C. S. Lewis' four love of love power Through life, people have experienced various kinds of love. Many people believe that they love someone, but I really do not like it because I do not know what they mean. We want to understand love, but still it is difficult to explain. As C. Luis tried to explain it in his book "Four Love", the true meaning of love is still a mystery. I believe that in order to know what love means, you have to experience it. They can love each other, know them and feel it is true.
C. S. Lewis's "Four Loves" continues to discuss the four ancient philosophical definitions of love, namely eroticism, philia, phage, and agape. A fascinating story that will help you better understand your emotions and understandings and strongly recommend those who value life and life.
C. S. Lewis' four love of love power Through life, people have experienced various kinds of love. Many people believe that they love someone, but I really do not like it because I do not know what they mean. We want to understand love, but still it is difficult to explain. As C. Luis tried to explain it in his book "Four Love", the true meaning of love is still a mystery. I believe that in order to know what love means, you have to experience it. - True love is a human obsession with mystery and magic. That power is legendary. The idea of the existence of love has neither cultural binding power nor recently. For centuries there were many stories, legends, and myths that explain the power. "Love is deeply rooted in our culture, and has been inherited to us by no doubt.
In the process of growth, I believe that marriage has value and sanctity in all other aspects of our society. It is love that is in the center. That is the idea that I am trying to understand persistently and academically. Please read like "Four Loves" by C. S. Lewis, "The Truth in Love" by Michael Sims. How does this "sacred" emotion drive me? How does it drive all of us? Is it just a biological survival mechanism for reproductive or even more? If love is defined as an important element of marriage, that is what we consider as the cornerstone of the current social core family. But historically, marriage is not necessarily defined by love. After several centuries of change, the core family reached the climax in the 1950s, and it turned out that the cracks occurred soon in the 1960s and 1970s.