Physiognomy Founded on Physiology, and Applied to Various Countries, Professions, and Individuals: With an Appendix on the Bones at Hythe, the Sculls of the Ancient Inhabitants of Britain and Its InvadersSmith, Elder and Company, 1834 - 286페이지 |
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... vital , or locomotive character As to mental character , volition as well as sensation displayed in the face , and advantages resulting from this · Mode in which the face affords physiognomical indi- cations ib . . 219 - 222 SECTION IV ...
... vital , or locomotive character As to mental character , volition as well as sensation displayed in the face , and advantages resulting from this · Mode in which the face affords physiognomical indi- cations ib . . 219 - 222 SECTION IV ...
5 페이지
... vital , or mental character ; * An outline of this was communicated by the writer to Blackwood's Magazine for November , 1829 . † An outline communicated to the same Magazine for September , 1829 . An outline , to the same for September ...
... vital , or mental character ; * An outline of this was communicated by the writer to Blackwood's Magazine for November , 1829 . † An outline communicated to the same Magazine for September , 1829 . An outline , to the same for September ...
7 페이지
... vital , and mental , of which the body is composed . These , therefore , must be the first subjects of our enquiry . In viewing the human organs in a general man- ner , a class of these organs at once obtrudes itself upon our notice ...
... vital , and mental , of which the body is composed . These , therefore , must be the first subjects of our enquiry . In viewing the human organs in a general man- ner , a class of these organs at once obtrudes itself upon our notice ...
9 페이지
... possessing vessels , have life ) they may be termed vital ; and the third may be named nervous , or ( as mind results from them ) mental . B 5 The human body , then , consists of organs of THE SUBJECT OF PHYSIOGNOMY . 9.
... possessing vessels , have life ) they may be termed vital ; and the third may be named nervous , or ( as mind results from them ) mental . B 5 The human body , then , consists of organs of THE SUBJECT OF PHYSIOGNOMY . 9.
10 페이지
... vital action is maintained ; and by the third , thinking or mental action is permitted . Anatomy is , therefore , divided into three parts , namely , that which considers the locomotive or mechanical organs ; that which considers the nu ...
... vital action is maintained ; and by the third , thinking or mental action is permitted . Anatomy is , therefore , divided into three parts , namely , that which considers the locomotive or mechanical organs ; that which considers the nu ...
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Æthiop Æthiopic afford its basis ancient application Blumenbach bones brain breadth broad calvarium calvarium and face Camper carnivora Celtic Celts cere cerebellic cerebellum cerebral cavity cerebrum climate craniology cranium degree descend differences among animals distinguished emotions and passions Englishman equal length European external extreme facial line female crania frontal sinuses functions gland greater head Hence higher animals Highlander human race human species impressions ascend indicated indicates function inhabitants intellectual organs intermediate locomotive lodged those medullary lower jaw Lowlander male and female mechanical organs medulla oblongata mental character mental operation mental organs merely present moderate Mongol motion narrow nations nearly Negro nerves nervous action nose observed organs of sense ossa permanent physical but mental physiognomy pituitary gland Plate portion possess posterior preceding principles proportion quadrupeds racter remarkable Romans Saxon says Scotland scull sensibility sensorium Sömmerring superciliary ridges tinctions tion transmits liquids trunk vital organs volition voluntary power
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63 페이지 - Yet notwithstanding these and other discouraging circumstances among the Romans, their slaves were often their rarest artists. They excelled too in science, insomuch as to be usually employed as tutors to their master's children. Epictetus, Terence, and Phaedrus, were slaves. But they were of the race of whites. It is not their condition then, but nature, which has produced the distinction.
63 페이지 - America. Most of them, indeed, have been confined to tillage, to their own homes, and their own society : yet many have been so situated, that they might have availed themselves of the conversation of their masters...
63 페이지 - In music they are more generally gifted than the whites with accurate ears for tune and time, and they have been found capable of imagining a small catch.
111 페이지 - Credulity, versatility, and thirst of distinctions, from the earliest period formed, and still form, and ever will continue to form, the basis of the Greek character ; and the dissimilarity in the external appearance of the nation arises, not from any radical change in its temper and disposition, but only...
112 페이지 - ... impulse of every agent. When patriotism, public spirit, and pre-eminence in arts, science, literature, and warfare, were the road to distinction, the Greeks shone the first of patriots, of heroes, of painters, of poets, and of philosophers. Now that craft and subtilty, adulation and intrigue, are the only paths to greatness, these same Greeks are — what you see them...
59 페이지 - In cold countries they have very little sensibility for pleasure; in temperate countries, they have more; in warm countries, their sensibility is exquisite. As climates are distinguished by degrees of latitude, we might distinguish them also in some measure by those of sensibility. I have been at the opera in England and in Italy, where I have seen the same pieces and the same performers; and yet the same music produces such different effects on the two nations: one is so cold and phlegmatic, and...
83 페이지 - ... the three fundamental qualities I have mentioned, the first seeming may easily be less amiable than the final result shall be useful. To a stranger of differently constructed mind, the cold observation, and, in particular, the slowness and reserve which must accompany it, may seem unsociable ;.but they are inseparable from such a construction of mind, and they indicate, not pride, but that respect for his feelings which the possessor thinks them entitled to, and which he would not violate in...
112 페이지 - Does not every modern Greek preserve the same desire for supremacy, the same readiness to undermine by every means fair or foul his competitors, which was displayed by his ancestors ? Do not the Turks of the present day resemble the Romans of past ages in their respect for the ingenuity, and at the same time, in their contempt for the character of their Greek subjects? And does the Greek of the Fanar...
112 페이지 - Believe me, the very difference between the Greeks of time past and of the present day arises only from their thorough resemblance; from that equal pliability of temper and of faculties in both, which has ever made them receive with equal readiness the impression of every mould and the impulse of every agent. When patriotism, public spirit, and pre-eminence in arts, science, literature, and warfare, were the road to distinction, the Greeks shone the first of patriots, of heroes, of painters, of poets,...