Why do we love? A philosophical inquiry - Skye C. Cleary

6,948,615 views ・ 2016-02-11

TED-Ed


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Ah, romantic love -
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beautiful and intoxicating,
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heartbreaking and soul-crushing,
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often all at the same time.
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Why do we choose to put ourselves through its emotional wringer?
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Does love make our lives meaningful,
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or is it an escape from our loneliness and suffering?
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Is love a disguise for our sexual desire,
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or a trick of biology to make us procreate?
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Is it all we need?
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Do we need it at all?
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If romantic love has a purpose,
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neither science nor psychology has discovered it yet.
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But over the course of history,
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some of our most respected philosophers have put forward some intriguing theories.
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Love makes us whole, again.
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The ancient Greek philosopher Plato
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explored the idea that we love in order to become complete.
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In his "Symposium", he wrote about a dinner party,
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at which Aristophanes, a comic playwright,
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regales the guests with the following story:
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humans were once creatures with four arms, four legs, and two faces.
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One day, they angered the gods,
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and Zeus sliced them all in two.
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Since then, every person has been missing half of him or herself.
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Love is the longing to find a soulmate who'll make us feel whole again,
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or, at least, that's what Plato believed a drunken comedian would say at a party.
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Love tricks us into having babies.
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Much, much later, German philosopher Arthur Schopenhauer
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maintained that love based in sexual desire
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was a voluptuous illusion.
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He suggested that we love because our desires lead us to believe
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that another person will make us happy, but we are sorely mistaken.
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Nature is tricking us into procreating,
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and the loving fusion we seek is consummated in our children.
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When our sexual desires are satisfied,
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we are thrown back into our tormented existences,
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and we succeed only in maintaining the species
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and perpetuating the cycle of human drudgery.
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Sounds like somebody needs a hug.
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Love is escape from our loneliness.
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According to the Nobel Prize-winning British philosopher Bertrand Russell,
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we love in order to quench our physical and psychological desires.
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Humans are designed to procreate,
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but without the ecstasy of passionate love,
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sex is unsatisfying.
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Our fear of the cold, cruel world tempts us to build hard shells
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to protect and isolate ourselves.
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Love's delight, intimacy, and warmth helps us overcome our fear of the world,
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escape our lonely shells,
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and engage more abundantly in life.
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Love enriches our whole being, making it the best thing in life.
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Love is a misleading affliction.
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Siddhārtha Gautama,
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who became known as the Buddha, or the Enlightened One,
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probably would have had some interesting arguments with Russell.
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Buddha proposed that we love because we are trying to satisfy our base desires.
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Yet, our passionate cravings are defects,
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and attachments, even romantic love, are a great source of suffering.
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Luckily, Buddha discovered the eight-fold path,
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a sort of program for extinguishing the fires of desire
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so that we can reach Nirvana,
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an enlightened state of peace, clarity, wisdom, and compassion.
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The novelist Cao Xueqin illustrated this Buddhist sentiment
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that romantic love is folly in one of China's greatest classical novels,
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"Dream of the Red Chamber."
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In a subplot, Jia Rui falls in love with Xi-feng
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who tricks and humiliates him.
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Conflicting emotions of love and hate tear him apart,
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so a Taoist gives him a magic mirror that can cure him
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as long as he doesn't look at the front of it.
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But of course, he looks at the front of it.
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He sees Xi-feng.
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His soul enters the mirror
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and he is dragged away in iron chains to die.
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Not all Buddhists think this way about romantic and erotic love,
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but the moral of this story
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is that such attachments spell tragedy,
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and should, along with magic mirrors, be avoided.
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Love lets us reach beyond ourselves.
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Let's end on a slightly more positive note.
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The French philosopher Simone de Beauvoir
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proposed that love is the desire to integrate with another
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and that it infuses our lives with meaning.
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However, she was less concerned with why we love
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and more interested in how we can love better.
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She saw that the problem with traditional romantic love
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is it can be so captivating,
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that we are tempted to make it our only reason for being.
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Yet, dependence on another to justify our existence
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easily leads to boredom and power games.
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To avoid this trap, Beauvoir advised loving authentically,
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which is more like a great friendship.
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Lovers support each other in discovering themselves,
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reaching beyond themselves,
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and enriching their lives and the world together.
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Though we might never know why we fall in love,
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we can be certain that it will be an emotional rollercoaster ride.
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It's scary and exhilarating.
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It makes us suffer
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and makes us soar.
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Maybe we lose ourselves.
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Maybe we find ourselves.
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It might be heartbreaking,
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or it might just be the best thing in life.
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Will you dare to find out?
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