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Word: reasonable (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...Shuffle costs $79 and replaces the one that cost $49. That's potentially a big driver to Apple's bottom line. Veteran Apple analyst Gene Munster of Piper Jaffray thinks the higher price tag carries higher margins for Apple, increasing its revenue and profit. That's yet another reason Jobs would have delivered the news and taken the victory lap. (See the top 10 iPhone applications...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A New iPod Shuffle Arrives — Minus Steve | 3/11/2009 | See Source »

...obvious reason is that so many people have a stake in what the world defines as crazy and what it calls normal. Famously, homosexuality was listed as a DSM condition until a 1974 vote among APA members removed it. Other groups of mental-health professionals and patients want certain disorders to be added (and covered by insurance): sexual compulsivity, for instance, is not in the DSM, even though "sexual aversion disorder" (302.79) - the persistent and distressing avoidance of genital contact not explained by another disorder like depression - is included. (Read an interview with an author who has bipolar disorder...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Redefining Crazy: Researchers Revise the DSM | 3/11/2009 | See Source »

...ignores causes almost entirely. If you feel sad and tired for a couple of months, have trouble sleeping and making decisions, and gain weight, you can be given a DSM diagnosis of depression (296.31 or 296.32, mild or moderate, recurrent) and prescribed drugs for it - even if the reason for your funk is that you just lost your job. Such physiological responses as insomnia are evolutionarily natural (and sometimes helpful, in a jump-starting sort of way) when you suffer a trauma like losing your job. But according to the DSM, only perfect is considered normal. Another basic problem with...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Redefining Crazy: Researchers Revise the DSM | 3/11/2009 | See Source »

Such a diagnostic model wouldn't be simple, though, which is one reason the DSM is taking 13 years to rewrite. And in the meantime, the book still has to be useful to everyday clinicians seeing patients who need a code number for insurance companies. "It's like wondering how you repair the airport while the planes are still flying," Hyman said at the conference...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Redefining Crazy: Researchers Revise the DSM | 3/11/2009 | See Source »

...Ager, who teaches Sociology 159. Jeffrey A. Miron, the director for undergraduate studies in the Economics Department, was able to give a more practical explanation of the considerations involved. “Why don’t we have the business type of courses in economics? The simple reason is you can’t do everything with finite resources and we don’t have the resources to do those in addition to doing the ones we currently do,” he says...

Author: By H. Zane B. Wruble, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Being Your Own Boss | 3/11/2009 | See Source »

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