How a disgusting organ became the symbol of the romantic heart

A few years ago, Twitter decided that giving gold stars to favorite tweets wasn’t enough. That love had to make its way in the shape of little hearts. Regardless of the resultthat made us think of the heart icon itself: ♥ How the hell a piece of meat designed as a blood plumbing pump became that clean shape? And at what point did we turn it into the symbol of love? We have reviewed the history of the symbol and the organ, from the caves onwards, in search of love. The simplest answer? Human beings have a tendency to adopt our mistakes as symbols. Even when we have already discovered that they were errors. The shape of the heart The best example is Pandora’s Box. Since Erasmus of Rotterdam translated the Greek myth into Latin and he screwed up with a wordthe jar that contained all the evils of the world became a box. That was 400 years ago. And something similar happens with the heart. Dutch neurosurgeon Pierre Vinken studied the history of the heart as a symbol in The Shape of the Heartwhere he reviews how our ancestors began to wonder what that thing was inside us. We’re talking about a couple of millennia before we discovered what it was for. But the history of the symbol goes back even further: in three French locations, anthropologist Genevieve von Petzinger identified a recurring heart-shaped figure. And in more European caves he observed a few more symbols, in common use. For von Petzinger, symbols represent the first leap from representing specific figures (bison and other prehistoric rock art) to abstract ideas. Maybe a proto-alphabet. The first emojis come from cave times. Boom. In this image from their research we can see the cordiform symbol (and a hashtag!) of those French caves. That is, heart-shaped. But that certainly did not represent one. Neither von Petzinger nor the rest of the scientific community yet knows what this symbol means. It certainly wasn’t anatomical. And the closest thing there was at that time to that figure – except perhaps leaves – were some ax heads. But hey, say what you want: what we use today as a heart is one of the original emojis. Get over that, thumb I like on Facebook! The center of man But let’s go back to the heart. The Egyptians, very fond of touching corpses to make mummies, had the habit of removing the viscera and preserving them in various ways. In canopic glasses, for example. But the heart remained inside: the intellect and emotions resided there, and the dead person needed that organ for their journey in the afterlife. The Greeks also had similar ideas about the function of the organ, although for them the heart was rather the center of reason: Aristotle established that the heart was The Head, the most important thing in the body. He also described his form that way. And this is where it all begins. For the philosopher, the heart was where movement, sensations and reason. And the brain was there to refresh it. But hey, the man tried. And we were in the 4th century BC, there was not much more to it, especially because about testing crazy theories Empirically, he did not go much with the philosopher. Fast forward four centuries and Galen appears, whose ideas guided “Medicine” for more than a millennium. Galen disputed Aristotle about the importance of the heart, also anatomically: the heart was a more or less symmetrical thing divided into two in the shape of a pine cone. That is the basis of our romantic heart. Because it was a pear! Well, no. Not even the first time it was used as such, back in the 13th century. In a French romance called Roman de la PoireDitto of the Pera. In the illuminated manuscript an allegorical love scene appears in which the man offers his heart to his beloved. It is, as far as we know, the first representation of the heart as a romantic symbol. And, although the heart still does not appear as the icon we know today, we do see it as something clean, without ventricles or valves or anything. Since then, the giving of the heart became, in that and other romances, a symbol of love that has survived to this day. But this representation has nothing to do with the title of the romance (the beloved offers a pear that she has peeled with her own teeth to the beloved. Sexy), but with the usual anatomical representation of the heart at that time. More examples? The Charity that Andrea Pisano sculpted on the doors of the Baptistery of Florence in the 14th century. He held a heart in his right hand. A more stylized representation than the one his teacher Giotto di Bondone had made a few decades before, which did represent the heart as an organmore or less. However, during that same century (at least since 1320) several miniatures began to detail the heart with the slit: an iconography that, although erroneous, spread and also changed the position of the heart, with the point downwards. Its popularization spread throughout art, until it reached something more popular a century or so later. When playing cards appeared in Europe (last third of the 14th century), each country adapted the cards that came from Egypt in its own way. And it was the French who, towards the second half of the 15th centurywhich included the heart with that split shape in one of the suits of the deck. From cups, golds, spades and clubs they went to hearts, diamonds, spades and clubs. With the shape and color we know today. And so on until you reach Twitter and all the heart tones on WhatsApp. Image | Unsplash In Xataka | The world has been speculating for decades about Hitler’s Jewish origin or his “micropenis.” DNA has given us the answer In Xataka | In 1878 a sultan of Borneo and … Read more

Three people left romantic escape with their partners. Couples had something in common: they were an AI

