The Best Books on Love — Science, Philosophy, and What They Find

Love is the most written-about and least understood subject in human experience. The scientific literature on it is more interesting than the popular treatment suggests — and the philosophical implications of what it finds reach further than most researchers acknowledge.

The Essential Reading

What each approach actually establishes

Why We Love — Helen Fisher: Brain imaging research showing romantic love activates dopamine circuits similar to addiction. The three distinct systems — lust, attraction, attachment — and their neurochemical basis.
Attached — Levine and Heller: Attachment theory applied to adult relationships. The three attachment styles and their developmental origins. Practically the most useful relationship book currently available.
The Art of Loving — Erich Fromm: Love as an active practice rather than a passive experience. Something done rather than fallen into. Still the most important philosophical treatment of love available.
Hold Me Tight — Sue Johnson: Emotionally Focused Therapy — the attachment-based couples approach with the strongest evidence base.
The Four Loves — C.S. Lewis: The classical distinction between storge, philia, eros, and agape. The most accessible philosophical treatment of love varieties.

The Framework Account

Love as an Operation of the ground — not a feeling that happens to us

The Infinitely Simple framework derives that Love is not an arbitrary attribute of the Necessary Foundation but what the Foundation IS in relational expression. When the creature loves genuinely — not the contracted self-protecting simulation that fear produces but the real thing — it is the Operation of Love expressing through the creature structural correspondence with the Logos.

This is why genuine love is simultaneously the most natural and the most difficult thing a human being can do. Natural because it is what the ground is, expressing through what derives from the ground. Difficult because every layer of subconscious obstruction — fear, shame, self-protection — contracts the channel through which it flows. The practice develops the structural correspondence that allows Love to express more fully. The love that arrives is not manufactured. It is the fruit of what the ground is, moving through a creature whose obstruction has been reduced.

Read the book

Infinitely Simple: The Foundation — nine chapters, first principles, no assumptions. The guided practice applies it to the brain and body. Free on YouTube.