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Love is patient

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  • Love is patient

    Love is patient; love is kind and envies no one.Love is never boastful, nor conceited, nor rude;never selfish, not quick to take offense.There is nothing love cannot face;there is no limit to its faith,its hope, and endurance.In a word, there are three thingsthat last forever: faith, hope, and love;but the greatest of them all is love...
    To have and to hold, from this day forward,For better or for worse, for richer or for poorer,In sickness and in health, to love and to cherish,Till death do us part.

    let my shoot a question in my tread!
    What is love?? what i say is?
    It is anticipation.
    Love is an imperfection in yourself not bothering you.
    It is acceptance.
    Love is passing up an opportunity because the time isn’t right yet.
    It is patience.
    Love is a back massage that starts above the hairline and ends around the innersoles.
    It is exploration.
    Love is not having to say, "Let’s make love", because you know what the other person wants.
    It is understanding.
    It is consideration.
    Love is both of you remembering protection.
    It is responsibility.
    Love is saying the perfect phrase to make a solemn embrace dissolve into giggles.
    It is humor.
    Love is reviewing the damage to your living room and realizing personal effects are strewn
    in a clockwise pattern from the front door to the bedroom.
    It is desire.
    Love is seeing what your lover really looks like for the first time.
    It is truth.
    Love is knowing what time it is and not caring.
    It is joy.
    Love is the arms around you tightening their embrace.
    It is ecstasy.
    Love is seeing a new side of a person you thought you knew.
    It is renewal.
    Love is telling a person if you have to leave, you will let them sleep, and being told they would rather be
    awakened.
    It is tenderness.
    Love is waking up to find the subject of the dream you were having asleep on your shoulder.
    It is where fantasy meets reality.
    Love is being there to wake your lover. Slowly.
    It is sensuousness.
    Love is belatedly knowing why you bothered to buy a queen size bed three years ago.
    It is practicality.
    Love is two people only taking up a third of a queen size bed.
    It is closeness.
    Love is knowing you gave the extra set of keys to the right person.
    It is trust.
    Love is saying goodbye and knowing you will be back by mutual consent.
    It is faith.
    Love is stretching your arms and discovering the real meaning of the word "sore".
    It is a lesson in human frailty.
    Love is opening your medicine cabinet and finding your toothpaste turned into a pretzel.
    It is adaptation.
    Love is sitting at the window, looking out and remembering who you were the night before.
    It is reflection.
    Love is hearing the weather forecast for a winter storm and wishing you could spend it in bed with your lover.
    It is loneliness.
    Love is stories that will never be told.
    It is personal.
    Love is a slow kiss goodnight.
    What about you? i would like to have more ideas.conversation,pipeline,utterance and information...


    Exhibiting common sense what is required!
    I missed everyone!!
    VerTigO

  • #2
    You know, I'd say this thread rocks, but some of these "words of wisdom" on love, have been on the AOL Instant Messenger profile of every kid or their Armenian club profile, so I'm tired of seeing and reading the first few words of it.

    But thanks for the thought, that's what counts. P.S. I haven't missed you yet.
    Achkerov kute.

    Comment


    • #3
      aha

      My Friend
      I really feel pleasure,gladness and gratification just cause i like the (CROW) movie and nice Avatar but there is an exception and rejection!! You cant eliminate,eradicate and destroy The power of LOVE and i see that you aren't satisfied so let me enlight you MR.Crow!
      The philosophical discussion regarding love logically begins with questions concerning its nature. This implies that love has a 'nature', a proposition that some may oppose arguing that love is conceptually irrational, in the sense that it cannot be described in rational or meaningful propositions. For such critics, who are presenting a metaphysical and epistemological argument, love may be an ejection of emotions that defy rational examination; on the other hand, some languages, such as Papuan do not even admit the concept, which negates the possibility of a philosophical examination. In English, the word 'love', which is derived from Germanic forms of the Sanskrit lubh (desire), is broadly defined and hence imprecise, which generates first order problems of definition and meaning, which are resolved to some extent by the reference to the Greek terms, eros, philia, and agape.


      I will continue on me 2nd Thread so check it..
      Attached Files
      VerTigO

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      • #4
        Eros

        1)Eros


        The term eros (Greek erasthai) is used to refer to that part of love constituting a passionate, intense desire for something, it is often referred to as a sexual desire, hence the modern notion of 'erotic' (Greek erotikos). In Plato's writings however, eros is held to be a common desire that seeks transcendental beauty-the particular beauty of an individual reminds us of true beauty that exists in the world of Forms or Ideas (Phaedrus 249E: "he who loves the beautiful is called a lover because he partakes of it." Trans. Jowett). The Platonic-Socratic position maintains that the love we generate for beauty on this earth can never be truly satisfied until we die; but in the meantime we should aspire beyond the particular stimulating image in front of us to the contemplation of beauty in itself.

