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Animal Spirits

2024-01-11 20:56:57

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Recent interest in the spirit of animals, spiritual guide, animal 'totem' is evoking extensive research into the animal's instructional renaissance and the knowledge we have. These well-known headlines are often used indiscriminately and interchangeably and confuse how which animal guides contribute to the time and duration of our lives. How does the energy of all these animals lead us to our lives? There are various categories of animal guidance, but when and where can they help us?

In social science, Karl Marx referred to "the spirit of animals" in English translation of the "Capital Theory" 1887. Marx talked about the spirit of the animals of the workers and the capitalists thought that promoting decompression through the use of the assembly line by promoting social interaction and competition within the factory, the workers repeated the work. "Animal Spirit" is a euphemism of late Victorian and Edwardian era, used by a British public school boy, such as G. G. Wodehouse (born two years ago Eaton Keynes) and studied at Dulwich College. Wodehouse and Arthur Conan Doyle were the top boys' boys at a public school in the UK before the First World War. In the year Kane was born in 1883, Doyle himself used the word "animal spirit".

Animal Spirits is a term used by the famous British economist, John Maynard Keynes, to explain the financial and purchasing decisions under uncertainty. In Keynes' 1936 publication "General Theory of Employment, Interest, and Money", the spirit of animals describes human emotions that promote consumer confidence. In modern economic terms, the spirit of animals explains the psychological factors that investors take action in the face of high capital market volatility. This word is derived from Latin-speaking animals, which means evoking the breathing of human thought.

The spirit of animals represents confidence, fear, and pessimism affecting decisions that promote or impede economic growth. The 2008 financial crisis has rekindled interest in the spiritual role of animals in financial markets. With a low mood, even though the market and economic fundamentals continue to be strong, the degree of confidence will be low, which will cause the market to back out. Likewise, if the spirit is high, the trust of economic participants will increase and market prices will rise. For example, the market in 2008 was full of financial innovation originally thought to be favorable until it turned out that the financial product was fraudulent and fraudulent. Investor confidence fell sharply at this point, then the sale continued, the market plummeted.