A System of PhrenologyMarsh, Capen and Lyon, 1837 - 664 páginas |
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Página vii
... Gall and Spurzheim , was derived from No. 49. of the Edinburgh Review . Led away by the boldness of that piece of criticism , I regarded their doctrines as contemptibly absurd , and their authors as the most disingenuous of men . In ...
... Gall and Spurzheim , was derived from No. 49. of the Edinburgh Review . Led away by the boldness of that piece of criticism , I regarded their doctrines as contemptibly absurd , and their authors as the most disingenuous of men . In ...
Página xii
... Gall , 628 Organs in Previous Editions of this Work , 630 APPENDIX . No. I. Faculties of Dr. Gall , 632 INDEX , 633 121 , 244 , 536 , 568 LIST CF FIGURES xũ CONTENTS .
... Gall , 628 Organs in Previous Editions of this Work , 630 APPENDIX . No. I. Faculties of Dr. Gall , 632 INDEX , 633 121 , 244 , 536 , 568 LIST CF FIGURES xũ CONTENTS .
Página 19
... Gall and Spurzheim , for believing in a plurality of mental organs , is constrained to admit , that “ this kind of reasoning has been employed by the greater number of anatomists , who , from the time of Galen , down to those of our own ...
... Gall and Spurzheim , for believing in a plurality of mental organs , is constrained to admit , that “ this kind of reasoning has been employed by the greater number of anatomists , who , from the time of Galen , down to those of our own ...
Página 37
... Gall never observed , that the individual , who in one year had displayed selfish or knavish dispositions , be- came in the next a good and faithful friend . The scholars with whom Dr. Gall had the greatest difficulty in competing ...
... Gall never observed , that the individual , who in one year had displayed selfish or knavish dispositions , be- came in the next a good and faithful friend . The scholars with whom Dr. Gall had the greatest difficulty in competing ...
Página 37
... Gall could not believe that the coinci- dence of the two circumstances was entirely accidental . From this period , therefore , he suspected that they stood in an important relation to each other . After much reflection , he conceived ...
... Gall could not believe that the coinci- dence of the two circumstances was entirely accidental . From this period , therefore , he suspected that they stood in an important relation to each other . After much reflection , he conceived ...
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Termos e frases comuns
Acquisitiveness activity appears arises attention beauty Benevolence betwixt brain bust Causality cause Cautiousness cerebellum cerebral character circumstances colors Combativeness combination conceive conception Conscientiousness constitution Constructiveness convolutions deficient degree delight desire Destructiveness directed discover disease disposition distinguished doctrine dura mater Edinburgh Review effect emotion endowment equal excited existence external objects fact faculty feeling female frontal bone frontal sinus functions Gall mentions genius gives gratify hence human Ideality ideas imagine impression individual insanity instance instinctive intellectual largely developed Love of Approbation lower animals manifested manner medulla oblongata ment metaphysicians mind motion natural language nerves ness never observed organ is large parietal bones particular passion perceive perception persons Philoprogenitiveness philosophers philosophy of mind Phrenological Society Phrenology physiologists possess predominates present primitive principle produce propensity proportion qualities reflection regard remarkable Secretiveness Self-Esteem sensation sense skull Spurzheim talent taste tendency Thomas Brown tion Veneration viduals
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