Edwards, engraver, his Construc- tiveness and Comparison large, 224, 358.
Egotism, the result of predominat- ing Self-Esteem, 235. Example of, 236. Produced also by Love of Approbation, 249.
Egyptians, ancient, heads of, 619. Elephant's brain larger than that of man, 100.
Eventuality, organ of, its size how discriminated, 425. Three engrav- ings of heads illustrative of it, 425. History of its discovery by Dr Gall, 426. Large in Sheridan, 427. Effects of its largeness and defi. ciency, 429. In combination with large and small Concentrative- ness, &c. ib. 430, 577. Large in observant authors, 431.
Elevation, physical, love of, in some Example, explanation of its power- animals, 149, 240.
ful effects on children, 551.
Eloquence, source and nature of, Executions, pleasure in witnessing,
Energy of character supposed by some phrenologists to arise from Destructiveness, 171. Engineering, talent for, 393. English delight in humour, 197. Their Self-Esteem, Cautiousness, and Firmness, larger than those of the French, 238, 259, 286. Pro- bable cause of their political liber- ty, 238.
Engravers, eminent, have large or- gans of Constructiveness and Imi- tation, 224, 358.
Envy, by what caused, 235. Epigrams, talent for, arises from the organ of Wit, 353.
Equilibrium, instinct of, 395.
whence arising, 174..
Exercise of the cerebral organs in-
creases their activity, 555. Existence of material objects, evi- dence of, 483.
Experiment, tendency to investi- gate by, conferred by Eventuali- ty, 427, 432.
External senses.-See Senses. Eyes, only one used in looking, 369. Their functions, 379. Memory of forms and colours not dependent on the, 386, 399. Do not perceive the relations of colours, 399, 413. Large organ of Language indi- cated by their prominence and de- pression, 48, 446.
E. S. of Dublin, character and de- Face, size of, compared with that of velopment of, 179.
44. Its fallacy, 45. Faculties, plurality of, 14, 37.
Esquirol, cases of insanity from, 215, Facial angle of Camper described, 284. Europeans, their large heads, 563. Their moral and intellectual na- ture, 600. Account of their heads, 618. Eventuality, one of the perceptive
faculties, function of, 427. Useful to men of business and lawyers, 430. Mrs Quickly an illustration of, 432. Dr Spurzheim on, ib. Observations on, 465.
Appear successively, 15, 38. Connexion of, with particular or- gans, 36, et seq. Combinations of, 40, 571. Meaning of the term, 106. What faculties are admitted to be primitive, ib. Dr Spurzheim's division of them, 113. Modes of their activity, 489, et seq. Ex- cited by the presentment of their
objects, 475. Effects of size in the organs on their manifestation, 562, 571. Desire of gratification in proportion to the size of their organs, 571. FEELINGS, 116. Propensities, ib. Sentiments, 230- 358. INTELLECTUAL FACUL- TIES, 359. External senses, 359- 379. Faculties perceiving exist- ence, 379-413. Faculties perceiv- ing relations, 414-462. REFLECT- ING FACULTIES, 465-488.
perceive perspective, 390. organ of Size small, 391, 499. Ferriar, Dr, Cases of injury of the brain mentioned by, 644, 651, 654. Fever, how productive of sleepless- ness and dreaming, 510. Figurative language, whence, 466. Filial piety arises chiefly from Ve- neration, 280.
Fine arts, by what faculties pro- duced, 329-30, 357. Taste in,
Faith, exercise of, favoured by Firmness, one of the sentiments,
Hope, 307.
Fame, love of, 245.
Familiar spirits, belief in, arises
from Wonder, 309, 312. Fanaticism, religious, produced by excited Wonder, 318. Fancy, 514.
Farish, Professor, of Cambridge, his
organ of Weight large, 394. Fashions in dress, &c., cause of their mutability, 315.
Fear, whence arising, 163, 253. Feebleness and power of character, 30, 563, 569.
Feeling or Touch, sense of, 371. Feelings, 116, et seq. Females have a greater endowment of Philoprogenitiveness than males, 128, 132. Differences between their brains and those of males, 132. Their Combativeness smal- ler, 164. Their Cautiousness and Veneration larger, 258, 284.—See Women.
among the lower animals more cautious than males, 258. Fenelon's Benevolence, 264. Feræ, the organ of Destructiveness
large in the, 184. Ferguson, Dr Adam, on the politi- cal freedom of the English, 238. Mr, case of inability to
use of, 285. Appears not to be admitted by metaphysicians, 288.
organ of, its situation, 285. History of its discovery, ib. Effects of its predominance, on the manner, 286. Larger in the British than in the French, 286. Effects of its deficiency, 288. Its disease, ib.
