Phrenology
Part of a series on |
Alternative medicine |
---|
Phrenology or craniology[citation needed] (from Ancient Greek φρήν (phrēn) 'mind' and λόγος (logos) 'knowledge') is a pseudoscience that involves the measurement of bumps on the skull to predict mental traits.[1][2] It is based on the concept that the brain is the organ of the mind, and that certain brain areas have localized, specific functions or modules.[3] It was said that the brain was composed of different muscles, so those that were used more often were bigger, resulting in the different skull shapes. This provided reasoning for the common presence of bumps on the skull in different locations. The brain "muscles" not being used as frequently remained small and were therefore not present on the exterior of the skull. Although both of those ideas have a basis in reality, phrenology generalizes beyond empirical knowledge in a way that departs from science.[1][4] The central phrenological notion that measuring the contour of the skull can predict personality traits is discredited by empirical research.[5] Developed by German physician Franz Joseph Gall in 1796,[6] the discipline was influential in the 19th century, especially from about 1810 until 1840. The principal British centre for phrenology was Edinburgh, where the Edinburgh Phrenological Society was established in 1820.
Phrenology is today recognized as pseudoscientific.[1][2][7] The methodological rigor of phrenology was doubtful even for the standards of its time, since many authors already regarded phrenology as pseudoscience in the 19th century.[8] There have been various studies conducted that discredited phrenology, most of which were done with ablation techniques. Marie-Jean-Pierre Flourens demonstrated through ablation that the cerebrum and cerebellum accomplish different functions. He found that the impacted areas never carried out the functions that were proposed through phrenology. Paul Broca also discredited the idea when he discovered and named the "Broca's area". The patient's ability to produce language was lost while their ability to understand language remained intact. Through an autopsy examining their brains, he found that there was damage to the left frontal lobe. He concluded that this area of the brain was responsible for language production. Between Flourens and Broca, the claims to support phrenology were dismantled. Phrenological thinking was influential in the psychiatry and psychology of the 19th century. Gall's assumption that character, thoughts, and emotions are located in specific areas of the brain is considered an important historical advance toward neuropsychology.[9][10] He contributed to the idea that the brain is spatially organized, but not in the way he proposed. There is a clear division of labor in the brain but none of which even remotely correlates to the size of the head or the structure of the skull. While it contributed to some advancements in understanding the brain and its functions, skepticism of phrenology developed over time.
While phrenology itself has long been discredited, the study of the inner surface of the skulls of archaic human species allows modern researchers to obtain information about the development of various areas of the brains of those species, and thereby infer something about their cognitive and communicative abilities,[11] and possibly even something about their social life.[12] Due to its limitations, this technique is sometimes criticized as "paleo-phrenology".[12]
Mental faculties
[edit]Phrenologists believe that the human mind has a set of various mental faculties, each one represented in a different area of the brain. For example, the faculty of "philoprogenitiveness", from the Greek for "love of offspring", was located centrally at the back of the head (see illustration of the chart from Webster's Academic Dictionary).
These areas were said to be proportional to a person's propensities. The importance of an organ was derived from relative size compared to other organs. It was believed that the cranial skull—like a glove on the hand—accommodates to the different sizes of these areas of the brain, so that a person's capacity for a given personality trait could be determined simply by measuring the area of the skull that overlies the corresponding area of the brain.
Phrenology, which focuses on personality and character, is distinct from craniometry, which is the study of skull size, weight and shape, and physiognomy, the study of facial features.
Method
[edit]Phrenology is a process that involves observing and/or feeling the skull to determine an individual's psychological attributes. Franz Joseph Gall believed that the brain was made up of 27 individual organs that determined personality, the first 19 of these "organs" he believed to exist in other animal species. Phrenologists would run their fingertips and palms over the skulls of their patients to feel for enlargements or indentations.[13] The phrenologist would often take measurements with a tape measure of the overall head size and more rarely employ a craniometer, a special version of a caliper. In general, instruments to measure sizes of cranium continued to be used after the mainstream phrenology had ended. The phrenologists put emphasis on using drawings of individuals with particular traits, to determine the character of the person and thus many phrenology books show pictures of subjects. From absolute and relative sizes of the skull the phrenologist would assess the character and temperament of the patient.
