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...I'm just going to post my 2 cents and retreat hastily from this thread, too slippery for my taste.
I'm againts polygamous relationships personally - the sense of exclusivity is one of the core elements of "loving someone", not a by-product. Polygamy is perfectly fine when in the context of purely biological levels of attraction, however it doesn't pass the test of emotional commitment, at least not up to my standards. For me, to love someone is "to adore", it's not something that passes with time. I accept the fact that love that's experienced by the senses is a by-product of a chemical balance etc. however there's also a mental component to it which very well may be unaffected by the flow of time.
To adore is to painstakingly select the other half of the apple, it's choosing one specimen which, in your opinion, is the ultimate and "completes you" in a manner of speaking. When I "fall in love" I practically stop noticing other females because I'm far too occupied with the one I have in my heart. I wouldn't be physically capable of loving more then one person at a time because when I love, it's not a feeling that can be subject to gradation - I either love one particular person or I don't.
What I'm trying to say is that to me, love not only implies exclusivity - exclusivity is explicit in my relationships. If I "love" someone and suddenly "fall in love" with someone else it means that I merely didn't truly love in the first place. Were I to love someone, I would not look for thrills elsewhere.
Now, should it be legalized? Sure, if people want to engage in polygamous relationships, why not? I personally wouldn't be a part of one though, that's for sure. For me, true love is exclusive between two partners, physical attraction can apply to numerous partners. If I am to be loved, I want to be "the only one".
I'm againts polygamous relationships personally - the sense of exclusivity is one of the core elements of "loving someone", not a by-product. Polygamy is perfectly fine when in the context of purely biological levels of attraction, however it doesn't pass the test of emotional commitment, at least not up to my standards. For me, to love someone is "to adore", it's not something that passes with time. I accept the fact that love that's experienced by the senses is a by-product of a chemical balance etc. however there's also a mental component to it which very well may be unaffected by the flow of time.
To adore is to painstakingly select the other half of the apple, it's choosing one specimen which, in your opinion, is the ultimate and "completes you" in a manner of speaking. When I "fall in love" I practically stop noticing other females because I'm far too occupied with the one I have in my heart. I wouldn't be physically capable of loving more then one person at a time because when I love, it's not a feeling that can be subject to gradation - I either love one particular person or I don't.
What I'm trying to say is that to me, love not only implies exclusivity - exclusivity is explicit in my relationships. If I "love" someone and suddenly "fall in love" with someone else it means that I merely didn't truly love in the first place. Were I to love someone, I would not look for thrills elsewhere.
Now, should it be legalized? Sure, if people want to engage in polygamous relationships, why not? I personally wouldn't be a part of one though, that's for sure. For me, true love is exclusive between two partners, physical attraction can apply to numerous partners. If I am to be loved, I want to be "the only one".







