HomeNewsHealth & FitnessHeart function: Ancients instinctively understood what neurocardiology is confirming now

Heart function: Ancients instinctively understood what neurocardiology is confirming now

The heart is sending as many signals to the brain as the brain does to the heart. And the signals from the heart affect function in multiple parts of the brain including the amygdala, the emotional centre of the brain.

December 24, 2023 / 11:36 IST
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The role of the heart in human society and culture has taken many curious turns. (Photo by Oleksandr P via Pexels)
The role of the heart in human society and culture has taken many curious turns. (Photo by Oleksandr P via Pexels)

For many, the heart is nothing more than a blood pump directed by the brain. But for others, the heart is the repository of love, emotions, and memories.

Trace the evolution of our understanding of the heart, and it's impossible to miss the significance of the heart in art, culture, religion, and science from prehistoric times, through ancient societies, the European Middle Ages and Renaissance, into modern times.

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How the heart really works is just as interesting as its many meanings in our emotional and daily lives, and what cutting edge science is teaching us about this remarkable organ.

Ancient humans understood that a beating heart meant life, beating harder and faster with fear and love, and beating no more upon death. As a dead body quickly cooled, surely the heart must act as a furnace to warm the body. The heart had to be the home of emotions in our body, given its responses to love and joy, anger and fear. This hot beating organ in the middle of our body must be the location of consciousness, memory, and our soul. Surely the way to connect with God was through one’s heart.