado das imagens religiosas para a cristandade espanhola deste período e o quanto os ataques iconoclastas preocupavam os membros da Igreja católica e seus fiéis de modo geral, a ponto de gerar a encomenda de tais obras. Para tal, investigamos este corpus de imagens em dois níveis fundamentais: analisando seus elementos formais e temáticos; e sua relação com o cristianismo a encomenda e o debate sobre as imagens, sobre seus usos e funções nas práticas cultuais do catolicismo na Espanha do século XVII. / In our master dissertation we analyzed the group of four altarpieces commissioned in the 1640s to decorate the chapel of the extinct Capuchin Convent of Patience Christ of Madrid (1651-1836). These paintings ndepict the legend that became known as the Holy Christ of the Patience or Christ of the Injuries, and represent the attack of a group of people to a crucifix which, while suffering such disrespect, expressed his miraculous power through speech and the blood gush. Our aim was, through the analysis of these paintings, to understand the meaning of these religious images for Spanish Christendom in this period and how the iconoclastic attacks were a source of worry for the members of the Catholic Church and the faithful in general so as to generate a commission for such works. For this purpose, we investigated this corpus of images on two fundamental levels: analyzing their formal and thematic elements; and its relation to Christianity - the commission and the debate about images, their uses and functions in cultual practices of Catholicism in seventeenth century Spain.
10

An edition, with full critical apparatus of the Middle English poem Patience

Anderson, J. J. (John Julian), 1938- January 1965 (has links) (PDF)
[Typescript] Includes bibliography.

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