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2007-05-19 14:09:21 · 12 answers · asked by trer 3 in Arts & Humanities Philosophy

12 answers

You know, I was thinking this a couple of nights ago.

Love should be infinite, boundless, unmeasurable, you should not be able to grasp the Love you feel for others, and others will not be able to grasp the Love they feel for you. This is highest law. The same goes for Hate.

My answer: =

2007-05-19 20:07:26 · answer #1 · answered by Michael 3 · 0 0

the most horribly intense hatred i ever felt was toward someone i loved madly.
I know youre saying "is she serious?"
i am. It was a very toxic ,crazy relationship but it evoked both love and hate at intense levels.
Ive witnessed this in other situations,like in breakups between couples. 2 people that love or loved each other become hated enemies.isnt that funny.?

2007-05-19 18:10:44 · answer #2 · answered by matowakan58 5 · 0 0

You could easily love but you would go threw so much to get to hate but the most intense one is love cause you could go threw so many bad emotions and still love intill you just give up and hate the person.....

2007-05-19 14:22:16 · answer #3 · answered by Yassy 2 · 0 0

I believe hate is more intense but love is more powerful. To elaborate Id say hate can turn your mind inside out and make you do crazy sub-human things but love can make a person do things that make people fall to their knees in wonder and awe.

2007-05-19 15:08:14 · answer #4 · answered by Dan7 2 · 0 0

Most times only true love, can turn it into intense hate

2007-05-19 16:27:43 · answer #5 · answered by Misguided Rose 5 · 0 0

The two have an affinity in the whole person as consciousness is not simple mechanism but in confluence with its self, self consciousness, i.e. that parts are fluid and unlike solid fluids have that property of reciprocal quantum emergence, they confuse in action but do not stop. Love is its self but hate is anger and fear and threaten to reduce the person to a philosophy of pure universality rather than one that merges the particular with universal and individual; like racism. Hatred is more intense as it gets more of its work done, but love gets its work done well.

2007-05-19 15:25:29 · answer #6 · answered by Psyengine 7 · 0 0

An emotion is an emotion, only when you combine it with another emotion does it grow in intensity.

2007-05-19 14:16:54 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Two sides of the same coin. You can love someone with all your might and hate another just as intensely, both can drive you mad if you let them go uncontrolled.....

2007-05-19 14:31:22 · answer #8 · answered by Cone 3 · 0 0

Love comes and goes. We tend to (outside of family) fall in love easily. We may stay in love and it gradually goes away and turns to hate (like in a marriage starting and ending) The hate can become overwhelming and we can stay in it for years. You forget all about the things you loved about that person and just start remembering when it went bad and all the things that person did to hurt you. You hate more strongly because when you are hurt badly you want to cast blame. Also it takes time for this hate to heal, we all know people who 5 years later are still talking about their ex in hateful terms. If you aren't careful, the hate will overwhelm you and take over your life. You need to open your heart to forgiveness to get over this hate,

2007-05-19 14:54:08 · answer #9 · answered by sweet sue 6 · 0 1

I think both are equivalent to each other. Hate can destroy a person just out of spite and love can make you insane even if the love is unrequited.

2007-05-19 14:18:08 · answer #10 · answered by oceanblue 3 · 0 0

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