Love
Socrates' speech on love in the Symposium--arguing that love is merely a longing for immortality and ideas are immortal--is just a conceit of the intellectual. I prefer Aristophanes' speech, imagining a world in which humans were once four-armed, four-legged, and two-headed balls who tumbled around doing cartwheels, each one split in two and yearning to find their other half.
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- Categories:
- Antiquity |
- Aristophanes |
- Love |
- Philosophy |
- Plato |
- Socrates |
- Symposium

