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  2. Love and hate (psychoanalysis) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Love_and_hate_(psychoanalysis)

    Suttie saw hate as the frustration aspect of love. “The greater the love, the greater the hate or jealousy caused by its frustration and the greater the ambivalence or guilt that may arise in relation to it.” Hate has to be overcome with love by the child removing the cause of the anxiety and hate by restoring harmonious relationships.

  3. Masaru Emoto - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Masaru_Emoto

    Masaru Emoto (江本 勝, Emoto Masaru, July 22, 1943 – October 17, 2014) [1] was a Japanese businessman, author and pseudoscientist who claimed that human consciousness could affect the molecular structure of water.

  4. Philosophy of love - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philosophy_of_love

    Among his love-sick targets, Catullus, along with others like Héloïse, would find himself summoned in the 12C to a Love's Assize. [17] From the ranks of such figures would emerge the concept of courtly love, [18] and from that Petrarchism would form the rhetorical/philosophical foundations of romantic love for the early modern world.

  5. Heraclitus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heraclitus

    The philosopher Anaxagoras refuses to separate the opposites in the "one cosmos". [80] Empedocles has forces (arguably the first since Heraclitus's tension) [65] which are in opposition, known as Love and Hate, or more accurately, Harmony and Strife. [80] Democritus and the atomists were also influenced by Heraclitus. [132]

  6. Category:Philosophers of love - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Philosophers_of_love

    Talk; Category: Philosophers of love. 13 languages. ... Pages in category "Philosophers of love" The following 47 pages are in this category, out of 47 total.

  7. The Art of Loving - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Art_of_Loving

    Through practicing love, and thus producing love, the individual overcomes the dependence on being loved, having to be "good" to deserve love. He contrasts the immature phrases "I love because I am loved" and "I love you because I need you" with mature expressions of love, "I am loved because I love", and "I need you because I love you." [33]

  8. The Four Loves - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Four_Loves

    The Four Loves is a 1960 book by C. S. Lewis which explores the nature of love from a Christian and philosophical perspective through thought experiments. [1] The book was based on a set of radio talks from 1958 which had been criticised in the U.S. at the time for their frankness about sex.

  9. Phaedrus (dialogue) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phaedrus_(dialogue)

    The Rhetoric of Morality and Philosophy: Plato's Gorgias and Phaedrus. University of Chicago Press. Blyth, Dougal. 1997. “The Ever-Moving Soul in Plato’s Phaedrus.” The American Journal of Philology 118: 185–217. Campbell, Douglas R. "Self‐Motion and Cognition: Plato's Theory of the Soul" Southern Journal of Philosophy 59 (4): 523 ...