Pig: "Eros is two-sided... evident in the argument between body and soul. Am I just a victim of hubris pierced, mocked, and dishonored, by you?"
"In my own openness, you remain a stone. I, the soul of us, am smitten in the estrangement of passing moments, and changes occurring at all times to our body. I quote Diotima who concedes... 'before preparing a method of ascent, that could remedy the problems -- souls with their thoughts, feelings, and desires, are no more stable than bodies.'"
"A certain kind of self-critique, perception of our cracks and holes, seepage's that makes us comic poetry, and somehow we salvage our self."
Cow: "You do go on, Porcine, like a comic poet of your own disaster."
(Solomon, R. C., paraphrased, 1991)
Reference
Solomon, R. C. and Higgins, Kathleen M. editors. (1991) Philosophy of erotic love, the; University Press of Kansas, USA, p 308-9
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