Gall's list of the "brain organs" was specific. An enlarged organ meant that the patient used that particular "organ" extensively. The number—and more detailed meanings—of organs were added later by other phrenologists. The 27 areas varied in function, from sense of color, to religiosity, to being combative or destructive. Each of the 27 "brain organs" was located under a specific area of the skull. As a phrenologist felt the skull, he would use his knowledge of the shapes of heads and organ positions to determine the overall natural strengths and weaknesses of an individual. Phrenologists believed the head revealed natural tendencies but not absolute limitations or strengths of character. The first phrenological chart gave the names of the organs described by Gall; it was a single sheet, and sold for a cent. Later charts were more expansive.[14]
History
[edit]Among the first to identify the brain as the major controlling center for the body were Hippocrates and his followers, inaugurating a major change in thinking from Egyptian, biblical and early Greek views, which based bodily primacy of control on the heart.[15] This belief was supported by the Greek physician Galen, who concluded that mental activity occurred in the brain rather than the heart, contending that the brain, a cold, moist organ formed of sperm, was the seat of the animal soul—one of three "souls" found in the body, each associated with a principal organ.[16]
The Swiss pastor Johann Kaspar Lavater (1741–1801) introduced the idea that physiognomy related to the specific character traits of individuals, rather than general types, in his Physiognomische Fragmente, published between 1775 and 1778.[17] His work was translated into English and published in 1832 as The Pocket Lavater, or, The Science of Physiognomy.[18] He believed that thoughts of the mind and passions of the soul were connected with an individual's external frame.
Of the forehead, When the forehead is perfectly perpendicular, from the hair to the eyebrows, it denotes an utter deficiency of understanding. (p. 24)
In 1796 the German physician Franz Joseph Gall (1758–1828) began lecturing on organology: the isolation of mental faculties[19] and later cranioscopy which involved reading the skull's shape as it pertained to the individual. It was Gall's collaborator Johann Gaspar Spurzheim who would popularize the term "phrenology".[19][20]
In 1809 Gall began writing his principal[21] work, The Anatomy and Physiology of the Nervous System in General, and of the Brain in Particular, with Observations upon the possibility of ascertaining the several Intellectual and Moral Dispositions of Man and Animal, by the configuration of their Heads. It was not published until 1819. In the introduction to this main work, Gall makes the following statement in regard to his doctrinal principles, which comprise the intellectual basis of phrenology:[22]
- The Brain is the organ of the mind
- The brain is not a homogenous unity, but an aggregate of mental organs with specific functions
- The cerebral organs are topographically localized
- Other things being equal, the relative size of any particular mental organ is indicative of the power or strength of that organ
- Since the skull ossifies over the brain during infant development, external craniological means could be used to diagnose the internal states of the mental characters
Through careful observation and extensive experimentation, Gall believed he had established a relationship between aspects of character, called faculties, with precise organs in the brain.
Johann Spurzheim was Gall's most important collaborator. He worked as Gall's anatomist until 1813 when for unknown reasons they had a permanent falling out.[19] Publishing under his own name Spurzheim successfully disseminated phrenology throughout the United Kingdom during his lecture tours through 1814 and 1815[23] and the United States in 1832 where he would eventually die.[24]
Gall was more concerned with creating a physical science, so it was through Spurzheim that phrenology was first spread throughout Europe and America.[19] Phrenology, while not universally accepted, was hardly a fringe phenomenon of the era. George Combe would become the chief promoter of phrenology throughout the English-speaking world after he viewed a brain dissection by Spurzheim, convincing him of phrenology's merits.
The popularization of phrenology in the middle and working classes was due in part to the idea that scientific knowledge was important and an indication of sophistication and modernity.[25] Cheap and plentiful pamphlets, as well as the growing popularity of scientific lectures as entertainment, also helped spread phrenology to the masses. Combe created a system of philosophy of the human mind[26] that became popular with the masses because of its simplified principles and wide range of social applications that were in harmony with the liberal Victorian world view.[23] George Combe's book On the Constitution of Man and its Relationship to External Objects sold more than 200,000 copies through nine editions.[27] Combe also devoted a large portion of his book to reconciling religion and phrenology, which had long been a sticking point. Another reason for its popularity was that phrenology balanced between free will and determinism.[28] A person's inherent faculties were clear, and no faculty was viewed as evil, though the abuse of a faculty was. Phrenology allowed for self-improvement and upward mobility, while providing fodder for attacks on aristocratic privilege.[28][29] Phrenology also had wide appeal because of its being a reformist philosophy not a radical one.[30] Phrenology was not limited to the common people, and both Queen Victoria and Prince Albert invited George Combe to read the heads of their children.[31]
The American brothers Lorenzo Niles Fowler (1811–1896) and Orson Squire Fowler (1809–1887) were leading phrenologists of their time. Orson, together with associates Samuel Robert Wells and Nelson Sizer, ran the phrenological business and publishing house Fowlers & Wells in New York City. Meanwhile, Lorenzo spent much of his life in England, where he initiated the famous phrenological publishing house L. N. Fowler & Co. and gained considerable fame with his phrenology head (a china head showing the phrenological faculties), which has become a symbol of the discipline.[32] Orson Fowler was known for his octagonal house.
