The Nature of Love: Plato to LutherRandom House, 1966 - 395 Seiten A piglet disguises himself to attend the school children's Christmas party. |
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Seite 342
... Luther posits him in heaven . Obviously , he felt he could not live unless there were some such father somewhere . And yet , this much in Luther hardly explains his rejection of caritas . After all , the medievals believed in agapē just ...
... Luther posits him in heaven . Obviously , he felt he could not live unless there were some such father somewhere . And yet , this much in Luther hardly explains his rejection of caritas . After all , the medievals believed in agapē just ...
Seite 343
... Luther's refusal to believe that caritas is really possible . Though God has infinite power , perhaps Luther does not trust him to use it as the medievals had promised . With the wisdom of a peasant , Luther will not budge from what he ...
... Luther's refusal to believe that caritas is really possible . Though God has infinite power , perhaps Luther does not trust him to use it as the medievals had promised . With the wisdom of a peasant , Luther will not budge from what he ...
Seite 347
... Luther idealizes what Sartre calls " facticity " -man having become a definite something whose reality cannot be denied . But Luther says more than that : he also claims that man tran- scends himself only by realizing he cannot ...
... Luther idealizes what Sartre calls " facticity " -man having become a definite something whose reality cannot be denied . But Luther says more than that : he also claims that man tran- scends himself only by realizing he cannot ...
Inhalt
Appraisal and Bestowal | 3 |
Idealization in Freud and Santayana | 24 |
Love as Idealization | 40 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
agapē appraisal Aquinas Aristophanes Aristotle attitude Augustine beatitude beauty becomes beloved Bernard bestowing value calls caritas Chris Christ Christian love Christian mystics church commandment concept courtly love created deity desire divine doctrine emotional eros and agape eros tradition erotic eternal everything exist faith father feeling Freud give God's love Greek Holy Ghost human love human nature Ibid idea ideal imagination infinite instinct Jesus Jewish Jews Judaism kind ladder libido live love of persons lover Lucretius Luther man's means medieval merely merging moral neighbor never nomos Nygren Old Testament one's oneself Ovid passion Paul perfect friendship philia philosophers Plato Platonic love Plotinus possible reality reason reciprocity religion religious love righteousness Romantic love saint sake salvation Santayana satisfy says seeks self-love sense sexual sinners sins Socrates soul speak spiritual marriage symbols things tion true ultimate union universe Venus wish woman word