What is Phrenology
Phrenology (from Greek: ????, phr?n, "mind"; and ?????,
logos, "knowledge") is a theory which claims to be able to determine
character, personality traits, and criminality on the basis of the shape
of the head (reading "bumps"). Developed by German physician Franz Joseph Gall
around 1800, and very popular in the 19th century, it is now discredited as a
pseudoscience. Phrenology has however received credit as a protoscience
for having contributed to medical science the ideas that the brain is the
organ of the mind and that certain brain areas have localized, specific
functions.
Its principles were that the brain is the organ of the mind, and that mind has a
set of different mental faculties, each particular faculty being represented
in a different part or organ of the brain. These areas were said to be
proportional to a given individual's propensities and importance of a mental
faculty, and the overlying skull bone to reflect these differences.
Phrenology, which focuses on personality and character, is to be distinguished
from craniometry, which is the study of skull size, weight and shape, and physiognomy,
the study of facial features. However, these fields have all claimed the ability to
predict traits or intelligence. They were once intensively practised in
anthropology/ethnology and sometimes utilized to "scientifically" justify racism. While
some principles of phrenology are well-established today, the basic premise that
personality is determined by skull shape is almost universally considered to be false.
|