In Sternberg's theory, the concept of love is a triangle that is made up of three components. Some of these components are focused on the love between two people in a romantic or sexual relationship, but they also apply to other forms ofinterpersonal relationships. The three components of lo...
This article seeks to explain this finding using qualitative data from an earlier study exploring how people who engage in forms of consensual non-monogamy define love and relationships.doi:10.1007/s12119-023-10092-0N. BraidaE. MattaL. Paccagnella...
Sternberg has experience performing in classical ensembles and teaching a wide range of instruments—they studied jazz at the New School on full scholarship—but their music seeks a more pared-down, intuitive path. They strike a delicate balance between timeless forms of music—folk, gospel, the ...
combines personal life experiences with literary, musical, or art historical references into visual, ironic commentaries in various media. The installative total context of his exhibitions forms narrative contexts between the individual pieces that lead to the viewer to a fantastic world of associations...
Sternberger argues that at least until the end of the eighteenth century all forms of patriotism were constitutional patriotisms 鈥 understood as the love of laws and general freedoms. For Sternberger, the constitution is the homeland of citizens. J眉rgen Habermas has ...
Sternberg. Sternberg argued that love has three emotional components: intimacy, passion, and decision or commitment. Familiar forms or experiences of love can be understood to consist of a single component, different combinations of two components, or all three components. For example, the love ...