Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Eros_(concept)> ?p ?o }
- Eros_(concept) abstract "Eros (/ˈɪrɒs/ or /ˈɛrɒs/; Ancient Greek: ἔρως érōs \"love\" or \"desire\") is one of the four words in Ancient Greek which can be rendered into English as “love”. The other three are storge, philia and agape. Eros refers to “intimate love” or romantic love; storge to familial love; philia to friendship as a kind of love; and agape refers to “selfless love”, or “charity” as it is translated in the Christian scriptures (from the Latin caritas, dearness).The term erotic is derived from eros. Eros has also been used in philosophy and psychology in a much wider sense, almost as an equivalent to \"life energy\".".
- Eros_(concept) wikiPageID "718116".
- Eros_(concept) wikiPageLength "15581".
- Eros_(concept) wikiPageOutDegree "73".
- Eros_(concept) wikiPageRevisionID "687772947".
- Eros_(concept) wikiPageWikiLink Actaeon.
- Eros_(concept) wikiPageWikiLink Agape.
- Eros_(concept) wikiPageWikiLink Anima_and_animus.
- Eros_(concept) wikiPageWikiLink Antithesis.
- Eros_(concept) wikiPageWikiLink Aphrodite.
- Eros_(concept) wikiPageWikiLink Artemis.
- Eros_(concept) wikiPageWikiLink Arthur_Schopenhauer.
- Eros_(concept) wikiPageWikiLink Baroque.
- Eros_(concept) wikiPageWikiLink Basilisk.
- Eros_(concept) wikiPageWikiLink Carl_Jung.
- Eros_(concept) wikiPageWikiLink Category:Energy_and_instincts.
- Eros_(concept) wikiPageWikiLink Category:Freudian_psychology.
- Eros_(concept) wikiPageWikiLink Category:Love.
- Eros_(concept) wikiPageWikiLink Category:Philosophy_of_love.
- Eros_(concept) wikiPageWikiLink Category:Psychoanalytic_terminology.
- Eros_(concept) wikiPageWikiLink Charity_(virtue).
- Eros_(concept) wikiPageWikiLink Courtly_love.
- Eros_(concept) wikiPageWikiLink Cupid.
- Eros_(concept) wikiPageWikiLink Daemon_(classical_mythology).
- Eros_(concept) wikiPageWikiLink Death_drive.
- Eros_(concept) wikiPageWikiLink Eros.
- Eros_(concept) wikiPageWikiLink Eros_and_Civilization.
- Eros_(concept) wikiPageWikiLink Eroticism.
- Eros_(concept) wikiPageWikiLink Gender.
- Eros_(concept) wikiPageWikiLink Giovanni_Boccaccio.
- Eros_(concept) wikiPageWikiLink Greek_love.
- Eros_(concept) wikiPageWikiLink Greek_words_for_love.
- Eros_(concept) wikiPageWikiLink Helen_of_Troy.
- Eros_(concept) wikiPageWikiLink Herbert_Marcuse.
- Eros_(concept) wikiPageWikiLink Hippolytus_(son_of_Theseus).
- Eros_(concept) wikiPageWikiLink Id,_ego_and_super-ego.
- Eros_(concept) wikiPageWikiLink Idealism.
- Eros_(concept) wikiPageWikiLink Il_Filostrato.
- Eros_(concept) wikiPageWikiLink Individuation.
- Eros_(concept) wikiPageWikiLink Limerence.
- Eros_(concept) wikiPageWikiLink Logos.
- Eros_(concept) wikiPageWikiLink Love.
- Eros_(concept) wikiPageWikiLink Love_at_first_sight.
- Eros_(concept) wikiPageWikiLink Love_styles.
- Eros_(concept) wikiPageWikiLink Lovesickness.
- Eros_(concept) wikiPageWikiLink Middle_Ages.
- Eros_(concept) wikiPageWikiLink Oxymoron.
- Eros_(concept) wikiPageWikiLink Paris_(mythology).
- Eros_(concept) wikiPageWikiLink Phaedra_(mythology).
- Eros_(concept) wikiPageWikiLink Pheme.
- Eros_(concept) wikiPageWikiLink Philia.
- Eros_(concept) wikiPageWikiLink Philosophy.
- Eros_(concept) wikiPageWikiLink Plato.
- Eros_(concept) wikiPageWikiLink Platonic_love.
- Eros_(concept) wikiPageWikiLink Provence.
- Eros_(concept) wikiPageWikiLink Psychological_projection.
- Eros_(concept) wikiPageWikiLink Psychology.
- Eros_(concept) wikiPageWikiLink Renaissance.
- Eros_(concept) wikiPageWikiLink Resistance_(psychoanalysis).
- Eros_(concept) wikiPageWikiLink Schema_(psychology).
- Eros_(concept) wikiPageWikiLink Sigmund_Freud.
- Eros_(concept) wikiPageWikiLink Sociology.
- Eros_(concept) wikiPageWikiLink Storge.
- Eros_(concept) wikiPageWikiLink Symposium_(Plato).
- Eros_(concept) wikiPageWikiLink The_Fairy-Queen.
- Eros_(concept) wikiPageWikiLink The_Four_Loves.
- Eros_(concept) wikiPageWikiLink Troilus.
- Eros_(concept) wikiPageWikiLink Troubadour.
- Eros_(concept) wikiPageWikiLink Wikt:caritas.
- Eros_(concept) wikiPageWikiLinkText "Eros (concept)".
- Eros_(concept) wikiPageWikiLinkText "Eros (concept)#Eros and Sigmund Freud".
- Eros_(concept) wikiPageWikiLinkText "Eros".
- Eros_(concept) wikiPageWikiLinkText "Marital love".
- Eros_(concept) wikiPageWikiLinkText "ero".
- Eros_(concept) wikiPageWikiLinkText "eros".
- Eros_(concept) wikiPageWikiLinkText "erōs".
- Eros_(concept) wikiPageWikiLinkText "the Eros".
- Eros_(concept) wikiPageWikiLinkText "Éros".
- Eros_(concept) colwidth "20".
- Eros_(concept) small "yes".
- Eros_(concept) wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Anchor.
- Eros_(concept) wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Div_col.
- Eros_(concept) wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Div_col_end.
- Eros_(concept) wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Family.
- Eros_(concept) wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:IPAc-en.
- Eros_(concept) wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Lang-grc.
- Eros_(concept) wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Love_sidebar.
- Eros_(concept) wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Eros_(concept) wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:The_Four_Loves.
- Eros_(concept) subject Category:Energy_and_instincts.
- Eros_(concept) subject Category:Freudian_psychology.
- Eros_(concept) subject Category:Love.
- Eros_(concept) subject Category:Philosophy_of_love.
- Eros_(concept) subject Category:Psychoanalytic_terminology.
- Eros_(concept) hypernym Words.
- Eros_(concept) type School.
- Eros_(concept) type Relationship.
- Eros_(concept) type School.
- Eros_(concept) comment "Eros (/ˈɪrɒs/ or /ˈɛrɒs/; Ancient Greek: ἔρως érōs \"love\" or \"desire\") is one of the four words in Ancient Greek which can be rendered into English as “love”. The other three are storge, philia and agape. Eros refers to “intimate love” or romantic love; storge to familial love; philia to friendship as a kind of love; and agape refers to “selfless love”, or “charity” as it is translated in the Christian scriptures (from the Latin caritas, dearness).The term erotic is derived from eros.".
- Eros_(concept) label "Eros (concept)".