What is Love? Interpersonal Fun S. Gentile. What is Love? Helen Fisher TED.COM: “Why We Love, Why We Cheat?“Why We Love, Why We Cheat? QUESTION: If Someone.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Attraction and Love – Binding Forces
Advertisements

LOVING & LIKING THEORIES OF LOVE l STYLES OF LOVE (Lee) –Primary Styles Love of Beauty Playful Love Companionate Love.
Love. Love in Modern Society An Impersonal Society exaggerates the rational and economic aspects of human and tends to ignore peoples need for affection.
Love, Intimacy, and Sexual Communication
Love vs. Infatuation. Building Blocks of Love 1. Being Attracted to him/her 2. Being Excited to see and be with him/her 3. Feeling at ease with each other.
Attraction, Affiliation and Love
Copyright Atomic Dog Publishing, 2004 Chapter Six Love, Attraction, Attachment, and Intimate Relationships.
1 Psychology 320: Gender Psychology Lecture Purpose: To critically appraise theory and research related to gender psychology. Term Paper Due Date:
The Psychology of Love.
Chapter 5 Loving Ourselves and Others. Chapter Outline  Personal Ties in an Impersonal Society  What is Love?  Two Things Love Isn’t  Self-Esteem.
Falling in Love Ch. 6.
Chapter Eight Love and Communication in Intimate Relationships.
Interpersonal Communication Love Styles Attachment Styles Standpoint Theory Perception.
Developing and Enriching Intimate Relationships
Friendship, Love, and Intimacy. Intimacy Closeness between two individuals  Not the same thing as being intimate.  Is an emotional state, rather than.
Chapter 7 Love, Attraction, Attachment and Intimate Relationships
Romantic Love. Robert Sternberg The Love Triangle: Romantic love has 3 ‘faces’ – passion, intimacy and committment.
Making a Love Connection
Attraction & Close Relationships: Lecture #10 topics  The initial attraction  familiarity, physical attraction, mate selection  Close relationships.
Chapter 7 Love and Communication in Intimate Relationships
Attraction & Romantic Relationships. I. Interpersonal Attraction A. Proximity: we are likely to develop relationships with people who live near us and.
LOVE. WOULD YOU MARRY A PERSON IF THEY HAD ALL THE ATTRBUTES YOU WANTED IN A MATE, BUT YOU DID NOT LOVE HIM?
The Nature of Adolescents’ Non-romantic Sexual Relationships and Their Link With Well-being Catherine M. Grello Deborah P. Welsh University of Tennessee.
Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education Canada6-1 Attraction and Love Chapter 6 This multimedia product and its contents are protected under copyright law.
Copyright 2008 Allyn & Bacon1 Attraction and Love  Binding Forces Chapter 7 This multimedia product and its contents are protected under copyright law.
Human Relationships Love. Starter (name the artist/s) “All you need is love” “All you need is love” “A million love songs” “A million love songs” “Love.
Friendship, Love, and Intimacy
Friendship, Love, and Commitment
Chapter 5 Loving Ourselves and Others Key Terms. love A deep and vital emotion that satisfies certain needs, combined with a caring for and acceptance.
Copyright © 2007 by Marline E. Pearson. All Rights Reserved. Lesson Five Principles of Smart Relationships.
Love and Communication in Intimate Relationships
©2002 Prentice Hall The Major Motives of Life: Love, Sex, Food, and Work.
Learning goals: Understand human’s need for attachment and the benefits affiliation provides Understand various theories of attraction Identify characteristics.
Wade and Tavris © 2005 Prentice Hall 14-1 Invitation To Psychology Carol Wade and Carol Tavris PowerPoint Presentation by H. Lynn Bradman Metropolitan.
Friendship, Love and Commitment gThe Importance of Love gLove and American Families gFriendship, Love and Commitment gThe Development of Love gApproaches.
Myths, meanings, and misuses
Chapter 7 Love and Intimacy. 2 How are they the same? How are they different? Friendship and Love.
Friendship, Love & Commitment
Chapter 12- Close Relationships: Passion, Intimacy, and Sexuality
1 Day #2 of 8 Different Colors of Love Roster:Handouts: Please verify your information and put a checkmark next to your name or add your name. Please pick.
April 22, 2015 Entry Task: Why do people date? Target: Dating purposes & types of love.
Love Chapter 5.
Copyright McGraw-Hill, Inc Human Sexuality: Diversity in Contemporary America, 7th Edition.
Miller Intimate Relationships, 6/e Chapter 8 Love Copyright (c) 2012 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin.
Committed Romantic Relationships
Interpersonal Attraction
Chapter 15: Love and Commitment
What is Love? Baby don’t hurt me ….
Quiz 1 Next Monday w 40 Multiple choice questions, 2 pts. Each, 80 pts. 5 from chapter 9, pages or 12 from chapters 14, 8, and 12 Focus on text,
1 Psychology 320: Psychology of Gender and Sex Differences Lecture 38.
Relationships and Abuse
INTIMACY AND FORMING RELATIONSHIPS
Friendship, Love, Family. The role of Interdependence Three criteria are critical to interdependence in our relationships. We have to interact frequently.
Chapter 5 Loving Ourselves and Others
Love in Interpersonal Relationships Based on information by Dr. Alan D. DeSantis Professor of Communications University of Kentucky.
Glencoe Making Life Choices Section 1 Infatuation or Mature Love? Chapter 18 Dating, Commitment, and Marriage 1 > HOME Chapter Dating, Commitment,
LOVE.
STERNBERG’S THEORY LOVE TRIANGLE
What Makes up a Relationship Different relationships in our lives may have different components Intimacy Passion Commitment – Do you feel a good relationships.
Love Chapter 5.
Intimate Relationships, 6/e
Do you believe in Love? Love at first sight? One true love 50% of Americans say yes One true love 75% of Americans say yes.
Love vs. Infatuation.
& Romantic Relationships
Cohabitation The Love Attitudes Scale’s Six Love Styles
4.1.1 Love I can talk about the importance of communication, honesty and trust in relationships. I can talk about the kind of partner I would want to.
STERNBERG’S THEORY LOVE TRIANGLE
Theories of Attraction and Mate Selection
4.1.1 Love I can talk about the importance of communication, honesty and trust in relationships. I can talk about the kind of partner I would want to.
Love I can talk about the importance of communication, honesty and trust in relationships. I can talk about the kind of partner I would want to involved.
Presentation transcript:

