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The love expert's Valentine message

Forget monogamy – it's the stuff of soppy poems

February 17, 2011 13:29
You can’t be serious: Prof Ben-Ze’ev and a sceptical Linda Kelsey

By

Jennifer Lipman,

Jennifer Lipman

1 min read

Israel's foremost authority on passion provoked a heated Valentine's Eve debate this week when he told a London crowd that monogamy was old-fashioned and highlighted the similarities between the lyrics of love songs and the comments of murderers.

Professor Aaron Ben-Ze'ev, president of Haifa University and one of the world's only academic experts in emotions, said that as with Communism, there were many victims of "romantic ideology".

Speaking at a British Friends of Haifa University event to raise money for those affected by the Carmel Forest fires, he said: "You see this romantic ideology in films, on TV and in poems - 'we'll be together forever', or 'you are my one and only'.

"People say 'what a great love', but then they look at their lives and see a great difference. They believe there is something better out there, which is not necessarily so. Now is the best and worst time for love, because we have so many choices, but we can't be satisfied with our lot, and this makes us miserable." Questioned on his work by former Cosmopolitan editor Linda Kelsey, Professor Ben-Ze'ev rejected the idea that love could do no evil. The author of several books and papers on the subject, he said he had found parallels between love songs and what was said by men who killed their wives.