lack+of+feeling

  • 11indifferent — ndifferent 1 Indifferent, unconcerned, incurious, aloof, detached, uninterested, disinterested mean not feeling or showing interest, especially natural or normal interest. Indifferent is often used in place of the other and more specific terms.… …

    New Dictionary of Synonyms

  • 12dullness — Synonyms and related words: abruptness, absence of color, acedia, achromaticity, achromatism, adynamia, aloofness, analgesia, anemia, anesthesia, angst, anguish, anxiety, apathy, aridity, aridness, ashiness, asininity, ataraxia, ataraxy, atony,… …

    Moby Thesaurus

  • 13indifference — /in dif euhr euhns, dif reuhns/, n. 1. lack of interest or concern: We were shocked by their indifference toward poverty. 2. unimportance; little or no concern: Whether or not to attend the party is a matter of indifference to him. 3. the quality …

    Universalium

  • 14JOB, BOOK OF — (named for its hero (Heb. אִיּוֹב), ancient South Arabian and Thamudic yʾb; Old Babylonian Ayyābum, Tell el Amarna tablet, no. 256, line 6, A ia ab; either from yʾb, to bear ill will or compounded of ay where? and ʾab (divine) father ), one of… …

    Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • 15apathy — noun Etymology: Greek apatheia, from apathēs without feeling, from a + pathos emotion more at pathos Date: 1594 1. lack of feeling or emotion ; impassiveness 2. lack of interest or concern …

    New Collegiate Dictionary

  • 16Man's Search for Meaning — Man s Search For Meaning: An Introduction to Logotherapy   …

    Wikipedia

  • 17epigraphy — epigraphist, epigrapher, n. /i pig reuh fee/, n. 1. the study or science of epigraphs or inscriptions, esp. of ancient inscriptions. 2. inscriptions collectively. [1850 55; EPIGRAPH + Y3] * * * ▪ historiography Introduction  the study of written… …

    Universalium

  • 18apathy — Indifference; absence of interest in the environment. Often one of the earliest signs of cerebral disease. [G. apatheia, fr. a priv. + pathos, suffering] * * * ap·a·thy ap ə thē n, pl thies lack of feeling or emotion * * * ap·a·thy (apґə… …

    Medical dictionary

  • 19Hysteria —    In 1802, Paris psychiatrist Jean Baptiste Louyer Villermay (1775–1837), in an essay differentiating hypochondria from hysteria, described a young female patient, uncertain about romance, who, at the sight of her loved one fainted, uttering… …

    Historical dictionary of Psychiatry

  • 20Hysteria-Psychosomatic-Somatization —    In 1802, Paris psychiatrist Jean Baptiste Louyer Villermay (1775–1837), in an essay differentiating hypochondria from hysteria, described a young female patient, uncertain about romance, who, at the sight of her loved one fainted, uttering… …

    Historical dictionary of Psychiatry