Ví dụ về việc sử dụng Philia trong Tiếng anh và bản dịch của chúng sang Tiếng việt
{-}
-
Colloquial
-
Ecclesiastic
-
Computer
Philia- is friendship.
Friendly love is philia.
Philia is the friendship.
Word friendship is philia.
Philia- Love of Friends.
The Greeks called it philia.
Philia is the love of friends.
This is usually called as‘Philia'.
Philia(the love between friends).
The third Greek word for love is Philia.
Philia- The love of friendship.
So, moving from the base to the pure, we have eros, storge, philia, and agapé.
Philia is the love between friends.
Aristotle probably is wrong when hesays that the possibility of community is created by Philia.
Philia- The love of friendship.
The just price, then, derives from the demands of philia as expressed in the reciprocity which is of the essence of all human community….
Philia is motivated by practical reasons;
But when we talk of loving those who oppose you andthose who seek to defeat you we are not talking about eros or philia.
Philia is love for our friends.
According to Aristotle if thousands and millions of people live together, speak the same language, foster the same traditions-all of these are the magic of the presence of goddess Philia.
Philia is the love between good friends.
Amphiphile(from the Greek αμφις, amphis: both and φιλíα, philia: love, friendship) is a term describing a chemical compound possessing both hydrophilic(water-loving, polar) and lipophilic(fat-loving) properties.
Philia means friendship, but this friendship is not an idea.
In the first the Pope proposes a theological-philosophical reflection on in its various dimensions-eros, philia, agape- explaining the essential traits of God's love for man and the intrinsic connection between this love and human love.
Another kind of philia, sometimes called storge, primarily to do with kinship and familiarity, embodied the love between parents and their children.
First there is Philia, and all the rest are her gifts.
Philia( philía), a dispassionate virtuous love, was a concept addressed and developed by Aristotle in his Nicomachean Ethics Book VIII.
But there is no Philia in the nature or society or love or hospitality.
She played Philia, a beautiful virgin concubine from the house of procurer Marcus Lycus(Phil Silvers) in the 1966 film version of the Broadway musical A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum.