en
Andrew Shaffer

Great Philosophers Who Failed at Love

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  • yohanatoruanidézett7 évvel ezelőtt
    “Love does not exist. There exists the physical need for intercourse, and the rational need for a mate in life.”
  • yohanatoruanidézett7 évvel ezelőtt
    “By all means, marry. If you get a good wife, you’ll become happy; if you get a bad one, you’ll become a philosopher.”
  • yohanatoruanidézett7 évvel ezelőtt
    “Man is born free; and everywhere he is in chains,” he wrote. “But human nature does not go backward, and we never return to the times of innocence and equality, when we have once departed from them.”
  • yohanatoruanidézett7 évvel ezelőtt
    “I consider promiscuity immoral. Not because sex is evil, but because sex is too good and too important.”
  • yohanatoruanidézett7 évvel ezelőtt
    “To say ‘I love you’ one must first know how to say the ‘I.’ ”
  • yohanatoruanidézett7 évvel ezelőtt
    “Love is a serious mental disease.”
  • yohanatoruanidézett7 évvel ezelőtt
    Sometimes the force of a clear argument may make some impression, yet they nevertheless stand firm, and keep out the enemy, truth, that would captivate or disturb them.
  • yohanatoruanidézett7 évvel ezelőtt
    The one who in love forgets himself, forgets his suffering, in order to think of someone else’s, forgets all his misery in order to think of someone else’s, forgets what he himself loses in order lovingly to bear in mind someone else’s loss, forgets his own advantage in order lovingly to think of someone else’s—truly, such a person is not forgotten. There is one who is thinking about him: God in heaven.
  • yohanatoruanidézett7 évvel ezelőtt
    Kant believed that masturbation is a sin worse than “even murdering oneself.” Suicide, he argued, requires courage; the masturbator is simply giving in weakly to lust.
  • yohanatoruanidézett7 évvel ezelőtt
    We change ourselves into that which we love, and yet remain ourselves. Then we would like to thank the beloved, but find nothing that would do it adequately. We can only be thankful to ourselves. Love transforms gratitude into faithfulness to ourselves and into an unconditional faith in the Other. Thus love steadily expands its most intimate secret. Closeness here is existence in the greatest distance from the other—the distance that allows nothing to dissolve—but rather presents the “thou” in the transparent, but “incomprehensible” revelation of the “just there.” That the presence of the other breaks into our own life—this is what no feeling can fully encompass.
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