"You know that you have truly loved someone when you have glimpsed in them that which is too beautiful to die".
I think he is right.
Does anyone disagree?
Regards
Dachshund
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"Beauty is not important for Love, if any, maybe insignificant enough, but a sense of Love can be established from a spark of Beauty."I am a 21 years old Malaysian named Sam, I am a bachelor student in business major. I am interested in philosophy since I think I need to see the world broader, and develop advanced critical thinking skill. I am not old enough to boast myself on my achievements or anything since I have no experiences as much as what others have. I am humbly being here to learn and share (not teach) my own thoughts too, so for those who read this, please give chances to this wandering young man with benevolence.
Hereandnow wrote: ↑August 9th, 2018, 10:55 am How is it that when one acknowledges something or someone as beautiful, one can escape one self to do so? It is not that there is no one or nothing there, beyond the self, it's rather that this "Other" is given to you through your self, that is, your faculties of perception, thought, and feeling. Love and beauty? Whence comes love if not from within?Simply put, love is a subjective value based on habit, repetition and a sparing of the rod
Hereandnow wrote: ↑August 9th, 2018, 10:55 am And how is it that the beloved can place this there? He, she or it can inspire, one might say, or, to put the matter on more objective footing, catalyze, through some emotional midwifery (think Socratic maieutics such that one cannot teach another what the other does not already know, for elsewise how could the other have the disposition to receive it?) love and aesthetics, but not be these themselves sort of transposing from one to the other. It cannot be made sense of to say that anything "out there" (if Wittgenstein will pardon me for speaking nonsense) can get in here."Beware of strangers with candy" but not your ugly old grandparents (who may be Nazi sympathizers for all you know) or your ugly old town that stroke your ego's reliance on familiarity.
Dachshund wrote: ↑May 16th, 2018, 10:53 am Gabriel Marcel argued that love and beauty were related to each other. He said:Love can make someone beautiful. But to love beauty for the sake of it is false.
"You know that you have truly loved someone when you have glimpsed in them that which is too beautiful to die".
I think he is right.
Does anyone disagree?
Regards
Dachshund
Angel Trismegistus wrote: ↑August 1st, 2020, 2:46 am No one's picked up on the role of death in the Marcel quote. Strange.Though less strange than posting about something you find interesting while withholding your own opinion on it.
LuckyR wrote: ↑August 7th, 2020, 10:51 amFair enough. So it seems to me that the Marcel quote resonates upon the theme of liebestod, the romantic idea that associates love and death. The classic expression of this theme, found in opera and literature, portrays love as transcendent -- Elizabeth Barrett Browning's "I shall love thee better after death." But Marcel appears to contradict this theme and to oppose love and death -- the beloved is in some sense "too beautiful to die." In the Marcel quote the association of love and beauty appears to be at odds with the association of love and death. The quote, as it stands, without the benefit of context, seems to deny the transcendence of love.Angel Trismegistus wrote: ↑August 1st, 2020, 2:46 am No one's picked up on the role of death in the Marcel quote. Strange.Though less strange than posting about something you find interesting while withholding your own opinion on it.
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