Fisher, Miss Clara, her large Secre- tiveness, and Love of Approba- tion, 197, 251. Engraving of her head, shewing large Imitation, 358.
Flechier, Eveque de Nismes, ego- tism of, 237
Flourens' experiments on the cere- bellum, 119.
Foderé on partial genius in idiots, 17. On plurality of cerebral or- gans, 21. Cases of insanity from, 201. On the Constructiveness of the Cretins, 228. Folie raisonante, what, 18. Force of character always accom- panied by a large brain, 30, 563. Forehead, sloping, 462. Form, one of the perceptive facul- ties, its vigour not proportionate to the acuteness of vision, 386. Manifested by animals, ib. Dr Spurzheim's analysis of, 387.
Form, organ of, history of its disco- very by Dr Gall, 385. Its situa- tion, ib. Its size, how distin- guishable, ib. 447, note. Engrav- ings of two heads, in which it is large and small, 380. Its effects in combination, 577. Forster's journey from Bengal to England, 259.
Fuseli on Raphael's style of paint- ing, 579.
Future state, disposition to belief of, arises from the sentiment of Hope, 307.
Futurity, brilliant anticipations of, arise from the Sentiment of Hope, 305. Notion of, 307.
Fortitude conferred by Firmness, Gaiety, by what produced, 347.
Galen placed the soul in the brain, 50.
285. Fox, Charles James, his large head, Galileo and his discoveries, how 563. treated by his contemporaries, 3.
François Cordonnier, poet, engrav-
ing of his head, 233. His Ideality large, 324.
Franklin, Captain, his large head,
Franklin, Benjamin, 40. His Cau. sality large, 481. Reverenced God, though he renounced Chris- tianity, 486.
Fraser's Language small, 462. French, not a humorous nation, 197. Their Constructiveness large, 224. Their Self-Esteem
and Firmness smaller than those of the English, 238, 286. Their Love of Approbation and Cau- tiousness very large, 251, 259. Are the leaders of fashion, and why, 316. Their Individuality and Form large, 384, 387. Their Tune, 439. Their Comparison large, 468. Their Causality not large, 482.
French M. D., cast, 422, 425. Frontal sinus, what, 81. Objections
to Phrenology founded on its ex- istence, answered, 82. Throws a difficulty in the way of the obser- vation of Individuality, 384; Form, 385; Size, 393; and Lo- cality, 419.
Fry, Mrs, Combativeness of, 160.
His Locality large, 416. greatness, 628. Gall, Dr F. J., the founder of Phre- nology, 47. Birth and death of, ib. Discovered Phrenology by obser- vation, 48, 623. Abandoned all theories, 51. His anatomical re- searches, 52. First lectured in 1796. His opinion of the faculty of Adhesiveness, 155. Did not admit a distinct organ of Justice, 268. On Firmness, 285. Did not admit the organ of Conscien- tiousness, 297. His theory of the single impressions perceived by double organs of the external senses, 368. His views of the faculty of Hope, 304. His organ of Form deficient, 385, 386, note. His infantile genius, ib. On the harmony of colours, 404. His views of Eventuality, 433. Ad- mitted two organs of Language, 454. His merits and discoveries, 665, 667. Names of the organs
adopted by him, 668. Game-cocks and game-hens have larger Combativeness than do- mestic fowls, and may be distin- guished by the shape of their heads, 165.
Gaming, love of, whence, 306.
Garrick's large organ of Imitation, example of, 354.
Gauls, their character as given by Tacitus, 604.
Generals, qualifications of, 161, 201, 417.
Genius, cause of, 560, 570.
for music, &c. See Music, &c. -, partial, explicable only by plurality of cerebral organs, 15. Geographers, eminent, their Loca- lity large, 416. Geometry, genius for, 417. George III. his large organs of In- dividuality and Form, 380, 385. Engraving of his head, 380.
Gordon, Dr John, admitted the cor- respondence between the size of the skull and that of the brain,
80. Graminivorous and carnivorous ani- mals, difference between the brains of, 165, Secretiveness of the for- mer generally large, 201. Grammar, talent for, 453. Gratitude, whence arising, 302. Grattan's style characterized by
Concentrativeness, 145.
Great men, why they have not em- braced Phrenology, 627.
