Poging GOUD - Vrij
Why We Cry?
Reader's Digest India
|March 2017
Our tears are far more important than scientists once believed.

There's a lot scientists don’t know—or can’t agree on—about people who do cry. Charles Darwin once declared emotional tears “purposeless”, and nearly 150 years later, emotional crying remains one of the human body’s more confounding mysteries. Though some other species shed tears reflexively as a result of pain or irritation, humans are the only creatures whose tears can be triggered by their feelings. But why?
Researchers have generally focused their attention more on emotions than on physiological processes that appear to be their by-products. “scientists are not interested in the butterflies in our stomach, but in love,” writes ad Vingerhoets, a professor at Tilburg University in the Netherlands and the world’s foremost expert on crying, in his book, Why Only Humans Weep.
But crying is more than a symptom of sadness, as Professor Vingerhoets and others are showing. It’s triggered by a range of feelings—from empathy and surprise to anger and grief—and unlike those butterflies that flap around invisibly when we’re in love, tears are a signal that others can see. That insight is central to the newest thinking about the science of crying.
For centuries, people thought tears originated in the heart. A prevailing theory in the 1600s held that emotions—especially love—heated the heart, which generated water vapour in order to cool itself down. The heart vapour would then rise to the head, condense near the eyes and escape as tears. Finally, in 1662, a Danish scientist named Niels Stensen discovered that the lacrimal gland was the proper origin point of tears. That’s when scientists began to unpack what possible evolutionary benefit could be conferred by fluid that springs from the eye. Stensen’s theory: Tears were simply a way to keep the eye moist.
Dit verhaal komt uit de March 2017-editie van Reader's Digest India.
Abonneer u op Magzter GOLD voor toegang tot duizenden zorgvuldig samengestelde premiumverhalen en meer dan 9000 tijdschriften en kranten.
Bent u al abonnee? Aanmelden
MEER VERHALEN VAN Reader's Digest India

Reader's Digest India
How Cringe Won the Internet
Offbeat, unfiltered, and utterly addictive— India's so-called cringe creators are rewriting what it means to be a digital star
8 mins
August, 2025

Reader's Digest India
QUOTABLE QUOTES
My comfort zone is outside of my comfort zone. I like to be a little uncomfortable. -Billie Eilish, singer
1 min
August, 2025

Reader's Digest India
6 Ways to Make Your Dog Smarter
JUST LIKE HUMANS, a dog's intelligence can be increased through education and training. Well-trained dogs are smarter, better behaved and more fun. In reality, seeming 'smart' often simply reflects 'training' so you'll need to invest time in training and communicating with your dog. These tips will help make your dog a clever canine.
1 mins
August, 2025

Reader's Digest India
LAUGHTER THE BEST Medicine
A man is standing on the curb, ready to cross the street. As he steps down and starts to cross, a car comes screaming around the corner and heads straight at him.
1 mins
August, 2025

Reader's Digest India
POINTS TO PONDER
I LIKE TO MAKE TOMATO SAUCE whenever I return home after a trip, or when I arrive at a vacation home or wherever I'm staying while filming.
1 min
August, 2025

Reader's Digest India
WORLD OF MEDICINE
Many studies have linked health benefits to drinking coffee, but a recent study by scientists at Harvard and Tulane universities found that the benefits are specifically linked to the time of day people drink the brew.
2 mins
August, 2025

Reader's Digest India
One Moment on the TRAIN
A wordless encounter on a local train leaves a lasting imprint that time can’t erase
3 mins
August, 2025

Reader's Digest India
HIS BEST FRIEND WAS A 115-KG WARTHOG ... ONE DAY IT DECIDED TO KILL HIM
He'd come close to dying on multiple occasions, including a few months before his first birthday, when doctors discovered a golf ball-sized tumour growing inside his skull.
11 mins
August, 2025

Reader's Digest India
Valley of Courage
They came to guide tourists, not save lives. But when terror struck Baisaran hill, Pahalgam's pony-wallahs—unarmed, untrained, undeterred—stepped in to the rescue
5 mins
August, 2025

Reader's Digest India
QUEEN of the Lakes
The man who spent years tracking, observing and documenting India's wildlife shares the powerful, personal story of Ranthambhore's most unforgettable tigress
6 mins
August, 2025
Translate
Change font size