Elements of love on the road rarely surprise Scott Peck's unusual love view in his work "The way I traveled less". Peck's view of love is a correction to what he thinks other people think about love. This article explains Pek's view of love, a contrasting view on love, and my personal knowledge of Peck's faith. Peck takes a very pessimistic attitude, sometimes taking a contradictory view of the so-called "love", and introduces this viewpoint on his side with regard to the definition of love.
This poem is not about drawing out the way, individuality, or individuality. This poem is about the road taken and the road not taken, it is not necessarily the way not taken. Anyone who makes decisive choices will agree that it is the human nature to think "if so ..." if you choose what you did not do. This kind of thinking may already exist in different lives if they did different lives in different ways. The speaker selects another method at will and executes it once and it announces that he is happy because there are more lawns and many people do not pay attention to it. Anyway, he will come back one day and try the "raw" way again. Is that possible? It may not be the case, but life has come not to have a way to let one person go to another until I go backwards.
A view of love in Scott Peck's "little walking" is a correction to what he thinks other people think about love. This article explains Pek's view of love, a contrasting view on love, and my personal knowledge of Peck's faith. Peck takes a very pessimistic attitude, sometimes taking a contradictory view of the so-called "love", and introduces this perspective on the definition of love. Peck (1978) asserts that "love is too big, too deep for truly understanding, to measure in the framework of words or to be too deep" (p. 81). In the second half of the same page, Parker defined the definition of love as "willing to extend myself or to promote personal growth of others" (p. 81). He also divides his definition into five comments. The first one has its goals and objectives in its definition, the second is its cyclical process, the third is self love as love for others.
I used to like Robert Frost's "The Road Not Taken". Somewhere, I think that a contradictory traveler who is the hero will choose a road that can not travel much - this trip is more difficult but gives more reward. I think that this is the triumph of victory, we should all make efforts to achieve, or at least entertain. Then I became an English major. I also read this poem once again. Then again. Then again. And I was hit by a deep fact that this poem is unrelated to the triumph of victory. In fact, this is criticism of human perception, and more importantly, criticism of our behavior based on these ideas.