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What do people mean when they say "love"?

Do they know what they are saying or has the English language messed up the meaning, ie it may not exist? How does it differ from “like”? Is it pure feeling or is it a mixture of a bunch of experiences?

Frank Hubeny
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You are right in detecting a linguistic problem and I certainly think our modern society would be many notches better if like the ancient Greeks we nuanced love a bit more.

They had 6 words eros, philia, ludus, agape, pragma, philautia.

  • Eros : sexual love "out of control" hormones
  • Philia : genuine deep friendship
  • Ludus : playful "men guffawing drunk"
  • Agape : Universal love (Jesus, Mother Theresa type)
  • Pragma : "Staying in love" (rather than falling) Think the (rare!) 80 year old happily marrieds
  • Philautia : Self-love of the good sort, When you are deeply happy with yourself you have no need to run down or hurt others. Related to the vedantic idea of atma the ultimate unity of individual and universal self
Rushi
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  • I didn't realize they had so many words for love. Perhaps such answers can focus this question so it is not just opinion based. – Frank Hubeny Aug 07 '19 at 14:20
  • It's not a problem to have a rich and nuanced polysemous word. Native speakers would not ever confuse the love someone has for the mother, their lover, or their favourite flavour of icecream. – curiousdannii Aug 07 '19 at 23:35