Phrenology came about at a time when scientific procedures and standards for acceptable evidence were still being codified.[33] In the context of Victorian society, phrenology was a respectable scientific theory. The Phrenological Society of Edinburgh founded by George and Andrew Combe was an example of the credibility of phrenology at the time, and included a number of extremely influential social reformers and intellectuals, including the publisher Robert Chambers, the astronomer John Pringle Nichol, the evolutionary environmentalist Hewett Cottrell Watson, and asylum reformer William A. F. Browne. In 1826, out of the 120 members of the Edinburgh society an estimated one third were from a medical background.[34] By the 1840s there were more than 28 phrenological societies in London with more than 1,000 members.[27] Another important scholar was Luigi Ferrarese, the leading Italian phrenologist.[35] He advocated that governments should embrace phrenology as a scientific means of conquering many social ills, and his Memorie Riguardanti La Dottrina Frenologica (1836), is considered "one of the fundamental 19th-century works in the field".[35]
Traditionally the mind had been studied through introspection. Phrenology provided an attractive, biological alternative that attempted to unite all mental phenomena using consistent biological terminology.[36] Gall's approach prepared the way for studying the mind that would lead to the downfall of his own theories.[37] Phrenology contributed to development of physical anthropology, forensic medicine, knowledge of the nervous system and brain anatomy as well as contributing to applied psychology.[38]
John Elliotson was a brilliant but erratic heart specialist who became a phrenologist in the 1840s. He was also a mesmerist and combined the two into something he called phrenomesmerism or phrenomagnatism.[34] Changing behaviour through mesmerism eventually won out in Elliotson's hospital, putting phrenology in a subordinate role.[33] Others amalgamated phrenology and mesmerism as well, such as the practical phrenologists Collyer and Joseph R. Buchanan. The benefit of combining mesmerism and phrenology was that the trance the patient was placed in was supposed to allow for the manipulation of his/her penchants and qualities.[34] For example, if the organ of self-esteem was touched, the subject would take on a haughty expression.[39]
Phrenology was mostly discredited as a scientific theory by the 1840s. This was due only in part to a growing amount of evidence against phrenology.[34] Phrenologists had never been able to agree on the most basic mental organ numbers, going from 27 to over 40,[41][42] and had difficulty locating the mental organs. Phrenologists relied on cranioscopic readings of the skull to find organ locations.[43] Jean Pierre Flourens' experiments on the brains of pigeons indicated that the loss of parts of the brain either caused no loss of function, or the loss of a completely different function than what had been attributed to it by phrenology. Flourens' experiment, while not perfect, seemed to indicate that Gall's supposed organs were imaginary.[37][44] Scientists had also become disillusioned with phrenology since its exploitation with the middle and working classes by entrepreneurs. The popularization had resulted in the simplification of phrenology and mixing in it of principles of physiognomy, which had from the start been rejected by Gall as an indicator of personality.[45] Phrenology from its inception was tainted by accusations of promoting materialism and atheism, and being destructive of morality. These were all factors that led to the downfall of phrenology.[43][46] Recent studies, using modern day technology like Magnetic Resonance Imaging have further disproven phrenology claims.[47]
During the early 20th century, a revival of interest in phrenology occurred, partly because of studies of evolution, criminology and anthropology (as pursued by Cesare Lombroso). The most famous British phrenologist of the 20th century was the London psychiatrist Bernard Hollander (1864–1934). His main works, The Mental Function of the Brain (1901) and Scientific Phrenology (1902), are an appraisal of Gall's teachings. Hollander introduced a quantitative approach to the phrenological diagnosis, defining a method for measuring the skull, and comparing the measurements with statistical averages.[48]
In Belgium, Paul Bouts (1900–1999) began studying phrenology from a pedagogical background, using the phrenological analysis to define an individual pedagogy. Combining phrenology with typology and graphology, he coined a global approach known as psychognomy. Bouts, a Roman Catholic priest, became the main promoter of renewed 20th-century interest in phrenology and psychognomy in Belgium. He was also active in Brazil and Canada, where he founded institutes for characterology. His works Psychognomie and Les Grandioses Destinées individuelle et humaine dans la lumière de la Caractérologie et de l'Evolution cérébro-cranienne are considered standard works in the field. In the latter work, which examines the subject of paleoanthropology, Bouts developed a teleological and orthogenetical view on a perfecting evolution, from the paleo-encephalical skull shapes of prehistoric man, which he considered still prevalent in criminals and savages, towards a higher form of mankind, thus perpetuating phrenology's problematic racializing of the human frame. Bouts died on March 7, 1999. His work has been continued by the Dutch foundation PPP (Per Pulchritudinem in Pulchritudine), operated by Anette Müller, one of Bouts' students.
