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== == A person who hates/dislikes change is a "neophobe", the opposite of a "neophile" who is easily excited by novelty. Sentence: A bunch of childish neophobes have created a Facebook group objecting to minor layout revisions and new features. If you're talking about someone who hates TECHNOLOGICAL change specifically, you might be looking for the word "luddite" or "neo-luddite" (since Luddites were a type of people from 19th Century England).

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Q: What you call a person who hates change?
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What do you call a person who hates all foreigners?

a xenophobe


A person who hates everyone is known as?

mis·an·thro·pist


What do you call a person whose emotions change from happy to sad?

rhapsodic


What is the difference between indirect and direct perception?

In perception, when I see a person, what do I see? A good initial answer is the obvious one: I just see another person. Seeing is an activity that requires an object. If what I see is the object of my seeing, then since what I see is this other person, it follows that the object of my seeing is another person. Call this view direct perception. The object of my seeing is another person. However, a different view is suggested by the following. As I walk around this person, what I see changes. My activity of seeing is constant and the object of my seeing, the other person, does not change. However, clearly what I see does change! The only change that occurs is my position. But how can a change in my position account for a change in the object of what I see, if that object is another person and that person does not change? The implication is that direct perception leaves out a key element: my perceptual state. Call this view indirect perception. If what I see changes as I walk round this person, it is the perceptual state (in this case a visual image) I have of this person that changes. If what I see is the object of my seeing, then this object changes. For indirect perception, the object of my seeing is not the other person, but rather my perceptual state


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