Saturday, December 15, 2012

The Thing About Laughter



The thing about laughter is that it brings back joyfulness. Dramatic impressions are not easily forgotten, so when someone can make us laugh, we naturally delight in their being able to do so.

Immanuel Kant counted laughter among the "Emotions by which Nature Mechanically Strengthens Health" in chapter 79 of the Anthropology. Kant writes on the therapeutic powers of laughter:

Good-humored (not malicious and bitter) laughing is, however, more highly esteemed and more beneficial...It may be a hired jester...who makes us laugh or a cunning knave among our friends who seems to have nothing mischievous on his mind. Waiting for his moment, he does not laugh with the others, but then with apparent innocence he suddenly makes his crack (like a taut string). The resulting laughter is always an exercise of muscles which are used for digestion. Laughing helps digestion better than the wisdom of the physician."







Medically speaking, laughing is one of several abnormal forms of respiration like sneezing, crying, and yawning. Mechanically it is produced by a series of short expiratory blasts which provoke a clear sound from the vocal chords and cause at the same time other inarticulate but nevertheless characteristic sounds from the vibrating structures of the larynx and pharynx. The face shows a characteristic expression that is essentially involuntary and often beyond control, but is generally interpreted as a friendly gesture. It can only be imitated imperfectly.

Analecta Husserliana, Vol. LVI,  257.




We can all spot a fake smile, we can feel in our 'gut' what fake laughter sounds like, and we seem to instinctively know when someone is holding back. 

But an individual endowed with humorous dexterity and timing doesn't hold back. They expose nonsense and faulty reasoning; they can see right through to the gist of a situation and when they take us along on this journey, we sit back, relax, laugh and enjoy the ride. 


"The most exciting phrase to hear in science, the one that heralds the most discoveries, is not Eureka! (I found it!) but 'That's funny..."
Issac Asimov






I cannot formulate an expression using tangible words from any language that would even begin to express just how deeply saddened I am by yesterday's tragic events. I suppose the fact that I still tried to post something today is a testament to my belief in the transformative power in making others feel good. 


































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