Many philosophers describe love as "work of art", but what is love for real? This discussion focuses on all the different forms of love, which is presented in the classical Greek typology. Using the Greek terms: Eros, this concerns our desire for pleasure, particularly the pleasure associated with our bodily desires for sex and food. If it feels good, it is good.
Philip refers too friendship love like brotherly where people act with one another with kindness and showing honor. Agape is divided in two parts, Divine love; a love that humans feel towards God. Altruism Love, defines the love among humans for one another. In Agape the love exist first then the value.
This meaner in other words that, someone would love the other person, without any reason. It is a sort of a selfless love of one person for another without sexual implications.Coble has discovered that there is more than one kind of love, and states that each love has its own meaning in their own particularly way and therefore divides it into two categories, a-type love and e-type love. E-type love mostly consists of Eros, and here the value exists first then the love. For example, a guy would love a girl because of her sexual appearance and her good looks, and not because of her intelligence or a friendly attitude.
Coble illustrates this by explaining that in an e-type love we choose to love the beauty, because this bodily beauty arouses sexual desire, which eventually gives us a great pleasure. A-type love is the opposite of e-type love, and therefore, refers to Agape in which people don't love other people for their superficial properties, (beauty, wealth, power) but for their significant properties (grace, honesty, moral virtue). Proponents of a-type love reflect its better to love without a motive, the way God's love for humans is due to his nature.