Phrenology - meaning and definition. What is Phrenology
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What (who) is Phrenology - definition

BRANCH OF PSEUDOSCIENCE: ASSERTION OF HUMAN CHARACTERISTICS BASED ON SHAPE OF THE SKULL
Phrenologist; Phrenological; Prenology; Craniology; Bump of Locality; Philoprogenitiveness; Frenology; Bumpology; Phrenologists; Brain shape science
  • American Institute of Phrenology (New York, 1893)
  • A definition of phrenology with chart from ''Webster's Academic Dictionary,'' circa 1895
  • [[George Combe]]
  • Phrenological bust
  • Phrenological skull, European, 19th century. Wellcome Collection, London
  • An 1883 phrenology chart
  • 1848 edition of ''American Phrenological Journal'' published by Fowlers & Wells, New York

phrenology         
Phrenology is the study of the size and shape of people's heads in the belief that you can find out about their characters and abilities from this.
N-UNCOUNT
phrenologist (phrenologists)
Queen Victoria had her own personal phrenologist.
N-COUNT
Phrenological         
·adj Of or pertaining to Phrenology.
phrenology         
[fr?'n?l?d?i]
¦ noun chiefly historical the detailed study of the shape and size of the cranium as a supposed indication of character and mental abilities.
Derivatives
phrenological adjective
phrenologist noun
Origin
C19: from Gk phren, phren- 'mind' + -logy.

Wikipedia

Phrenology

Phrenology (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. 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. 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 led to the reasoning behind why everyone had 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 generalized beyond empirical knowledge in a way that departed from science. The central phrenological notion that measuring the contour of the skull can predict personality traits is discredited by empirical research. Developed by German physician Franz Joseph Gall in 1796, 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 pseudoscience. 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. 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 the pseudoscience, phrenology. However, Paul Broca was the one who demolished the idea that phrenology was a science 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. 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. Phrenology was argued to be a science, when in fact it is a pseudoscience.

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, and possibly even something about their social life. Due to its limitations, this technique is sometimes criticized as "paleo-phrenology".

Examples of use of Phrenology
1. Phrenology was a respectable movement even though it was based on a phoney notion.
2. In Victorian times, the science of phrenology – in which the bumps on the head were ‘read‘ to predict personalities – was taken seriously.
3. From feeling your phrenology to sweeping your remnants up from the Amtico would be only seven minutes and would set you back a mere 300.
4. The bumps on the heads of those of European extraction were supposed to prove that they had superior skills.‘ He thinks that the obesity industry could disappear as fast as phrenology, in the right circumstances.
5. They are like proponents of the Flat Earth theory, or advocates of phrenology: in the face of all evidence to the contrary – mountains of it – they hold that the "real truth" (about the earth‘s flatness, the "scientific" validity of phrenology, all the "progress" we‘re making in Iraq) is being "suppressed." This dogged denial is the virtual definition of crackpottery, and it brings to mind a recent post by Matt Yglesias at The Atlantic wherein he complains that the crackpots (neocon variety) are being mainstreamed by ostensibly "liberal" Washington think–tanks: "The crux of the matter is that we have here in Washington, D.C., a certain number of institutions working in the national security sphere that are essentially crackpot operations – AEI, The Weekly Standard, the Project for a New American Century, and the Foundation for the Defense of Democracies come to mind.