During the 1930s, Belgian colonial authorities in Rwanda used phrenology to explain the purported superiority of Tutsis over Hutus.[49]
Application
[edit]Racism
[edit]Some scientists believed phrenology affirmed European superiority over other races. By comparing skulls of different ethnic groups it was thought to allow for ranking of races from least to most evolved. Broussais, a disciple of Gall, proclaimed that the Caucasians were the most beautiful, while peoples like the Australian Aboriginal and Māori would never become civilized since "they had no cerebral organ for producing great artists".[50] Few phrenologists argued for the emancipation of the slaves, while many used it to advocate for slavery.[51] Instead they argued that through education and interbreeding the "lesser peoples" could improve.[52] Another argument was that the natural inequality of people could be used to situate them in the most appropriate place in society.[51]
Gender stereotyping
[edit]Gender stereotyping was also common with phrenology. Women whose heads were generally larger in the back with lower foreheads were thought to have underdeveloped organs necessary for success in the arts and sciences while having larger mental organs relating to the care of children and religion.[53] While phrenologists did not contest the existence of talented women, this minority did not provide justification for citizenship or participation in politics.[54]
Education
[edit]One of the considered practical applications of phrenology was education. Due to the nature of phrenology people were naturally considered unequal, as very few people would have a naturally perfect balance between organs. Thus education would play an important role in creating a balance through rigorous exercise of beneficial organs while repressing baser ones. One of the best examples of this is Félix Voisin, who, for approximately ten years, ran a reform school in Issy for the express purpose of correction of the mind of children who had suffered some hardship. Voisin focused on four categories of children for his reform school:[55]
- Slow learners
- Spoiled, neglected, or harshly treated children
- Willful, disorderly children
- Children at high risk of inheriting mental disorders
Criminology
[edit]Phrenology was one of the first[clarification needed] to bring about the idea of rehabilitation of criminals instead of vindictive punishments that would not stop criminals, only with the reorganizing a disorganized brain would bring about change.[56] Voisin believed along with others the accuracy of phrenology in diagnosing criminal tendencies. Diagnosis could point to the type of offender, the insane, an idiot or brute, and by knowing this an appropriate course of action could be taken.[55] A strict system of reward and punishment, hard work and religious instruction, was thought to be able to correct those who had been abandoned and neglected with little education and moral ground works. Those who were considered intellectually disabled could be put to work and housed collectively while only criminals of intellect and vicious intent needed to be confined and isolated.[57] Phrenology also advocated variable prison sentences, the idea being that those who were only defective in education and lacking in morals would soon be released while those who were "mentally deficient" could be watched and the truly abhorrent criminals would never be released.[30][58][59] For other patients phrenology could help redirect impulses, one homicidal individual became a butcher to control his impulses, while another became a military chaplain so he could witness killings.[60] Phrenology also provided reformist arguments for the lunatic asylums of the Victorian era. John Conolly, a physician interested in psychological aspects of disease, used phrenology on his patients in an attempt to use it as a diagnostic tool. While the success of this approach is debatable, Conolly, through phrenology, introduced a more humane way of dealing with the mentally ill.[33] The first phrenological testimony in a court of law was solicited by American lawyer John Neal in Portland, Maine, in 1834.[61] Neal argued unsuccessfully that the jury should take leniency on his client because the part of his brain associated with violent behavior was inflamed.[62]
Psychiatry
[edit]In psychiatry, phrenology was proposed as a viable model in order to the disciplinary field. The South Italian psychiatrist Biagio Miraglia proposed a new classification of mental illness based on brain functions as they were described by Gall. In Miraglia's view, madness is consequent to dysfunctions of the cerebral organs: "The organs of the brain that may become ill in isolation or in complex get their activities infected through energy, or depression, or inertia or deficiency. So the madness can take the appearance of these three characteristic forms; i.e. for enhanced activity, or for depressed activity, or for inertia or deficiency of brain activities".[63]
Psychology
[edit]In the Victorian era, phrenology as a psychology was taken seriously and permeated the literature and novels of the day. Many prominent public figures, such as the Reverend Henry Ward Beecher (a college classmate and initial partner of Orson Fowler) promoted phrenology actively as a source of psychological insight and self-knowledge.[64] In Europe and the United States, many people visited phrenologists to have their heads analysed. After such an examination, clients received a written delineation of their character or a standardized chart with their score, combined with advice on how to improve themselves.[65] People also consulted phrenologists for advice in matters such as hiring personnel or finding suitable marriage partners.[66][67] As such, phrenology as a brain science waned but developed into the popular psychology of the 19th century.
Reception
[edit]Great Britain
[edit]Phrenology was introduced at a time when the old theological and philosophical understanding of the mind was being questioned and no longer seemed adequate in a society that was experiencing rapid social and demographic changes.[68] Phrenology became one of the most popular movements of the Victorian Era. In part phrenology's success was due to George Combe tailoring phrenology for the middle class. Combe's book On the Constitution of Man and its Relationship to External Objects was one of the most popular of the time, selling over two hundred thousand copies in a ten-year period. Phrenology's success was also partly because it was introduced at a time when scientific lectures were becoming a form of middle-class entertainment, exposing a large demographic of people to phrenological ideas who would not have heard them otherwise.[69] As a result of the changing times, new avenues of exposure and its multifaceted appeal, phrenology flourished in popular culture[70] although it was discredited as scientific theory by 1840.