What is Love? Interpersonal Fun S. Gentile

What is Love? Helen Fisher TED.COM: “Why We Love, Why We Cheat?“Why We Love, Why We Cheat? QUESTION: If Someone had all the qualities you desire in a partner, would you marry them if you were not IN LOVE with them?

What is Love? Think/Pair/Share: What is Love? Handout: “What is Love?” LOVE: When the satisfaction, security, and development of another person is as important to you as your own satisfaction, security and development, LOVE EXISTS!

Quick Test: True or False 1.True Love lasts forever 2.Love can conquer all 3.Love is a purely positive experience 4.When you fall in love, you will know it 5.When love strikes, you have no control over your behavior

Triangular Theory Of Love The Triangular theory of love is based on three (3) different building blocks combined which form different types of love 1.Intimacy: feelings of warmth, understanding, communication, support and sharing 2.Passion: physical arousal and desire 3.Commitment: decision to devote oneself to the relationship

Triangular Theory of Love

Some Variations

Styles of Loving

Eros (erotic lover) 1.Strong Physical Component a.Heavily influenced by physical appearance b.The erotic lover searches for a person with the right physical appearance c.Intense relationship d.Love at first site

Ludus (Loo-Dus) 1.Treats love as an uncommitted game a. Multiple partners b. Ludic lovers are playful, and fun 1) they tend to play the field

Storge (Store-Gay) 1.De-emphasizes strong emotion and seeks genuine friendship that gradually leads to a real commitment a.Storgic lovers prefer slowly developing attachments that lead to lasting commitment

Mania 1.A demanding, possessive, and filled with fantasy…and often obsession! 2.The manic lover is demanding and possessive a. Sometimes these lovers feel ‘out of control’

Agape (Ah-gaa-Pay) 1.Agape lovers are giving, altruistic and self-less treating love like a duty 2.The agapic lover is altruistic a.Loving without concern for receiving anything in return

Pragma 1.Practical lover seeks logically for a “good match” 2.Pragmatic lovers search for someone with the proper vital stats a. Examples: job, age, religion, etc.)

Does Romantic Love Last?

Why? 1.The love that brings a couple to a long-term partnership is not the same Love that keeps them together decades later. 2.Make certain to commit yourself to lover who is also a friend 3.Stall boredom by keeping novelty and fun in the relationships 4.Enjoy passion…just not as the sole foundation

Before David and Catherine met, neither of them had been in love, so they were both excited when their dating relationship gradually developed into a more intimate love affair. Each was the other’s first lover, and they found sex to be both awkward and thrilling, and, within a few weeks, flushed with more romantic feelings than either of them had known, they decided to marry. But David soon became annoyed by Catherine’s apparent desire to know everything about his day. She would call him every morning and afternoon when he was at work, just to “be in touch,” and she would start to fret if he met clients over lunch or was out of the office running errands. For her part, Catherine was troubled by David’s apparent reluctance to tell her what was on his mind. He prided himself on his self-sufficiency and didn’t feel that it was necessary to tell her everything, and he began to feel crowded by her insistent probing. What advice can you offer David and Catherine?