Claire Marin, Philosopher of Intimacy. Celine Nissaver
INTERVIEW – Our capacity for wonder does not dry up in our lifetime. There are always opportunities. In the beginnings The Philosopher of Intimacy questions the power of first times and invites us to never let go of the momentum of the beginning.
Exciting in his new essay the beginningsClaire Marin explores our attachment to first times: the first kiss, the first love, the first trip… break(s) and D’To be in his place I wonder about the allure that beginnings evoke, their elusiveness, what they reveal about our relationship to life and death. Beginnings can be imperceptible (we often see them in hindsight), misleading (we think we are starting a great story that will eventually fail, and vice versa), but also self-sufficient (the beauty of some discoveries, a. being, an object, the place is precisely because they don’t last and remain unfinished: love will last a night and we won’t settle in Kyoto as we dreamed…), and maybe it’s better that way. An interview with a philosopher for whom it’s never too late to start (again).
In the video: 6 pillars of sexually satisfied couples
Madame Figaro . – Becoming a parent is a perfect beginning. Into what, exactly?
Source: Le Figaro