France
[edit]While still not a fringe movement, there was not popular widespread support of phrenology in France. This was not only due to strong opposition to phrenology by French scholars but also once again accusations of promoting atheism, materialism and radical religious views. Politics in France also played a role in preventing rapid spread of phrenology.[71] In Britain phrenology had provided another tool to be used for situating demographic changes; the difference was there was less fear of revolutionary upheaval in Britain compared with France. Given that most French supporters of phrenology were liberal, left-wing or socialist, it was an objective of the social elite of France, who held a restrained vision of social change, that phrenology remain on the fringes. Another objection was that phrenology seemed to provide a built in excuse for criminal behaviour, since in its original form it was essentially deterministic in nature.[71]
Ireland
[edit]Phrenology arrived in Ireland in 1815, through Spurzheim.[72] While Ireland largely mirrored British trends, with scientific lectures and demonstrations becoming a popular pastime of the age, by 1815 phrenology had already been ridiculed in some circles priming the audiences to its skeptical claims.[73] Because of this the general public valued it more for its comic relief than anything else; however, it did find an audience in the rational dissenters who found it an attractive alternative to explain human motivations without the attached superstitions of religion.[74] The supporters of phrenology in Ireland were relegated to scientific subcultures because the Irish scholars neglected marginal movements like phrenology, denying it scientific support in Ireland.[25] In 1830 George Combe came to Ireland, his self-promotion barely winning out against his lack of medical expertise, still only drawing lukewarm crowds. This was due to not only the Vatican's decree that phrenology was subversive of religion and morality but also that, based on phrenology, the "Irish Catholics were sui generis a flawed and degenerate breed".[75] Because of the lack of scientific support, along with religious and prejudicial reasons, phrenology never found a wide audience in Ireland.
United States
[edit]The first publication in the United States in support of phrenology was published by John Bell, who reissued Combe's essays with an introductory discourse, in 1822.[76] The following year, John G. Wells of Bowdoin College "commenced an annual exposition, and recommendation of its doctrines, to his class".[76] In 1834, John D. Godman, professor of anatomy at Rutgers Medical College, emphatically defended phrenology when he wrote:[77]
It is, however, allowable to take as a principle, that there will be a relation betwixt vigour of intellect and perfection of form; and that, therefore, history will direct us to the original and chief family of mankind. We therefore ask, which are the nations that have excelled and figured in history, not only as conquerors, but as forwarding, by their improvements in arts and sciences, the progress of human knowledge?
Phrenological teachings had become a widespread popular movement by 1834, when Combe came to lecture in the United States.[78] Sensing commercial possibilities men like the Fowlers became phrenologists and sought additional ways to bring phrenology to the masses.[79] Though a popular movement, the intellectual elite of the United States found phrenology attractive because it provided a biological explanation of mental processes based on observation, yet it was not accepted uncritically. Some intellectuals accepted organology while questioning cranioscopy.[80] Gradually the popular success of phrenology undermined its scientific merits in the United States and elsewhere, along with its materialistic underpinnings, fostering radical religious views. There was increasing evidence to refute phrenological claims, and by the 1840s it had largely lost its credibility.[66] In the United States, especially in the South, phrenology faced an additional obstacle in the antislavery movement. While phrenologists usually claimed the superiority of the European race, they were often sympathetic to liberal causes including the antislavery movement; this sowed skepticism about phrenology among those who were pro-slavery.[81] The rise and surge in popularity in mesmerism, phrenomesmerism, also had a hand in the loss of interest in phrenology among intellectuals and the general public.[39][82]
John Brown Jr., son of the abolitionist John Brown, travelled for a time as a lecturer on phrenology.[83]
Specific phrenological modules
[edit]From Combe:[84]
Propensities
[edit]Propensities do not form ideas; they solely produce propensities common to animals and man.
- Adhesiveness
- Alimentiveness
- Amativeness
- Acquisitiveness
- Causality
- Cautiousness
- Combativeness
- Concentrativeness
- Constructiveness
- Destructiveness
- Ideality
- Love of life
- Philoprogenitiveness
- Secretiveness
Sentiments
[edit]Lower sentiments
These are common to man and animal.
- Cautiousness
- Love of approbation
- Self-esteem
- Truthfulness
Superior sentiments
These produce emotion or feeling lacking in animals.
- Benevolence
- Conscientiousness
- Firmness
- Hope
- Ideality
- Imitation
- Veneration
- Wit or Mirthfulness
- Wonder
Intellectual faculties
[edit]These are to know the external world and physical qualities
- Coloring
- Eventuality
- Form
- Hearing
- Individuality
- Language
- Locality
- Number
- Order
- Sight
- Size
- Smell
- Taste
- Time
- Touch
- Tune
- Weight
Reflecting faculties
[edit]These produce ideas of relation or reflect. They minister to the direction and gratification of all the other powers:
- Causality
- Comparison
Influences on popular culture
[edit]Several literary critics have noted the influence of phrenology[85] (and physiognomy) in Edgar Allan Poe's fiction.[86]
Phrenology (2002) by The Roots was named so after group member Black Thought saw an article in a scientific journal and the group "appropriated the term, not only for its political irony ..."[87]
See also
[edit]- Anthropometry
- Boston Phrenological Society
- Brodmann's areas
- Characterology
- Craniometry
- Edinburgh Phrenological Society
- Faculty psychology
- Graphology
- Localization of brain function
- Metoposcopy
- Mien Shiang
- Moral insanity
- Neuroepistemology
- Neuro-imaging
- Onychomancy
- Palmistry
- Pathognomy
- Phreno-magnetism
- Physiognomy
- Psychograph
- Psychognomy
- Quackery
- Racial policy of Nazi Germany
- Scientific racism
- Scientific skepticism
- The Zoist: A Journal of Cerebral Physiology & Mesmerism, and Their Applications to Human Welfare
References
[edit]- ^ a b c Wihe, J. V. (2002). "Science and Pseudoscience: A Primer in Critical Thinking". Encyclopedia of Pseudoscience. California: Skeptics Society. pp. 195–203.
