Sadness  

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-[[Image:L'Absinthe (1876) - Edgar Degas.jpg|thumb|right|200px|''[[L'Absinthe]]'' ([[1876]]) - [[Edgar Degas]]]]+[[Image:The Anatomy of Melancholy by Robert Burton frontispiece 1638 edition.jpg|thumb|right|200px| [[Book frontispiece|Frontispiece]] for the [[1638]] edition of ''[[The Anatomy of Melancholy]]'' by [[Robert Burton]] ]]
 +[[Image:L'Absinthe (1876) - Edgar Degas.jpg|thumb|left|200px|''[[L'Absinthe]]'' ([[1876]]) - [[Edgar Degas]]]]
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'''Sadness''' is an [[emotion]] characterized by [[feeling]]s of disadvantage, loss, and helplessness. When sad, people often become quiet, less energetic, and withdrawn. Sadness is considered to be the opposite of [[happiness]], and is similar to the emotions of [[sorrow]], [[grief]], [[misery]], and [[melancholy]]. The philosopher [[Baruch Spinoza]] defined sadness as the “transfer of a person from a large perfection to a smaller one.” '''Sadness''' is an [[emotion]] characterized by [[feeling]]s of disadvantage, loss, and helplessness. When sad, people often become quiet, less energetic, and withdrawn. Sadness is considered to be the opposite of [[happiness]], and is similar to the emotions of [[sorrow]], [[grief]], [[misery]], and [[melancholy]]. The philosopher [[Baruch Spinoza]] defined sadness as the “transfer of a person from a large perfection to a smaller one.”

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Sadness is an emotion characterized by feelings of disadvantage, loss, and helplessness. When sad, people often become quiet, less energetic, and withdrawn. Sadness is considered to be the opposite of happiness, and is similar to the emotions of sorrow, grief, misery, and melancholy. The philosopher Baruch Spinoza defined sadness as the “transfer of a person from a large perfection to a smaller one.”

Sadness can be viewed as a temporary lowering of mood (feeling blue), whereas clinical depression is characterized by a persistent and intense lowered mood, as well as disruption to one's ability to function in day to day matters.

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Unless indicated otherwise, the text in this article is either based on Wikipedia article "Sadness" or another language Wikipedia page thereof used under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License; or on research by Jahsonic and friends. See Art and Popular Culture's copyright notice.

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