The Philosophical Truth Pertaining to Healthy Love Relationships

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Have you ever sat down and wondered what does a healthy love relationship provide for us as subjects? We recently discussed Kelly Oliver’s Family Values: Subjects Between Nature and Culture. Kelly Oliver “examines the ways in which nature and culture have been defined in relation to sexual difference, articulated as the difference between mother and father” (Oliver xi). The reality of relationships has been controverted by some philosophers and has been accredited to the idea that everything can be fulfilled from self-love. Kelly Oliver gives us a clear picture, through text, of all the possible aspects of life we can gain within a healthy love relationship by two or more individuals coming together. These types of relationships can be developed with family, friends, and lovers. I would like to take you readers on an enticing journey of what I as a philosophy student believe one can allegedly obtain from a structural relationship. We, as society, have a distinct definition of what a healthy love relationship is, but we as individuals have a mindset of values or important concepts that we put in a distinct order of how we feel a healthy relationship should progress. In this section, I will discuss what Oliver means by “social” and “embodied”. Before I get into Oliver I will begin by introducing readers to the broad definition of embodiment according to the dictionary, “embodiment can be an expression of or give a tangible or visible form to (an idea, quality, or feeling)”. We’ve just seen how society explains what embodiment is, but now I must go on to Oliver’s text. Oliver explains in her introduction that her philosophical work is explaining “ the opposition between nature and culture has been figured as a war between the sexes... ... middle of paper ... ...nd physically. The positive factors associated with social and embodied relationships can lead to a longer, happier, and healthier life. As one reflects on their social and embodied relationships they can interpret the positive results from those relationships in their daily lives. “There is no denying that the fantasy of the nuclear family is still a centerpiece of our cultural imaginary”(Oliver xvii).Without influential depictions of an embodied father and a social mother, the depictions of maternity and paternity in culture leave us with despondency images of isolation. Changing the stereotypes and portrayal of our culture is an essential step in changing our family situations. As we try to recreate family structures outside the limitations and unfeasible idea of the average nuclear family, we alter our representation of the possibility of love and of ourselves.

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