Greek philosophers calumniated each other, 3. Persecuted by the peo- ple, ib.
Georget on size and power of Greeks, ancient, skulls of, 619. En-
Germans have larger Cautiousness and Tune than the French, 259, 439. Tacitus' description of them, 604.
Ghosts and visions, belief in, whence arising, 309.-See Visions. Gibbon's Self-Esteem very large, 237.
Gregory, Dr, admits the connexion of the mind with the brain, 9. Greyhound's Combativeness smaller than that of the bull-dog, 164. Grief and Joy, analysis of, 541. Griffiths, murderer, 265. Guilt, sense of, the effect of Con- scientiousness, 297.
Gibson, John, 199, 299. Engrav- Guise, Duc de, remarkable case of
ing of his head, 299.
Mr P., painter, his large organ of Size, and excellence in perspective, 392. Gladiators represented with large organs of Combativeness, 163. Glory, love of, whence, 246. Gluck's organ of Tune, 438. God, existence of, indirectly proved
by the organ of Veneration, 277, 279. Demonstrable by reason, 485. Goldsmith's writings display mode- rate Secretiveness, 201. His Love of Approbation, 249. His verses on Hope, 243.
injury of the brain, 651, 654.
H., Mrs, 94, 288, 299. Engraving of her head, 299. Habit, analysis of, 553. Haggart, David, murderer and rob-
ber, 88, 94, 163, 177, 198, 243, 251, 288, 297, 299. Engraving of his head, 299.
Hall, Sir James, his organ of Weight large, 394.
Haller saw the necessity of a plu
rality of cerebral organs, 21, 22. Had large face and brain, 45. Placed the soul in the brain, 50.
Gordon, James, murderer, 97, 176, Handel's Tune large, 446. Engrav-
Hands of man not the origin of his arts, 360.
Happiness consists in the harmoni. ous gratification of the faculties, 491.
head appears to slope, 462. His Comparison large, 469.
Herschel's Constructiveness large, 224.
Hette, Dr, 118, 243, 251, 260, 299.
Hardwicke, Lord Chancellor, his Hindoos have small brains, 31. Acquisitiveness large, 205.
Hare, William, murderer, 176, 265.
Profile of the head of, 87. Hares and rabbits, difference of
Harmony and Melody, what, 437, 439.
Harvey and his discoveries, how treated by his contemporaries, 4, 631.
Hats, diversity of sizes of, 30, 570. Haydn's organ of Tune large, 438, 446.
Haydon, Mr, painter, his organs of Constructiveness, Colouring, and Causality large, 224, 403, 481, 580.
Hazlitt's Ideality large, 338. Part of a review of Lord Byron's Tra- gedies attributed to him, ib. Ma- nifests the sentiment of Wonder, 317.
Head, engraving of, as divided into regions by Dolci, 22. Different shape of, in males and females, 128.
Relation between its size and the voice, 440. Effects of its great and small size, 563-4. Heaman, murderer, 177. Hearing, sense of, 373. Not the
origin of Music and Speech, ib. Heart not the seat of the tender affections, 44. Supposed by Aris- totle to be the seat of the soul, 50- Helvetius, his erroneous theory, that man owes his arts to the struc- ture of his hands, 360. Henri Quatre, French poet, his Benevolence large, 263. His fore-
Engravings of skulls of, 177, 202, 606. Their sentiment of truth weak, 299. Their language figurative, 467. Account of their brains and character, 605. No- tices of their development, 94, 97, 171, 177, 200, 238, 260. Historians, Eventuality essential to,
Hobbes denied the existence of the sentiment of Benevolence, 274, and of the moral sense, 289, 303. Hog's brain, 100. Home, Sir Everard, observations on his proposed mode of investigat- ing the functions of the brain, 658. Homer's Ideality represented large, 325. Supposed cause of his ge、、 nius, 570.
Honour, laws of, on what founded, 294.
Hood's case of a patient who lost the use of language, 438, 449, 517. Hope, one of the higher sentiments, Dr Gall's views of, 304. Its func- tions, 305. Its effects on the character, 306. Assuages fear of death, 307. Favours the exercise of faith, and disposes to belief in a life to come, 307. Admitted by metaphysicians, ib.
organ of, its situation, 304. Not admitted by Dr Gall, 305. Its deficiency predisposes to de- spondency and suicide, 306. Its effects in combination, 576. Hoppe, Dr, his views of Concentra- tiveness, 136, and Alimentive- ness, 185.
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