This introductory text offers a clear, concise look at the
philosophy of love. The author's presentation assumes no previous
knowledge of philosophy, providing the humanities student with an
insightful introduction to some of the most prominent writers and
philosophers, both ancient and modern. From the dialogues of Plato
to the writings of feminist philosopher Luce Irigaray, Wagoner
presents six major ideas of love: erotic love, Christian love,
romantic love, moral love, love as power, and mutual love.
This study asserts that even though we have only one word for
love, six fundamentally different meanings can be distinguished:
erotic love, Christian love, romantic love, moral love, love as
power, and mutual love. Wagoner identifies each of these ideas of
love in terms of the special meaning it brings to experience. No
one meaning is comprehensive. Each is shown to have a logic and
legitimacy of its own. Why each view seems real and compelling is
the focus of separate discussions, as well as the price that may be
exacted by each idea. The extent to which these ideas throw light
on actual experience is striking, but the book is not an empirical
or psychological inquiry. How one self finds itself in another is
first defined and then explored further to see how this shapes the
rational and sexual aspects of life.
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