A Rhapsody of Love and SpiritualityAlgora Publishing, 2003 - 306 էջ Explores the various facets of love: Platonic eros, Christian mysticism, friendship, religious ritual, and love as people experience it, turning up startling ironies and paradoxes and, along the way, some traditions we may find worth reclaiming. |
From inside the book
Արդյունքներ 59–ի 1-ից 5-ը:
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... desire. Some consider a departure from tradition liberating. Others consider living according to personal desire to be unstable and capricious, even unholy. In this chapter, and throughout this book, I will introduce a particularly ...
... desire. Some consider a departure from tradition liberating. Others consider living according to personal desire to be unstable and capricious, even unholy. In this chapter, and throughout this book, I will introduce a particularly ...
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... desire when she watched Daphnis bathing. The cause for Chloe's feelings is attributed to the god of love — “While they were playing like this, Love [“Eros”] made something serious flare up.”7 Longus describes Chloe's observation of ...
... desire when she watched Daphnis bathing. The cause for Chloe's feelings is attributed to the god of love — “While they were playing like this, Love [“Eros”] made something serious flare up.”7 Longus describes Chloe's observation of ...
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... desire by any means possible. One of Chloe's suitors ruins a garden, intending to blame Daphnis's goats for the destruction and thereby alienate Chloe's parents from Daphnis. A prostitute seeks Daphnis' favor. A dissolute homosexual ...
... desire by any means possible. One of Chloe's suitors ruins a garden, intending to blame Daphnis's goats for the destruction and thereby alienate Chloe's parents from Daphnis. A prostitute seeks Daphnis' favor. A dissolute homosexual ...
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... desire. “[H]e feels a desire to see, to touch, to kiss him, and to share his bed.”31 The physical expression of love is treated with loathing by Plato; he considers it beastly: Now the man . . . who has been corrupted. realm of Ideal ...
... desire. “[H]e feels a desire to see, to touch, to kiss him, and to share his bed.”31 The physical expression of love is treated with loathing by Plato; he considers it beastly: Now the man . . . who has been corrupted. realm of Ideal ...
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... desire and its mixture of pain and pleasure, and fear and anger; . . . mastery of these would lead to. 32. Ibid., p. 57. 33. Ibid.,pp. 62, 63. 34. Ibid., p. 65. 35. Plato,Timaeus,p. 58. 36. Ibid., p. 97. 37. This conflict. 22 A Rhapsody ...
... desire and its mixture of pain and pleasure, and fear and anger; . . . mastery of these would lead to. 32. Ibid., p. 57. 33. Ibid.,pp. 62, 63. 34. Ibid., p. 65. 35. Plato,Timaeus,p. 58. 36. Ibid., p. 97. 37. This conflict. 22 A Rhapsody ...
Բովանդակություն
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3 | |
5 | |
27 | |
Romantic Scriptures Ambiguous Interpretations and Gregory of Nyssas Platonic Biblical Allegories | 59 |
Saint John Chrysostom Saint Jerome and Saint Augustine | 91 |
Chivalric Romance and Ascetic Discipline | 113 |
Thomas Aquinas and the Cloud of Unknowing | 147 |
Emanuel Swedenborg | 189 |
Shelley and Intellectual Beauty | 203 |
T S Eliots The Waste Land | 223 |
The Recent Erotic Spirituality of Vatican II and David Matzko Mccarthy Karl Barth and Eberhard Jungel | 237 |
Chapter XII A Heap of Broken Images? Erotic Love and Spirituality in the PostModern Age | 267 |
299 | |
303 | |
Martin Luther Sir Edmund Spenser and the Puritans | 161 |
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appears Aristotle Augustine Beauty become begins beloved body brings called celibacy chapter Christ Christian Church claims comes compared considered couple court created culture Daphnis and Chloe desire discussion divine doctrine experience fact feel follows friends friendship give God’s Grail Gregory hand heart heaven hold holy human husband Ibid Ideal ideas Jesus keep King knight lady Land leave live looked lover lust Luther marital marriage married means mind nature never one’s Ovid passage passion person philosophical Plato pleasure poem question reason reference relations relationship Romance Romantic Love seems sense sexual Shelley society Song soul spiritual story Swedenborg tell theology things Thomas thou thought traditions Tristan true turn union virtue wants Waste whole wife Wisdom woman women writing