0 a calm mental state, especially after a shock or disappointment or in a difficult situation: --
1 the state of being calm and in control of your emotions, esp. in a difficult situation: --
Second, the presumed equanimity of younger age groups to state-sponsored intergenerational transfers in favour of the elderly may not be an unchanging feature of political life.
Desire sensations are inconsistent with equanimity.
Platonism promises immortality to the philosopher who meets death with equanimity, rejoicing in the soul's imminent liberation.
The men who brought up the past once or twice in the middle third of their scenarios tended to display the greatest emotional equanimity.
Whatever motivates her action, it does not additionally dispose her to sensations that disrupt her equanimity.
Since phenomenologically salient desires are accompanied by desire sensations by definition,22 they are inconsistent with the equanimity requirement.
The children thus experienced multiple identities to which their languages contributed, and which, on the whole, they accepted with equanimity.
She must needle, cajole, and sometimes enrage her fellow citizens to overcome their acquiescence and recover their moral equanimity.