About Love |
Love is a feeling of strapping affection and individual attachment. Love is as well a virtue representing all of soul kindness, sympathy, and affection; and "the generous loyal and compassionate concern for the good of another". Love is essential to various religions, as in the Christian phrase, "God is love". Love may as well be explained as actions towards others based on sympathy, or as actions towards others based on care.
In English, love refers to a range of special feelings, states, and manner, ranging from happiness ("I loved that meal") to interpersonal appeal ("I love my partner"). "Love" may refer particularly to the ardent desire and relationship of romantic love, to the sexual love of Eros, to the touching convenience of familial love, or the spiritual love that describes friendship, to the deep oneness or devotion of devout love. This diversity of uses and meanings, joint with the involvedness of the feelings involved, makes love oddly difficult to consistently define, even evaluates to other emotional states.
Love in its diverse forms acts as a foremost facilitator of interpersonal affairs and, owing to its central emotional magnitude, is one of the most frequent themes in the creative arts.
Love may be implicit as part of the survival intuition, a function to keep human beings as one against menaces and to ease the persistence of the species.
Love is every so often referred to as being the "international language", dominant cultural and linguistic divisions.
Impersonal love
Impersonal love |
Interpersonal love
Interpersonal love |
Throughout history, attitude and religion have done the most assumption on the occurrence of love. In the last century, the science of psychology has written an immense deal on the subject. In last some years, the sciences of evolutionary psychology, evolutionary biology, anthropology, neuroscience, and biology have added to the sympathetic of the nature and meaning of love.