Central and East European
Society for Phenomenology

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147485

Eros as transformation

Ralph Ellis

pp. 35-70

Abstract

If conscious beings are sometimes motivated to intensify their consciousness through expressive activity, rather than merely to reduce homeostatic drives, then the prevalent assumption that erotic love is ultimately derivative from a reductive sexual drive is far from self-evident. For this reason, our inquiry here will begin not with sexuality per se, but with a question that has proven much more difficult to even formulate, let alone answer, in terms of traditional psychological theories: Why do people experience the intense, turbulent, and all-consuming passion which I designated above as a feeling of "erotic love,' or "eros in the full sense,' rather than merely feeling sexually attracted to each other?

Publication details

Published in:

Ellis Ralph (1996) Eros in a narcissistic culture: an analysis anchored in the life-world. Dordrecht, Springer.

Pages: 35-70

DOI: 10.1007/978-94-009-1661-6_2

Full citation:

Ellis Ralph (1996) Eros as transformation, In: Eros in a narcissistic culture, Dordrecht, Springer, 35–70.