- ^ a b Hines, T. (2002). Pseudoscience and the Paranormal. New York: Prometheus Books. p. 200.
- ^ Fodor, Jerry A. (1983). Modularity of Mind: An Essay on Faculty Psychology. Cambridge, Massachusetts: MIT Press. pp. 14, 23, 131. ISBN 0-262-56025-9.
- ^ Bunge, M. (2018). From a Scientific Point of View: Reasoning and Evidence Beat Improvisation across Fields. Cambridge: Cambridge Scholar Publishing. p. 74.
- ^ Parker Jones, O.; Alfaro-Almagro, F.; Jbabdi, S. (2018). "An empirical, 21st century evaluation of phrenology". Cortex. 106: 26–35. doi:10.1016/j.cortex.2018.04.011. PMC 6143440. PMID 29864593.
- ^ Graham, Patrick. (2001) Phrenology [videorecording (DVD)]: revealing the mysteries of the mind. Richmond Hill, Ont.: American Home Treasures. ISBN 0-7792-5135-0
- ^ Bunge (1985), p. 54; Stiles (2012), p. 11; Cooter (1990), p. 156; Christison-Lagay & Cohen (2013), pp. 337–354
- ^ Flourens (1844), p. 150; Anonymous (1860), pp. 249–260; Winn (1879), pp. 18–29; Robinson Storer (1866), p. 134
- ^ Fodor, JA. (1983) The Modularity of Mind. MIT Press. pp. 14, 23, 131
- ^ Simpson, D. (2005) "Phrenology and the Neurosciences: Contributions of F. J. Gall and J. G. Spurzheim" ANZ Journal of Surgery. Oxford. Vol. 75.6; p. 475
- ^ Beaudet, Amélie (2017). "The Emergence of Language in the Hominin Lineage: Perspectives from Fossil Endocasts". Frontiers in Human Neuroscience. 11: 427. doi:10.3389/fnhum.2017.00427. PMC 5572361. PMID 28878641.
- ^ a b Hughes, Virginia (2013-03-13). "From Neanderthal Skull to Neanderthal Brain?". National Geographic. Archived from the original on 2021-06-03. Retrieved 2021-03-30.
- ^ Parssinen 1974, p. 2.
- ^ Wells, Samuel Roberts (1885). How to Read Character: A New Illustrated Hand-Book of Phrenology and Physiognomy, for Students and Examiners; with A Descriptive Chart. New York: Fowler & Wells Co. p. iii.
- ^ Finger, Stanley (2004). Minds Behind the Brain: A History of the Pioneers and Their Discoveries. New York: Oxford University Press. p. 29. ISBN 978-0195181821.
aristotle brain.
- ^ "A History of the Brain". A History of the Body. Stanford University, Early Science Lab. Archived from the original on 23 October 2013. Retrieved 13 September 2013.
- ^ Baggerman, J. Arianne; Dekker, Rudolf M.; Mascuch, Michael James (2011). Controlling Time and Shaping the Self: Developments in Autobiographical Writing Since the Sixteenth Century. Brill. p. 250–. ISBN 978-90-04-19500-4 – via Google Books.
- ^ Lavater, Johann Caspar (1832). The pocket Lavater, or, The science of physiognomy : to which is added, An inquiry into the analogy existing between brute and human physiognomy, from the Italian of Porta.
- ^ a b c d Staum 2003, p. 49.
- ^ Lyons 2009, p. 56.
- ^ 1833, The American Journal of the Medical Sciences, Southern Society for Clinical Investigation
- ^ Lyons 2009, p. 53.
- ^ a b Parssinen 1974, p. 3.
- ^ McCandless 1992, p. 199.
- ^ a b Leaney 2006, p. 25.
- ^ Combe 1851, p. 1.
- ^ a b Staum 2003, p. 50.
- ^ a b Parssinen 1974, p. 5.
- ^ Staum 2003, p. 51.
- ^ a b Parssinen 1974, p. 6.
- ^ Parssinen 1974, p. 1.
- ^ "Oops..." Archived from the original on 2010-03-18.
- ^ a b c McGrew 1985, p. 261.
