Synopses & Reviews
'What is it to love another person?' This is to raise one of the deepest, and most puzzling, questions we can put to ourselves. Love is a central theme in the autobiography we each write as we try to understand our lives; but we may feel that we become only more confused the more we reflect upon it. Love is closely connected with our vision of happiness; yet there is no one we are more likely to hurt, or be hurt by, than the person we love. If love is something we all want, why is it so hard to find and harder to keep? Love is one of humanity's most persistent and most esteemed ideals, but it is hard to say exactly what this ideal is and how--if at all--it relates to real life.
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Wryly right. (The Guardian)
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Wise, discursive...It is powerful and valuable. (The Times [London])
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Armstrong is perceptive and tender. (The Evening Standard [London])
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The reader is attracted, amused, encouraged to respond, left fulfilled and eager for more. (The Independent on Sunday [London])
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Armstrong's tone is never patronizing and touches on genuinely interesting points. (Times Educational Supplement [London])
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A tightly structured tour of human intimacy. (Express)
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Elegant, wide-ranging and genuinely revelatory. (Scotsman)
Synopsis
An alluring, thoughtful reflection on why falling in love is never enough, "Conditions of Love" gleans insight from sources as diverse as Dante, St. Augustine, and Jane Austen.
Synopsis
"A gracefully argued and compassionate work. . . . Armstrong does for philosophy what Adam Phillips does for psychoanalysis: removes our fear of it: demonstrates its fascinations. works like a loving conversation; the reader is attracted, amused, encouraged to respond, left fulfilled and eager for more." --
About the Author
John Armstrong is a research fellow in the philosophy of art at the University of Melbourne and director of the Aesthetics Programme at the Monash Centre for Public Philosophy in Australia.