        The implication of the Platonic theory of eros is that ideal beauty, which is reflected in the particular images of beauty we find, becomes interchangeable across people and things, ideas, and art: to love is to love the Platonic form of beauty-not a particular individual, but the element they posses of true (Ideal) beauty. Reciprocity is not necessary to Plato's view of love, for the desire is for the object (of Beauty), than for, say, the company of another and shared values and pursuits.
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        • #5
          Philia

          2)Phila
          In contrast to the desiring and passionate yearning of eros, philia entails a fondness and appreciation of the other. For the Greeks, the term philia incorporated not just friendship, but also loyalties to family and polis-one's political community, job, or discipline. Philia for another may be motivated, as Aristotle explains in the Nicomachean Ethics, Book VIII, for the agent's sake or for the other's own sake. The motivational distinctions are derived from love for another because the friendship is wholly useful as in the case of business contacts, or because their character and values are pleasing (with the implication that if those attractive habits change, so too does the friendship), or for the other in who they are in themselves, regardless of one's interests in the matter. The English concept of friendship roughly captures Aristotle's notion of philia, as he writes: "things that cause friendship are: doing kindnesses; doing them unasked; and not proclaiming the fact when they are doneÖ" (Rhetoric, II. 4, trans. Rhys Roberts).

          Aristotle elaborates on the kinds of things we seek in proper friendship, suggesting that the proper basis for philia is objective: those who share our dispositions, who bear no grudges, who seek what we do, who are temperate, and just, who admire us appropriately as we admire them, and so on. Philia could not emanate from those who are quarrelsome, gossips, aggressive in manner and personality, who are unjust, and so on. The best characters, it follows, may produce the best kind of friendship and hence love: indeed, how to be a good character worthy of philia is the theme of the Nicomachaen Ethics. The most rational man is he who would be the happiest, and he, therefore, who is capable of the best form of friendship, which between two "who are good, and alike in virtue" is rare (NE, VIII.4 trans. Ross). We can surmise that love between such equals-Aristotle's rational and happy men-would be perfect, with circles of diminishing quality for those who are morally removed from the best. He characterizes such love as "a sort of excess of feeling". (NE, VIII.6)

          Friendships of a lesser quality may also be based on the pleasure or utility that is derived from another's company. A business friendship is based on utility--on mutual reciprocity of similar business interests; once the business is at an end, then the friendship dissolves. Similarly with those friendships based on the pleasure that is derived from the other's company, which is not a pleasure enjoyed for who the other person is in himself, but in the flow of pleasure from his actions or humour.

          The first condition for the highest form Aristotelian love is that a man loves himself. Without an egoistic basis, he cannot extend sympathy and affection to others (NE, IX.8). Such self-love is not hedonistic, or glorified, depending on the pursuit of immediate pleasures or the adulation of the crowd, it is instead a reflection of his pursuit of the noble and virtuous, which culminate in the pursuit of the reflective life. Friendship with others is required "since his purpose is to contemplate worthy actionsÖto live pleasantlyÖsharing in discussion and thought" as is appropriate for the virtuous man and his friend (NE, IX.9). The morally virtuous man deserves in turn the love of those below him; he is not obliged to give an equal love in return, which implies that the Aristotelian concept of love is elitist or perfectionist: "In all friendships implying inequality the love also should be proportional, i.e. the better should be more loved than he loves." (NE, VIII, 7,). Reciprocity, although not necessarily equal, is a condition of Aristotelian love and friendship, although parental love can involve a one-sided fondness.
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          • #6
            Agape

            3)Agape


            Agape refers to the paternal love of God for man and for man for God but is extended to include a brotherly love for all humanity. (The Hebrew ahev has a slightly wider semantic range than agape). Agape arguably draws on elements from both eros and philia in that it seeks a perfect kind of love that is at once a fondness, a transcending of the particular, and a passion without the necessity of reciprocity. The concept is expanded on in the Judaic-Christian tradition of loving God: "You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your might" (Deuteronomy 6:5) and loving "thy neighbour as thyself" (Leviticus 19:18). The love of God requires absolute devotion that is reminiscent of Plato's love of Beauty (and Christian translators of Plato such as St Augustine employed the connections), which involves an erotic passion, awe, and desire that transcends earthly cares and obstacles. Aquinas, on the other hand, picked up on the Aristotelian theories of friendship and love to proclaim God as the most rational being and hence the most deserving of one's love, respect, and considerations.

