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  2. Love and Saint Augustine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Love_and_Saint_Augustine

    Love and Saint Augustine was the title of Hannah Arendt's doctoral thesis from the University of Heidelberg in 1929. [1] When it was first published in Berlin it attracted critical interest. Although an English translation had been prepared by E B Ashton [a] in the early 1960s, Arendt did not want it published without revising it and adding new ...

  3. Free love - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Free_love

    Free love is a social movement that accepts all forms of love. ... The camaraderie amoureuse thesis", he explained, "entails a free contract of association (that may ...

  4. Theories of love - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theories_of_love

    "Love" is a basic level that concept includes super-ordinate categories of emotions: affection, adoration, fondness, liking, attraction, caring, tenderness, compassion, arousal, desire, passion, and longing. Love contains large sub-clusters that designate generic forms of love: friendship, sibling relationship, marital relationship etc.

  5. The Science Of Love In The 21st Century - The Huffington Post

    highline.huffingtonpost.com/articles/en/love-in...

    Starting the ’70s, with divorce on the rise, social psychologists got into the mix. Recognizing the apparently opaque character of marital happiness but optimistic about science’s capacity to investigate it, they pioneered a huge array of inventive techniques to study what things seemed to make marriages succeed or fail.

  6. Love - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Love

    The term "free love" has been used [67] to describe a social movement that rejects marriage, which is seen as a form of social bondage. The free love movement's initial goal was to separate the state from sexual matters such as marriage, birth control, and adultery. It claimed that such issues were the concern of the people involved, and no one ...

  7. 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.

  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. Deus caritas est - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deus_caritas_est

    Deus caritas est (English: "God is Love"), subtitled De Christiano Amore (Of Christian Love), is a 2005 encyclical, the first written by Pope Benedict XVI, in large part derived from writings by his late predecessor, Pope John Paul II. Its subject is love, as seen from a Christian perspective, and God's place within all love.