Physical love
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- | :''[[Sheela na Gig]], [[medieval]], [[erotica]], [[Sexual repression]]'' | + | '''Physical love''' is a euphemism for [[sexual intercourse]]. It can be contrasted to [[platonic love]]. |
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- | [[Saint Paul]], [[Clerical celibacy (Catholic Church)]] | + | |
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- | [[Eroticism]] is rare in the art of the [[Early Christian]] period and the [[Middle Ages]]. [[Pagan]] monuments were often overtly sexual, but Christian art shunned the world of [[physical love]] [...]. Christianity was a [[non-sexual religion]]. --[[Peter Webb]], 1975, page 104 | + | |
+ | == See also == | ||
+ | *[[Qu'il n'y avait de bon en amour que le physique]] | ||
+ | *[[Physical]] | ||
+ | *[[Carnal love]] | ||
+ | *[[Aphrodite Pandemos]] | ||
+ | *[[On Love (Stendhal)]] | ||
+ | *[[Coitus]] | ||
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Physical love is a euphemism for sexual intercourse. It can be contrasted to platonic love.
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See also
- Qu'il n'y avait de bon en amour que le physique
- Physical
- Carnal love
- Aphrodite Pandemos
- On Love (Stendhal)
- Coitus
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