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How Pleasure Works, by Paul Bloom (Norton; $26.95).
HOW PLEASURE WORKS: The New Science of Why We Like What We Like, by Paul Bloom (Norton, $26.95).
Psychologist Paul Bloom writes in his book How Pleasure Works that this leads to a feedback loop.
She even does this with problems that don't seem particularly problematic: in Italy, she set herself the challenge of learning how pleasure is "most efficiently maximized," studying her subject "like a homework assignment".
He has faith, which Burke lacked, in human fulfillment through simple pleasure rather than inherited order, and could see how pleasure might increase for the ostler and the street people inside the shed when the sun came out again.
In his book "How Pleasure Works: The New Science of Why We Like What We Like," the psychologist Paul Bloom explains the idea eloquently: Everyone knows that the value of a painting shoots up if it is discovered to be by a famous artist, and plummets if it is discovered to be a fake.… Our obsession with history and context … is not snobbery or silliness.
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An "HQ" is defined as "how much pleasure someone derives from providing pleasure to others".
Finally, each individual was asked to listen to all other participants' "chills music" selections, and rate how much pleasure they felt as a result of listening to it, from none to intense pleasure.
You'd think that being naughty is all about pleasuring your partner, but it's also about telling your partner (in a very naughty manner) exactly how to pleasure you.
Now they ask how much pleasure the glasses will add.
A sex fiend who knows how to pleasure herself.
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