In religious texts such as the Bible, the heart has historically been ascribed much mystical significance, either as metaphor or as an organ genuinely believed to have spiritual or divine attributes.
In the Bible, this idea emerges in the earliest passages; Genesis 6:5 situates the thoughts of evil men in their hearts, and Exodus 5 through 12 speak repeatedly of the Lord "hardening Pharaoh's heart." By this it is meant that God made Pharaoh resolve not to let the Israelite slaves leave Egypt, in order to bring judgment against Pharaoh and demonstrate his power: "'Go to Pharaoh, for I have hardened his heart and the hearts of his officials so that I may perform these miraculous signs of mine among them'" (Exodus 10:1). In the Book of Jeremiah 17:9, it is written that the "heart is deceitful above all things, and desperately wicked," and that the Lord is the judge who "tries" the human heart.
The Sacred Heart of Jesus and the Immaculate Heart of Mary are traditional Roman Catholic devotional images.
Similarly, in Egyptian mythology, the heart was weighed in a balance against the feather of Ma'at, symbolising truth, in the judgment of the dead in the Egyptian Book of the Dead. Egyptian sources do not actually reveal whether the heart had to be lighter or heavier than the feather for the deceased to pass into paradise - all depictions show only the weighing of the heart, not the actual results, heavier or lighter. (See also Egyptian soul).
Many classical and medieval philosophers and scientists, including Aristotle, considered the heart the seat of thought, reason or emotion, often rejecting the value of the brain.
The Roman physician Galen located the seat of the passions in the liver, the seat of reason in the brain, and considered the heart to be the seat of the emotions. While Galen's identification of the heart with emotion were proposed as a part of his theory of the circulatory system, the heart has continued to be used as a symbolic source of human emotions even after the rejection of such beliefs.
The Stoics taught that the heart was the seat of the human soul.
In European traditional art and folklore, the heart symbol is drawn in a stylized shape. This shape is typically colored red, suggesting both blood and, in many cultures, passion and strong emotion. The hearts and the diamonds are the two red suits in most playing card decks. The shape is particularly associated with romantic poetry; it is often seen on St. Valentine's Day cards, candy boxes, and similar popular culture artifacts as a symbol of romantic love.
What the traditional "heart shape" actually depicts is a matter of some controversy. It only vaguely resembles the human heart. Some people claim that it actually depicts the heart of a cow, a more readily available sight to most people in past centuries than an actual human heart. However, while bovine hearts are more similar to the iconic heart shape, the resemblance is still slight. The shape does resemble that of the three-chambered heart of the turtle, and that of the human male prostate gland, but it is very unlikely that the image was patterned after either of these organs.
The "heart" shape could also be considered to depict features of the human female body, such as the female's pubic mound or spread vulva. A Sumerian cuneiform symbol for "woman" closely resembles the heart shape, and is believed to directly depict the pubic mound. The tantric symbol of the "Yoni" is another example of a heart-shaped abstraction of a woman's vulva. In fact, the symmetry resembles the vulva far more than the asymmetry of the organ. In the introduction to the Vagina Monologues Gloria Steinem writes, "[The heart] was reduced from power to romance by centuries of male dominance."
Others maintain that the heart resembles the shape of the female breasts or the female buttocks.
2007-09-10 08:40:48
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Who Invented The Heart Shape
2016-11-16 12:03:25
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answer #2
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answered by ? 4
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This Site Might Help You.
RE:
Who invented the ♥ symbol?
Who invented the ♥ symbol?
The actual shape and look of the human heart looks nothing like it. What is the background on the ♥ symbol / shape and who is credited as it's creator?
2015-08-06 19:53:55
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answer #3
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answered by Dulcie 1
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The heart (♥) has long been used as a symbol to refer to the spiritual, emotional, moral, and in the past also intellectual core of a human being. As the heart was once widely believed to be the seat of the human mind, the word heart continues to be used poetically to refer to the soul, and stylized depictions of hearts are extremely prevalent symbols representing love. However, more realistic depictions of human hearts tend to have macabre connotations of death and violence, quite unlike the concepts associated with the poetic and symbolic heart. This discrepancy is a common source of dark humor.
2007-09-10 08:30:52
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answer #4
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answered by bobdaMoFobuildr 3
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The Catholic church claims that the symbol of the heart (Sacred Heart) began when Saint Margaret Marie Alacoque had a vision in the late 17th century. She saw a heart shape surrounded by a crown of thorns.
2007-09-10 08:30:27
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answer #5
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answered by hispregnantwife! 3
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Cupid the God of love and I am Cupida the Goddess of Good Loving lol
2007-09-18 07:44:05
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answer #6
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answered by Ms Durr 3
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Hmm.......good question.I think it's one of those unsolved mysteries.BTW,we have a heart model sitting on our dining room table........Dad's a cardiac-something-another.
2007-09-10 08:38:08
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answer #7
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answered by MidnightWaker 2
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--->> Tips---> https://trimurl.im/h12/who-invented-the-symbol
2015-08-04 17:24:09
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answer #8
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answered by Lyda 1
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Great question. Have often wondered that myself. will be checking all answers.
2007-09-17 09:50:39
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answer #9
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answered by Aloha_Ann 7
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I did .
2007-09-10 08:45:08
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answer #10
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answered by superwoman 1
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