ABSTRACT

The Routledge Handbook of Love in Philosophy collects 39 original chapters from prominent philosophers on the nature, meaning, value, and predicaments of love, presented in a unique framework that highlights the rich variety of methods and traditions used to engage with these subjects. This volume is structured around important realms of human life and activity, each of which receives its own section:

I. Family and Friendship

II. Romance and Sex

III. Politics and Society

IV. Animals, Nature, and the Environment

V. Art, Faith, and Meaning

VI. Rationality and Morality

VII. Traditions: Historical and Contemporary.

This last section includes chapters treating love as a subject in both Western and non-Western philosophical traditions. The contributions, all appearing in print here for the first time, are written to be accessible and compelling to non-philosophers and philosophers alike; and the volume as a whole encourages professional philosophers, teachers, students, and lay readers to rethink standard constructions of philosophical canons.

 

chapter |10 pages

Introduction

part I|2 pages

Family and Friendship

chapter 1|10 pages

Love and Friendship

chapter 3|12 pages

“Mama, Do You Love Me?”

A Defense of Unloving Parents

chapter 4|12 pages

Loving and (Or?) Choosing Our Children

Disability, Unconditional Parental Love, and Prenatal Selection

part II|2 pages

Romance and Sex

chapter 5|11 pages

Love, Romance, and Sex

chapter 6|11 pages

All Hearts in Love Use Their Own Tongues

Concepts, Verbal Disputes, and Disagreeing About Love 1

chapter 8|12 pages

Queer Bodies and Queer Love

chapter 9|11 pages

Plato on Love and Sex

chapter 10|12 pages

Eros and Agape in Interpersonal Relationships

Plato, Emerson, and Peirce

part III|2 pages

Politics and Society

chapter 12|16 pages

Love and Marriage

chapter 13|12 pages

Love, Anger, and Racial Injustice 1

chapter 14|11 pages

Love and Political Reconciliation

chapter 15|11 pages

The Morning Stars Will Sing Together

Compassion, Nonviolence, and the Revolution of the Heart

part IV|2 pages

Animals, Nature, and the Environment

chapter 16|12 pages

Love and Animals

Simone Weil, Iris Murdoch and Attention as Love

chapter 17|10 pages

On the Love of Nature

chapter 18|12 pages

Caring to Be Green

The Importance of Love for Environmental Integrity

part V|2 pages

Art, Faith, and Meaning

chapter 20|10 pages

Love Songs

chapter 22|11 pages

What Is This Thing Called Love?

part VI|2 pages

Rationality and Morality

chapter 23|11 pages

Reasons for Love

chapter 24|12 pages

Reasons of Love

chapter 25|13 pages

Love and Agency

chapter 27|8 pages

Love and Moral Structures

How Love Can Reshape Ethical Theory

chapter 29|13 pages

Love and Hatred

part VII|2 pages

Traditions

chapter 31|11 pages

Love

India’s Distinctive Moral Theory

chapter 32|13 pages

Love in the Jewish Tradition

chapter 33|14 pages

Love in Islamic Philosophy

chapter 34|13 pages

Three Models of Christian Love

Platonic, Aristotelian, and Kantian