Social Mood Conference | Socionomics Foundation

Post Tagged with: "Social Mood"

  • [Article] Where I Believe Socionomics is Heading

    [Article] Where I Believe Socionomics is Heading

    In a full question and answer interview, Mark Almand and Robert Prechter walk you through the development of socionomic thought from news headlines to the academic chalkboards. This issue also delves into new theoretical insights including a detailed chart of the structure of socionomic theory that puts all the pieces in place.

     
  • Will You Make the Cut? Pro-Eugenics Ideas May Resurface As Negative Mood Deepens

    Will You Make the Cut? Pro-Eugenics Ideas May Resurface As Negative Mood Deepens

    Alan Hall reveals how the large mood fluctuations shaped the eugenics movement in America and abroad and how it not only changes people’s valuation of financial and other assets — it changes how humans value others. Hall puts the pieces of the puzzle together and makes a startling forecast for a resurging ideology most believe to be dead.

     
  • [Article] Congress Gets Angry During Social Mood Declines

    [Article] Congress Gets Angry During Social Mood Declines

    The coming trend of negative social psychology will be characterized primarily by polarization between and among various perceived groups, whether political, ideological, religious, geographical, racial or economic.

     
  • [Article] The Wave Principle Delineates Phases of Social Caution and Ebullience

    [Article] The Wave Principle Delineates Phases of Social Caution and Ebullience

    This multi-decade study sketches a broad guide for anticipating phases in wealth-related social action. Robert Prechter and Alan Hall team up to discuss how four cyclical phases of social psychology influence attitudes on tax rates, financial regulation, relative financial wages, credit market debt, and wealth inequality.

     
  • [Article] A Socionomic View of Epidemic Disease

    [Article] A Socionomic View of Epidemic Disease

    Negative social mood increases stress and disrupts routines, sanitation, households, social relationships, and, ultimately, human immunity.

     
  • [Article] A Socionomic View of Epidemic Disease

    [Article] A Socionomic View of Epidemic Disease

    It’s widely believed that epidemics make people fearful, but as you will see in this report, socionomic causality better explains the data, which show that fearful people are more susceptible to epidemics.

     
  • [Article] A Socionomic Study of Epidemic Disease

    [Article] A Socionomic Study of Epidemic Disease

    Alan Hall’s two-part in-depth study, “A Socionomic Study of Epidemic Disease,” shows how negative social mood establishes conditions precipitating outbreaks of epidemic diseases. Part 1 explores a 600-year history of diseases in bear markets and how society becomes vulnerable. Part 2 focuses on the psychological and physiological mechanisms by which negative social mood compromises human immunity, charts illustrating the timing and similarity of epidemics to financial manias and more potential threats on the horizon.

     
  • [Article] The New Global Bull Market in Socialism

    [Article] The New Global Bull Market in Socialism

    Extremes in negative social mood portend a rise in socialist literature and a desire for the power over people.

     
  • [Article] Einstein and Social Behavior

    [Article] Einstein and Social Behavior

    Pete Kendall explores the socionomic forces that shaped the life and career of one of the greatest thinkers of the 20th century.   Einstein and the Study of “Psycho-Pathology” If there really is such a thing as social mood that guides collective human experience, how come they don’t teach it […]

     
  • [Article] A Socionomic Take On James Bond

    [Article] A Socionomic Take On James Bond

    In bear markets the sexual stereotypes that these icons represent fall from favor as society embraces a greater variety of gender roles and identities. The history of the longest-running film franchise to feature a traditionally male character bears this out.