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For passion, for reproduction
The Divine Conspiracy (HarperCollins: 1998), p. 163.
Intimacy is the mutual mingling of souls who are taking each other into themselves to ever increasing depths. The truly erotic is the mingling of souls. Because we are free beings, intimacy cannot be passive or forced. And because we are extremely finite, it must be exclusive. This is the metaphysical and spiritual reality that underlies the bitter violation of self experienced by the betrayed mate. It also makes clear the scarred and shallow condition of those who betray. ¶ The profound misunderstandings of the erotic that prevail today actually represent the inability of humanity in its current Western edition to give itself to others and receive them in abiding faithfulness. Personal relationship has been emptied out to the point where intimacy is impossible. Quite naturally, then, we say, "Why not?" when contemplating adultery. If there is nothing there to be broken, why worry about breaking it? ¶ One of the most telling things about contemporary human beings is that they cannot find a reason for not committing adultery. Yet intimacy is a spiritual hunger of the human soul, and we cannot escape it. This has always been true and remains true today. We now keep hammering the sex button in the hope that a little intimacy might finally dribble out. In vain.
Tagline: Sex, atheism, politics, dreams, and whatever. Thinking out loud since 2005.
George Santayana on Sex said...
Sex endows the individual with a dumb and powerful instinct, which
carries his body and soul continually toward another; makes it one of
the dearest employments of his life to select and pursue a companion,
and joins to possession the keenest pleasure, to rivalry the fiercest
rage, and to solitude an eternal melancholy.
Arthur Schopenhauer on Sex said...
"Metaphysics of the Love of the Sexes" in The World as Will and Idea (K. Paul, Trench, Trübner & Co.: 1906), p. 339.
The sexual impulse in all its degrees and nuances plays not only on the stage and in novels, but also in the real world, where, next to the love of life, it shows itself the
strongest and most powerful of motives, constantly lays claim to half
the powers and thoughts of the younger portion of mankind, to the
ultimate goal of almost all human efforts, interrupts the most serious
occupations every hour, sometimes embarrasses for a while even the
greatest minds, does not hesitate to intrude with its trash,
interfering with the negotiations of statesmen and the investigations
of men of learning, knows how to slip its love letters and locks of
hair even into ministerial portfolios and philosophical manuscripts,
and no less devises daily the most entangled and the worst actions,
destroys the most valuable relationships, breaks the firmest bond,
demands the sacrifice sometimes of life or health, sometimes of wealth,
rank, and happiness, nay, robs those who are otherwise honest of all
conscience, makes those who have hitherto been faithful, traitors;
accordingly on the whole, appears as a malevolent demon that strives to
pervert, confuse and overthrow everything.
Sleeper, dir. Woody Allen, writers Woody Allen and Marshall Brickman (Dec 17, 1973), 1:26:00.
Luna: But Miles, don't you see, meaningful relationships between men and women don't last. That was proven by science. You see, there's a chemical in our bodies that makes it so that we all get on each other's nerves sooner or later. Miles: That's science. I don't believe in science. Science is an intellectual dead end. You know, it's a lot of little guys in tweed suits and cutting up frogs on foundation grants, and... Luna: Oh, I see. You don't believe in science, and you also don't believe that political systems work, and you don't believe in God, huh? Miles: Right. Luna: So, then, what do you believe in? Miles: Sex and death. Two things that come once in my lifetime. But at least after death you're not nauseous.
Roger Ebert on Sex and Guilt said...
"History of the Blue Movie" at Suntimes.com (August 25, 1971).
That era is as long dead as the time when Indiana barbers kept the Police Gazette at the bottom of their towel drawers. We live in an age so compulsively permissive that I sometimes wonder whether anyone under 21 would know a forbidden thrill if he felt one. Norman Mailer was on the right track in "The Armies of the Night" when he protested against those who would remove the guilt from sex: Without guilt, he wrote, sex would lose half the fun.