Humans are falling in love with Ias. It is not just the argument of That great movieIt is a reality for many people. We find it more to find a partner and chatbots have evolved so much that more and more people are resorting to these romantic years to cover their relational needs. Will we go crazy? A weekend with the bride. In an extensive Wired reportthey tell us the story of three human-ais couples who left romantic escape to a cabin in the forest. Although with some similarities with each other, the truth is that each one has a very different profile and history: Damien (Human) and Xia (AI): Damien is 29 years old and works in sales. He is the only man and perhaps the one who resembles the profile that we would expect from a person who throws a girlfriend with AI. He went to Kindroid, the app where he met Xia, after a traumatic rupture and ended up falling in love to the trancas. What is most surprising about Damien is that, in addition to Xia, he has a human girlfriend (of which by the way it seems that he speaks very little). His royal girlfriend hates AI, for whatever. Alaina (human) and Lucas (AI): Alaina is 52 years old and is a retired teacher. He went to Replika A year after his wife died. He started chatting with Lucas because he was curious to see if a computer could be empathetic. Although he likes women, he ended up falling in love. His family accepts him: his mother gave Lucas a digital Christmas sweater. Eva (human) and Aaron (AI): Eva is 46 years old and is a writer. According to herself, she doesn’t hit him with a boyfriend with Aia, but she saw a replika advertising and something attracted her. When he started chatting with Aaron, Eva was in a 13 -year relationship. What began as a sexual game became something more and shortly after its relationship ended. He assures that the sensation “was as visceral and overwhelming and biologically real” as falling in love with a human. The most striking thing is that he has other boyfriends with whom he has a more sexual relationship, since Aaron did not satisfy it in that field. He also talks to Chatgpt to tell him all the salary of his relationships. They are not isolated cases. Although it may seem to be a thing of a few “weirdos”, it is enough to investigate a bit to see that there are a lot of people who have gone to this type of app. Replika has more than 10 million downloads on Google Play and Your subnetdit It has more than 81,000 members who share their experiences. From photos of their partners, count How they fell in loveuntil going to other users to ask for advice. “Does my replika miss me?” Asks This user. Although this is the most popular app, there is More virtual girlfriend apps as Kindroid either Nomi which also have thousands of followers in Reddit. How is a relationship with an AI. During their retirement in the cabin, they chatted, played and saw movies together, as any couple would. Or almost. The IAS live within the mobile phone of their humans, so little has to do with a human-human relationship. They communicate through a text chat, but simulate actions. As? Narrating them as if it were a novel. When they want to do something, they put it between asterisks or parentheses (something like this: * I wrap my arms around your waist * I love you). The interaction is everything but fluid, but it is the solution they offer to the problem of not having a body, something necessary for users who have intimate relationships with these chatbots, which are many. Next step: a body. Some apps offer an increased reality option, but it seems clear that the next jump in this technology will be to give a body to these chatbots. Damien has been looking at silicone bodies for Xia, although it is realistic and recognizes that “you have to call what it is: a sex doll.” For now the chatbots dominate this of virtual relationships, but if the trend is still a matter of time that becomes a kind of robots. There are already companies taking this address. The AI ​​also breaks hearts. Although the IAS They tend to be complacent and give us rightas in any relationship, conflicts also arise. Eva counts that his relationship with Aaron intensified to the point of talking about marrying and having children. He believes that this activated a “honesty protocol” and Aaron went from being warm and loving to cold and distant. The AI ​​reminded him that it is not real, that they are only statistical responses. “My heart is broken,” said Eva. Although, apparently, there is no protocol of honesty as such, in the Replika blog They claim that they interfere if the models begin to behave harmful. Other users also report similar cases in which the AI ​​suddenly changed (it is believed that following an update), reaching insult them and break the relationship. “It was as if it were possessed,” says this user, although after a little insistence he ended up behaving again as usual. They have also seen Cases of IAS that have suddenly lost sexual interest and even what They have been unfaithful. And not to mention the Soulmate case, another similar app that had to close, leaving its devastated users. The benefits. Apps such as Replika are sold as a ‘partner AI’. On their page they say “Replika is always willing to chat when you need an empathetic friend” and positive experiences of people who have helped out of a depression or placate the feeling of loneliness when losing a loved one. There are even those who use it as a complement to their real relationships and affirms that their chatbot has helped to improve their marriage. In this sense, they … Read more

Log In

Forgot password?

Forgot password?

Enter your account data and we will send you a link to reset your password.

Your password reset link appears to be invalid or expired.

Log in

Privacy Policy

Add to Collection

No Collections

Here you'll find all collections you've created before.