Description
The Pursuit of Love is both delicious and cerebral. Its stars are Freud and Plato and so, delightfully, is as much about the mysterious agitations of sex as it is about the spirituality oflove. Singer is clearly the Stephen Hawking of the metaphysics and history of love. -- Alan Soble, author of The Structure of Love. Written by the foremost authority on the concept of love, this new work is destined to become a classic. -- W. Jackson Bate, University Professor, Harvard University. The Pursuit of Love is a unique achievement in that it demonstrates the relation between love, value, and meaning. It is overall a work of great wisdom that I found to be illuminating and personally enriching. -- Arnold H. Modell, M.D., Professor of Clinical Psychiatry, Harvard Medical School
About the Author
Irving Singer is professor of philosophy at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. His many books include the three-volume The Nature of Love, as well as Meaning in Life: The Creation of Value; Mozart and Beethoven: The Concept of Love in their Operas; The Goals of Human Sexuality; and Santayana's Aesthetics.
Reviews
"Delicious and cerebral. Its stars are Freud and Plato and so, delightfully, is as much about the mysterious agitations of sex as it is about the spirituality of love. Singer is clearly the Stephen Hawking of the metaphysics and history of love."--Alan Soble, author of 'The Structure of Love' "'The Pursuit of Love' is both delicious and cerebral. Its stars are Freud and Plato and so, delightfully, is as much about the mysterious agitations of sex as it is about the spirituality oflove. Singer is clearly the Stephen Hawking of the metaphysics and history of love."--Alan Soble, author of 'The Structure of Love.' "Written by the foremost authority on the concept of love, this new work is destined to become a classic"--W. Jackson Bate, University Professor, Harvard University.
Book Information
ISBN 9780801852404
Author Emily Singer
Format Paperback
Page Count 200
Imprint Johns Hopkins University Press
Publisher Johns Hopkins University Press
Weight(grams) 283g