Define Love: Chemically

Key Points:
There are three phases to falling in love and different hormones are involved at each stage.

Events occurring in the brain when we are in love have similarities with mental illness.

When we are attracted to somebody, it could be because subconsciously we like their genes.

Smell could be as important as looks when it comes to the fanciability factor. We like the look and smell of people who are most like our parents.

Science can help determine whether a relationship will last .

Cupid’s chemicals:
Flushed cheeks, a racing heart beat and clammy hands are some of the outward signs of being in love. But inside the body there are definite chemical signs that cupid has fired his arrow.
When it comes to love it seems we are at the mercy of our biochemistry. One of the best known researchers in this area is Helen Fisher of Rutgers University in New Jersey. She has proposed that we fall in love in three stages. Each involving a different set of chemicals.

Stage 1: LUST
Lust is driven by the sex hormones testosterone and oestrogen. Testosterone is not confined only to men. It has also been shown to play a major role in the sex drive of women. These hormones as Helen Fisher says “get you out looking for anything”.

Stage 2: ATTRACTION
This is the truly love-struck phase. When people fall in love they can think of nothing else. They might even lose their appetite and need less sleep, preferring to spend hours at a time daydreaming about their new lover.

In the attraction stage, a group of neuro-transmitters called ‘monoamines’ play an important role:

Dopamine - Also activated by cocaine and nicotine.
Norepinephrine - Otherwise known as adrenalin. Starts us sweating and gets the heart racing.

Stage 3: ATTACHMENT
This is what takes over after the attraction stage, if a relationship is going to last. People couldn’t possibly stay in the attraction stage forever, otherwise they’d never get any work done!

Attachment is a longer lasting commitment and is the bond that keeps couples together when they go on to have children. Important in this stage are two hormones released by the nervous system, which are thought to play a role in social attachments:

Oxytocin - This is released by the hypothalamus gland during child birth and also helps the breast express milk. It helps cement the strong bond between mother and child. It is also released by both sexes during orgasm and it is thought that it promotes bonding when adults are intimate. The theory goes that the more sex a couple has, the deeper their bond becomes. (I really like this idea).

Vasopressin - Another important chemical in the long-term commitment stage. It is an important controller of the kidney and its role in long-term relationships was discovered when scientists looked at the prairie vole.

The frisky prairie vole:
In prairie vole society, sex is the prelude to a long-term pair bonding of a male and female. Prairie voles indulge in far more sex than is strictly necessary for the purposes of reproduction.

It was thought that the two hormones, vasopressin and oxytocin, released after mating, could forge this bond. In an experiment, male prairie voles were given a drug that suppresses the effect of vasopressin. The bond with their partner deteriorated immediately as they lost their devotion and failed to protect their partner from new suitors.

It’s long but I learned quite a few things from this.

Re: Define Love: Chemically

So we are controlled by chemicals or is it the other way around. How does morality fit into this picture? Criminals commit crimes because of chemical imbalances as well. !!!

Re: Define Love: Chemically

Love is all to do with the mind.....And you know how easily you can change your mind...Love is therefore over-rated and frivolous!I would like to have a more relevant description for those relationships which survive the torments of time.....Is it compromise...or they are comfortable with each other or is it immense compatability...?Or are they scared to out the relationship? Love is a temporary state....For some it may last 2 weeks others 2 years..eventually it fizzles out and what remains to hold a relationship together? True and permanent love may only found between parent and child! Describe that love please Light Bearer

Re: Define Love: Chemically

read the thread love philosophy.

Re: Define Love: Chemically

another important class of chemicals are the pheromones, which act subconsciously. Moreover, it has been suggested that actually man's sweat is the best attraction for a girl. (=most parfumes are based on such chemicals...)

Re: Define Love: Chemically

^^and it is also known that humans have lost pheromone detecors through evolution from apes....we're not animals like others....that's where morality fits in;)

Re: Define Love: Chemically

i prefer love as love
not chemical watevaa

Re: Define Love: Chemically

We may have lost pheromone detectors but we have developed highly functional optical analyzers!

Re: Define Love: Chemically

I don’t agree that humans have lost it. Current data suggest that, although that organ undergoes regression in embryonic development, it might still be functional in ways we do not fully understand yet. But that doesn’t mean humans have lost the ability

Re: Define Love: Chemically

^ a reference for abovementioned claim:

[quote]

Eur J Obstet Gynecol Reprod Biol. 2005 Feb 1;118(2):135-42.
Grammer K, Fink B, Neave N.

Human pheromones and sexual attraction.
Olfactory communication is very common amongst animals, and since the discovery of an accessory olfactory system in humans, possible human olfactory communication has gained considerable scientific interest. The importance of the human sense of smell has by far been underestimated in the past. Humans and other primates have been regarded as primarily 'optical animals' with highly developed powers of vision but a relatively undeveloped sense of smell. In recent years this assumption has undergone major revision. Several studies indicate that humans indeed seem to use olfactory communication and are even able to produce and perceive certain pheromones; recent studies have found that pheromones may play an important role in the behavioural and reproduction biology of humans. In this article we review the present evidence of the effect of human pheromones and discuss the role of olfactory cues in human sexual behaviour.
[/quote]

Re: Define Love: Chemically

second nature