            The universalist command to "love thy neighbor as thyself" refers the subject to those surrounding him, whom he should love unilaterally if necessary. The command employs the logic of mutual reciprocity, and hints at an Aristotelian basis that the subject should love himself in some appropriate manner: for awkward results would ensue if he loved himself in a particularly inappropriate, perverted manner! (Philosophers can debate the nature of 'self-love' implied in this-from the Aristotelian notion that self-love is necessary for any kind of inter-personal love, to the condemnation of egoism and the impoverished examples that pride and self-glorification from which to base one's love of another. St Augustine relinquishes the debate--he claims that no command is needed for a man to love himself (De bono viduitatis, xxi.) Analogous to the logic of "it is better to give than to receive", the universalism of agape requires an initial invocation from someone: in a reversal of the Aristotelian position, the onus for the Christian is on the morally superior to extend love to others. Nonetheless, the command also entails an egalitarian love-hence the Christian code to "love thy enemies" (Matthew 5:44-45). Such love transcends any perfectionist or aristocratic notions that some are (or should be) more loveable than others. Agape finds echoes in the ethics of Kant and Kierkegaard, who assert the moral importance of giving impartial respect or love to another person qua human being in the abstract.

            However, loving one's neighbor impartially (James 2:9) invokes serious ethical concerns, especially if the neighbor ostensibly does not warrant love. Debate thus begins on what elements of a neighbor's conduct should be included in agape, and which should be excluded. Early Christians asked whether the principle applied only to disciples of Christ or to all. The impartialists won the debate asserting that the neighbor's humanity provides the primary condition of being loved; nonetheless his actions may require a second order of criticisms, for the logic of brotherly love implies that it is a moral improvement on brotherly hate. For metaphysical dualists, loving the soul rather than the neighbor's body or deeds provides a useful escape clause-or in turn the justification for penalizing the other's body for sin and moral transgressions, while releasing the proper object of love-the soul-from its secular torments. For Christian pacifists, "turning the other cheek" to aggression and violence implies a hope that the aggressor will eventually learn to comprehend the higher values of peace, forgiveness, and a love for humanity.

            The universalism of agape runs counter to the partialism of Aristotle and poses a variety of ethical implications. Aquinas admits a partialism in love towards those we are related while maintaining that we should be charitable to all, whereas others such as Kierkegaard insist on impartiality. Recently, LaFallotte has noted that to love those one is partial towards is not necessarily a negation of the impartiality principle, for impartialism could admit loving those closer to one as an impartial principle, and, employing Aristotle's conception of self-love, iterates that loving others requires an intimacy that can only be gained from being partially intimate ("Personal Relations", Blackwell Companion to Ethics). Others would claim that the concept of universal love, of loving all equally, is not only impracticable, but logically empty-Aristotle, for example, argues: "One cannot be a friend to many people in the sense of having friendship of the perfect type with them, just as one cannot be in love with many people at once
            Attached Files
            VerTigO

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            • #7
              Satisfied??

              I hope you get your satisfaction MR.Crow
              Attached Files
              VerTigO

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              • #8
                I think you should be the minister of the forum, due to your powerful words and uplifting spirit. I'll listen to you.
                Achkerov kute.

                Comment


                • #9
                  Freedom and LOVE

                  Hi dear Anonymouse! Thank you for your kindness!I really appriciate!
                  Freedom and Love how delicious is the winning of a kiss at love's beginning
                  When two mutual hearts are sighing for the knot there's no untying!Yet remember, midst your wooing love has bliss, but Love has ruing;Other smiles may make you fickle,tears for other charms may trickle.
                  Love he comes and Love he tarries just as fate or fancy carries;
                  Longest stays, when sorest chidden;Laughs and flies, when press'd and bidden.

                  Bind the sea to slumber stilly,bind its odour to the lily,bind the aspen ne'er to quiver,then bind Love to last for ever.(JUST BIND and I WILL LOVE YOU FORVER)


                  Love's a fire that needs renewal of fresh beauty for its fuel;Love's wing moults when caged and captured,only free, he soars enraptured.
                  Answer!!!!
                  Love's a fire that needs renewal
                  Of fresh beauty for its fuel;
                  Love's wing moults when caged and captured,
                  Only free, he soars enraptured.
                  Can you keep the bees from ranging,or the ringdove's neck from changing?No! nor fetter'd Love from dying in the knot there's no untying
                  Love what I feel....
                  Attached Files
                  VerTigO

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                  • #10
                    ::YAWN::

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