Love is just a feeling? Or something more? For many, it is an ephemeral spark that can fade away. But philosophy and religion insist: love is objective. It is not just inside us. It is between us. It sets the structure of existence, ethics, and meaning. Even when we do not feel love, it remains a reality to which we are called.
Even in "The Symposium," Plato spoke of Eros as a force connecting the finite with the eternal. Love, according to Plato, is not just a desire for the body, but a longing for beauty itself. This is a striving for truth. In this sense, love is not a subjective fancy, but a fundamental structure of existence. We love because the world is structured so that we can connect. In Christianity, this idea is strengthened: God is Love. Love is not an attribute of God, but His essence. And if God is the foundation of everything, then love is the very fabric of reality.
Immanuel Kant did not write about love as a feeling. But his categorical imperative — to treat people as ends in themselves and not as means — is a philosophical expression of love. In the 20th century, Emmanuel Levinas went further: love is responsibility for the Other. The face of the Other calls me to account. This is not an emotion, but a duty that I cannot avoid. Martin Buber in "I and Thou" speaks of a true encounter that goes beyond utility. Love is not my project, but an event in which I participate.
In the New Testament, love — agape — is not a romantic feeling and not a brotherly attachment. It is unconditional, sacrificial love that does not depend on the merits of the object. It is objective in the sense that it is a norm to which we are called, even when we do not want to. "Love your enemies" is not advice, but a commandment. It does not appeal to feelings. It addresses the will. And therefore, love is not what we feel, but what we do.
Love would not be love if it were coercive. It is freedom that makes love possible and at the same time real. The free choice to love — even when there is no desire — transforms love from an emotion into an act. This transformation makes love objective: it exists in the world through our decisions. There is no love without freedom. There is no freedom without responsibility. And in this sense, love is the most objective fact of human life.
Socrates loved truth more than life. Francis of Assisi loved the poor and lepers. Etienne de la Boétie loved freedom. In each case, love was not a feeling, but a position. It determined their actions, their sufferings, their deaths. These examples show: love is objective because it changes the world. It creates families, communities, cultures. It builds cities and destroys walls.
Love does not disappear when passion fades. It remains as a choice, as memory, as hope. In this its objectivity: it does not depend on our mood. It depends on us.
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