Love
In the philosophical context, love is a virtue which represents all the goodness, compassion and affection of the human being. You can also be described as actions directed toward other (or toward oneself) and based on the compassion, or as actions directed toward others and based on affection.
In spanish, the word love (from the latin, love, -ōris) covers a large amount of different feelings, from desire passion and intimacy of romantic love until the emotional proximity asexual of familial love and the platonic love, and up to the deep unity or devotion of love religious. In the latter field, goes beyond the feeling and becomes viewed as a manifestation of a state of mind or the soul, identified in some religions with God himself and with the force that holds the universe together.The emotions associated with the love can be extremely powerful, arriving with frequency to be irresistible. Love in its various forms acts as a major facilitator of interpersonal relationships and, due to its psychological importance central, is one of the most common subjects in the creative arts (music, film, literature).
From the point of view of science that what we know as love seems to be an evolved state of primitive survival instinct, which maintained the human beings united and heroic in the face of threats and facilitated the continuation of the species through reproduction.
The diversity of uses and meanings and the complexity of the feelings that covers make love will be particularly difficult to define in a consistent manner, although, basically, love is interpreted in two ways: under a conception altruistic, based on compassion and collaboration, and under another selfish, based on individual interest and the rivalry.Selfishness is often connected with the body and the material world; altruism, with the soul and the spiritual world. Both are, according to the current science, expressions of brain processes that the evolution has provided the human being; the idea of the soul, or something similar to the soul, probably appeared between one million and several hundreds of thousands of years.
Often, it happens that individuals, groups or companies disguised their selfish behavior of altruism; it is what we know as hypocrisy, and we find many examples of such behavior on the advertising. Conversely, you can also happen that, in a selfish environment, an altruistic behavior the guise of selfishness: Oskar Schindler provided a good example.
Throughout history, there have been expressed, even in cultures without any known contact between them, concepts that, with some variations, include essential duality of the human being: the feminine and masculine, good and evil, the yin and yang, the Apeiron of Anaximander.