- ^ a b c d McGrew 1985, p. 260.
- ^ a b Yasgur, Jay (2003). Yasgur's Homeopathic Dictionary. p. 184.
- ^ Lyons 2009, p. 83.
- ^ a b Lyons 2009, p. 75.
- ^ McGrew 1985, pp. 259–261.
- ^ a b McCandless 1992, p. 213.
- ^ Flugel, J. C. (1933). A Hundred Years of Psychology. p. 44 – via Google Books.
- ^ McGrew 1985, p. 259.
- ^ Staum 2003, p. 52.
- ^ a b Staum 2003, p. 81.
- ^ Staum 2003, p. 80.
- ^ Staum 2003, p. 56.
- ^ McCandless 1992, p. 211.
- ^ Parker Jones, F. (31 January 2018). "An empirical, 21st century evaluation of phrenology". bioRxiv 10.1101/243089.
- ^ Hollander, Bernard (1891). "A Contribution to a Scientific Phrenology". The Journal of the Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland. 20: 227–234. doi:10.2307/2842265. JSTOR 2842265.
- ^ Rea, Lisa. "Applying Restorative Justice to the Genocide in Rwanda". Archived from the original on 14 September 2016. Retrieved 10 June 2012.
- ^ Staum 2003, p. 59.
- ^ a b Branson, Susan (2017). "Phrenology and the Science of Race in Antebellum America". Early American Studies. 15 (1): 164–193. ISSN 1543-4273. JSTOR 90000339. Archived from the original on 2022-07-12. Retrieved 2022-07-12.
- ^ Staum 2003, p. 62.
- ^ Staum 2003, p. 64.
- ^ Staum 2003, p. 65.
- ^ a b Staum 2003, p. 74.
- ^ Lyons 2009, pp. 79–80.
- ^ Staum 2003, p. 77.
- ^ "Punishing Criminals". Phrenological Journal. Num 3. LII (Whole Number 386): 200–204. March 1871.
- ^ Lyons 2009, p. 80.
- ^ Staum 2003, p. 76.
- ^ Thompson, Courtney E. (2021). An Organ of Murder: Crime, Violence, and Phrenology in Nineteenth-Century America. New Brunswick, Camden, and Newark, New Jersey, and London: Rutgers University Press. pp. 55, 191n4. ISBN 978-1978813069.
- ^ Holtzman, Geoffrey S. (December 16, 2015). "When Phrenology Was Used in Court: Lessons in Neuroscience from the 1834 Trial of a 9-year-old". Slate. New York. Archived from the original on May 16, 2021. Retrieved April 4, 2021.
- ^ Miraglia, Biagio G. (2014) [1874]. "A new classification of mental illness based on brain functions" (PDF). Dialogues in Philosophy, Mental and Neuro Sciences. 7 (2): 636–637. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2017-01-12. Retrieved 2016-11-11.
- ^ McCandless 1992, p. 204.
- ^ Sysling, Fenneke (June 2018). "Science and self-assessment: phrenological charts 1840–1940". The British Journal for the History of Science. 51 (2): 261–280. doi:10.1017/S0007087418000055. hdl:1887/123052. ISSN 0007-0874. PMID 29576034.
- ^ a b McCandless 1992, p. 210.
- ^ Hines, Terence (1988). Pseudoscience and the paranormal: a critical examination of the evidence. Buffalo, NY: Prometheus Books. ISBN 0879754192. OCLC 17462273.
- ^ Parssinen 1974, p. 14.
- ^ Parssinen 1974, pp. 2, 9.
- ^ Parssinen 1974, pp. 3–9.
- ^ a b Staum 2003, pp. 51–52.
- ^ Leaney 2006, p. 30.
- ^ Leaney 2006, p. 28.
- ^ Leaney 2006, pp. 28, 38.
- ^ Leaney 2006, p. 35.
- ^ a b Combe, George (1839). Lectures on phrenology, with notes by A. Boardman. Archived from the original on 2023-02-05. Retrieved 2020-11-19 – via Google Books.
- ^ "The anatomy and physiology of the human body (Volume 1) – Digital Collections – National Library of Medicine". collections.nlm.nih.gov. Archived from the original on 2021-06-03. Retrieved 2020-09-25.
- ^ McCandless 1992, pp. 205–208.
- ^ McCandless 1992, p. 208.
- ^ McCandless 1992, p. 206.
- ^ McCandless 1992, p. 212.
- ^ Mikulincer, Mario; Shaver, Phillip R.; Dovidio, John F.; Simpson, Jeffrey A. (2015). APA handbook of personality and social psychology (First ed.). Washington, DC: American Psychological Association. ISBN 978-1433816994. OCLC 862928518.
- ^ McGlone, Robert E. (March 1989). "Rescripting a Troubled Past: John Brown's Family and the Harpers Ferry Conspiracy". Journal of American History. 75 (4): 1179–1200, at p. 1190. doi:10.2307/1908635. JSTOR 1908635.
