positive feelings
identity with someone's mental image of the ideal lover
nurturing (file under positive feelings)
also biochemical delusion
desire
greed/possessiveness
Im sure someone will want to discount those as factors of love.
No, I think that is strongly genetic, since, as I said above, a lonely human being would not have survived for long. Then, this innate need has also been strongly socioculturally reinforced in many cultures, not surprisingly since a society per definition needs individuals that collaborate in some ways.Cuchulain] How do you explain love as a behaviorial trait? Just to keep us breeding? [/quote] Sexual love yes wrote: People feel an existential need for companionship/love- do you think this is societal?
Dragon Wench] How many people here actually have experienced that kind of a deep wrote:
I certainly have, although I would never describe it using the words you do. I assume this reflects basic differences in personal history and experiences. Whereas I agree that this type of close and totally open relationship with other people also has the consequence that one is totally "vulnerable" and "exposed" I personally would view it as a much more vulnerable and exposed situation to be isolated in oneself, alone and deprived of the wonderful gifts another human being can give to you.
In any case, contrary to you and Magrus I do believe it takes anything from love to understand it from a biochemical and evolutionary view. Why would it? On the contrary, I would view love as less important and certainly much less personal if I thought it was not human, it was not in us, but it was a phenomena connected to some god or some spiritual world.
I've heard some people say they believe that children can be in awe over things in a way adults can't, because children lacks the knowledge of certain things. Personally I think it's utter crap that lack of knowledge and understanding increases the sense of awe. I think it's a question of different personality traits. Some people feel awe that the natural world is as fantastic as it is, other people prefer mystery.
I think it is presumptious to claim that a certain view of the causality and mechanisms of a phenomena implicates something special about experience of it. Personal experience is not a more valid or more "correct" way to gain knowledge or understanding of this world.Magrus wrote:Anyone who decides to say love is a chemical reaction, or a simple method for breeding I'd have to say hasn't experienced it.
Would you claim that a person who is an expert in anaestethics has not experienced physical pain? Would you claim an astrophysicist has not experienced gravity?
You, as well as DW, may hold the more romantic or mystical view that being able to explain the mechanisms that mediate a phenomenon takes something away from it, but this is not necessarity true. Is the macrophages less fantastic and wonderful cells because we know how they work?
The idea that you need to keep mystery in things, that there must be an aspect that is not possible to understand, not possible to gain full knowledge about or not possible to relate to the material world, is a worldview. To claim that people who don't share your worldview have not experienced love, is also equivalent to claiming that if they did experience love, they would start to share your belief system.
So you are saying: because this emotion is so intense and deep, it cannot be an innate drive to preserve the species? Now, if something is really, really important for a species, it is survival. Survival of the individual and the species must be the most important, the highest priority if a species is to survive in the long run. So why do you find a contradiction between intensity and depth in emotion, and biological function that has been selected for because it was adaptive in successful survival of the species?Yes, emotions are caused by chemicals interacting with your brain and nervous system. However, that one single emotion happens to defy essentially everything else I've found in intensity and depth. If it were just a simple chemical reaction in my brain in order to produce offspring, I wouldn't still be hung up on someone who's stuck in a hole somewhere would I be? I can't breed with a corpse, yet I love who that person was, and I'm not sure I can ever match that emotion with any person I will happen to meet.
And what is your motivation for claiming that a "simple chemical reaction" would not cause love? Does the underlying causes and mechanisms of an emotion have to be complex because the emotion is strong?
Now, all biological systems are complex, but just for comparison: Fear of death and struggling for survival when confronted with immediate death threat, is a very strong emotion and response pattern. Yet, the mechanism behind the essential so called fight-or-flight response are among the least complex we know.
I am sure you love that person who is dead still, but you are 22, if you live long enough you will love others as well. Beside, that we can love people although they are dead is hardly evidence against love as drive for reproduction, group living functions and taking care of our offspring.