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(Expand. I don't think Mirabell's gender is mentioned; I believe "her personal studies" refers to Marasi)
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'''Mirabell''' was a statistician and phychologist.
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'''Mirabell''' was a statistician and psychologist on [[Scadrial]].{{book ref|mb5|7}}
   
She lived during the third century and studied productivity in the workplace, and found that having a sense of ownership helps improve morale. [[Marasi]] thinks of the rules Mirabell developed regarding the troubles in [[Elendel]].{{book ref|mb5|7}}
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Mirabell lived some time during the third century after the [[Catacendre]] ({{date|201-300|pc}}), presumably in or near the [[Elendel Basin]]. They studied productivity in the workplace, and found that having a sense of ownership helped to improve morale. They may have published their research in a book or paper called ''Mirabell's Rules''.{{book ref|mb5|7}}
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[[Marasi Colms]] applied Mirabell's theories to communities, and she found that crime tended to be lower where the residents had a sense of identity in their neighborhoods. Marasi thinks about Mirabell's work in relation to the growing unrest in [[Elendel]], as the more transient nature of modern society has eroded people's sense of community (and by extension, their trust in government).{{book ref|mb5|7}}
   
 
== Notes ==
 
== Notes ==

Revisión del 18:17 27 sep 2019

Mirabell
Oficio Scholar
Mundo natal Scadrial
Universo Cosmere

Mirabell was a statistician and psychologist on Scadrial.[1]

Mirabell lived some time during the third century after the Catacendre (201-300 PC), presumably in or near the Elendel Basin. They studied productivity in the workplace, and found that having a sense of ownership helped to improve morale. They may have published their research in a book or paper called Mirabell's Rules.[1]

Marasi Colms applied Mirabell's theories to communities, and she found that crime tended to be lower where the residents had a sense of identity in their neighborhoods. Marasi thinks about Mirabell's work in relation to the growing unrest in Elendel, as the more transient nature of modern society has eroded people's sense of community (and by extension, their trust in government).[1]

Notes

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