Plato's Symposium, Love & Cinema

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...to use in describing a plethora of very different emotions. Because of this, it is possible to hear someone declare an undying love as the motivation for a lifetime commitment of marriage, but also to hear someone declare a "love" for pizza, or golf. Obviously, although the same word is used, it is not describing the same emotion. The ancient Greeks discerned between types of love. The word "eros" was used to describe the emotion generated by sexual desire and a strong sexual attraction; "agape" was used to describe a more affectionate love, such as the one that God has in the Bible; and "philia" is the love of friends (Platonic Love).
In Plato's Symposium, the only love that is mentioned by name is "eros." Nevertheless, Plato recounts a supposed dialogue that focuses on definitions of love. Phaedrus goes first and asserts that Eros, as the oldest of the deities, bestows the greatest benefits on humanity. To prove his argument, Phaedrus sites how homosexual...

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