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self-love
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English Dictionary: self-love by the DICT Development Group
2 results for self-love
From WordNet (r) 3.0 (2006) [wn]:
self-love
n
  1. feelings of excessive pride [syn: amour propre, conceit, self-love, vanity]
  2. an exceptional interest in and admiration for yourself; "self-love that shut out everyone else"
    Synonym(s): self-love, narcism, narcissism
From Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913) [web1913]:
   Self-love \Self`-love`\, n.
      The love of one's self; desire of personal happiness;
      tendency to seek one's own benefit or advantage. --Shak.
  
               Self-love, the spring of motion, acts the soul. --Pope.
  
      Syn: Selfishness.
  
      Usage: {Self-love}, {Selfishness}. The term self-love is used
                  in a twofold sense: 1. It denotes that longing for
                  good or for well-being which actuates the breasts of
                  all, entering into and characterizing every special
                  desire. In this sense it has no moral quality, being,
                  from the nature of the case, neither good nor evil. 2.
                  It is applied to a voluntary regard for the
                  gratification of special desires. In this sense it is
                  morally good or bad according as these desires are
                  conformed to duty or opposed to it. Selfishness is
                  always voluntary and always wrong, being that regard
                  to our own interests, gratification, etc., which is
                  sought or indulged at the expense, and to the injury,
                  of others. [bd]So long as self-love does not
                  degenerate into selfishness, it is quite compatible
                  with true benevolence.[b8] --Fleming. [bd]Not only is
                  the phrase self-love used as synonymous with the
                  desire of happiness, but it is often confounded with
                  the word selfishness, which certainly, in strict
                  propriety, denotes a very different disposition of
                  mind.[b8] --Slewart.
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