- ^ Combe 1851, pp. x–xi.
- ^ Hungerford, Edward (1930). "Poe and Phrenology". American Literature. 2 (3): 209–231. doi:10.2307/2920231. JSTOR 2920231.
- ^ Erik Grayson. "Weird Science, Weirder Unity: Phrenology and Physiognomy in Edgar Allan Poe" Mode 1 (2005): 56–77. Also online (archive).
- ^ Venable, Malcolm (October 2002). "Mo' Money, Mo' Problems". Vibe. 10 (10). New York: 124–128. Retrieved May 24, 2019 – via Google Books.
Bibliography
[edit]- Anonymous (1860). "Sir William Hamilton on Phrenology". American Journal of Psychiatry. 16 (3): 249–260. doi:10.1176/ajp.16.3.249.
- Bunge, M. (1985). Treatise on Basic Philosophy. Vol. 7 (Part 2). Dordrecht: Reidel Publishing Company.
- Christison-Lagay, K. L.; Cohen, Y. E. (2013). "The Neural Representation of Vocalisation Perception". Animal Communication Theory: Information and Influence. New York: State University of New York Press.
- Combe, George (1851). A System of Phrenology. Boston: Benjamin B. Mussey and Company. Archived from the original on 2023-02-05. Retrieved 2012-06-10.
- Cooter, R. (1990). "The Conservatism of 'Pseudoscience'". Philosophy of Science and the Occult. New York: State University of New York Press.
- Flourens, P. (1844). Elementary Treatise on Human Physiology. New York: Harper & Brothers. p. 150.
- Leaney, Enda (2006). "Phrenology in Nineteenth-Century Ireland". New Hibernia Review / Iris Éireannach Nua. 10 (3): 24–42. doi:10.1353/nhr.2006.0058. JSTOR 20558078. S2CID 144035028.
- Lyons, Sherrie L. (2009). Species, Serpents, Spirits, and Skulls: Science at the Margins in the Victorian Age. Vol. 53. Albany: New York Press. pp. 141–143. doi:10.2979/victorianstudies.53.1.141. ISBN 978-1438427973. JSTOR 10.2979/victorianstudies.53.1.141. S2CID 141992807.
{{cite book}}
:|journal=
ignored (help) - McCandless, Peter (1992). "Mesmerism and Phrenology in Antebellum Charleston: 'Enough of the Marvellous'". The Journal of Southern History. 58 (2): 199–230. doi:10.2307/2210860. JSTOR 2210860.
- McGrew, Roderick E. (1985). Encyclopedia of Medical History. New York: McGraw-Hill Book Company. ISBN 978-0070450875.
- Parssinen, T. M. (Autumn 1974). "Popular Science and Society: The Phrenology Movement in Early Victorian Britain". Journal of Social History. 8 (1): 1–20. doi:10.1353/jsh/8.1.1. JSTOR 3786523. PMID 11632363.
- Robinson Storer, H. (1866). "Report on Insanity in Women". Transactions of the American Medical Association. 16: 134.
- Staum, Martin S. (2003). Labeling People: French Scholars on Society, Race and Empire, 1815–1848. Montreal: McGill-Queen's University Press. ISBN 978-0773525801. Archived from the original on 2023-02-05. Retrieved 2016-01-27.
- Stiles, Anne (2012). Popular Fiction and Brain Science in the Late Nineteenth Century. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
- Thompson, Courtney E. (2021). An Organ of Murder: Crime, Violence, and Phrenology in Nineteenth-Century America. Rutgers University Press. Archived from the original on 2021-06-04. Retrieved 2021-06-25.
- Winn, J. M. (1879). "Mind and Living Particles". Journal of Psychological Medicine and Mental Pathology. 5 (1): 18–29. PMC 5122056. PMID 28906933.
External links
[edit]- "Phrenology", North American Review, 1833 p. 59
- Manual of Phrenology. Open Content Alliance eBook Collection, Manual of phrenology: being an analytical summary of the system of Doctor Gall, on the faculties of man and the functions of the brain : translated from the 4th French ed
- New illustrated self-instructor in phrenology and physiology. Open Content Alliance eBook Collection, Fowler, O. S. (Orson Squire) (1809–1887); Fowler, L. N. (Lorenzo Niles) (1811–1896)
- The History of Phrenology on the Web by John van Wyhe, PhD.
- Phrenology: an Overview includes The History of Phrenology by John van Wyhe, PhD.
- Examples of phrenological tools can be seen in The Museum of Questionable Medical Devices in Minneapolis, Minnesota
- Historical Anatomies on the Web: Joseph Vimont: Traité de phrénologie humaine et comparée. (Paris, 1832–1835). Selected pages scanned from the original work. US National Library of Medicine.
- Jean-Claude Vimont: Phrénologie à Rouen, les moulages du musée Flaubert d'histoire de la médecine
- Phrenology: History of a Classic Pseudoscience – by Steven Novella MD
- The Skeptic's Dictionary by Robert Todd Carroll