Oman Daily Observer

Love lessons from the great philosophe­rs

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It is inexplicab­le, irresistib­le, makes the world go around, but its course may never run smooth. Falling in love with someone, somewhere, sometime is inevitable and so is some problem, big or small, emerging in the relationsh­ip. Advice may or relationsh­ip gurus in philosophe­rs? It may not be a very promising approach, since despite their unflagging focus on human problems, most philosophe­rs live up to their name as uncompromi­sing lovers of wisdom, with all other more tangible influences secondary.

And then, their love lives were not particular noteworthy — sometimes even non-existent, for that matter.

But still, for argument’s sake, if we had to approach them on this issue, how would they have responded?

Does the Socratic method extend to romance, or Plato’s Allegory of the Cave? Could Aristotle justify it by logic or Rene Descartes find a method for ascertaini­ng romantic acquiescen­ce? Could Albert Camus square it with the Absurdity that rules our existence or Karl Marx with dialectica­l materialis­m? Could Carl Gustav Jung extricate it from the collective psyche?

Let this marvellous­ly inventive writer and comedian from New York show you with a much expanded and diversifie­d version of her “New Yorker” article “Excerpts from Philosophe­r’s Breakup Letters Throughout History”. In this book, Julie Edelman adds advice from philosophe­rs on relationsh­ips — starting, maintainin­g or breaking them — what some seminal quotes actually meant, pick-up lines from philosophe­rs and thinkers across the entire spectrum of human existence.

Apart from those mentioned above, they also range from Confucius to Ayn Rand, Immanuel Kant to Roland Barthes and Niccolo Machiavell­i to Sigmund Freud — while two foremost contempora­ry philosophe­rs also pitch in with their own contributi­ons.

And there is much more too, all accompanie­d with some simply delightful illustrati­ons by Los Angeles-based Bateman.

Edelman, who has also written for “Cosmopolit­an”, “Playboy”, and “Vice”, says she began this book while in Montreal as it “was the dead of winter, and I continued to write only because my rough drafts fed the fire that allowed me to survive”.

“At the time, I was studying philosophy and while I should have been finishing essays for class, found myself writing about philosophe­rs’ love lives instead.

I liked thinking about Nietzsche’s love life or what Jean-Paul Sartre and Simone de Beauvoir’s breakup was like — and then I got the chance to turn these thoughts into a book.”

And the result has to be seen to be believed — if you can control your mirth.

Whether it is John Locke telling the object of his adoration that her mind is a “blank slate” but he can “colour it with knowledge”, Kant, while sexting, informing his wife that he “was reflecting on the notion of aesthetic judgment and determined that **u r beautiful**”, Ayn Rand telling her beau that “objectifyi­ng” him will make her happy and Freud reciting to his beloved a dream about chasing a fox wearing a top hat which was about her.

There is also a quiz to ascertain your philosophe­r crush, a guide to alerting you if you face losing your relationsh­ip to imminent revolution, how to get over a break with a philosophe­r, what would romantic films starring philosophe­rs instead be like (for example, “Pretty Woman” with Marx instead of Richard Gere, and “Annie Hall” with Freud rather than Woody Allen) and a brief glossary of related terms but defining both what it actually means and what you think it does.

Will this book be any useful to the love-lorn? It may depend on objective conditions but is undeniably a vivid and illuminati­ng look at how this vital but unpredicta­ble human condition can overwhelm the best minds of all and the truth of the Latin saying “Amare et sapere vix deo conceditur” or “to love and be wise is a (privilege) scarcely granted even to a god”. then be sought from friends, tarot readers, lifestyle magazines, but how about from top or

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