C Cernuschi - Art History, 2000 - Wiley Online Library
… trappings and even physiognomic likeness could be relinquished in favour of one that … ' applied not only to those illnesses we modern would call neuroses but also to diseases such as …
… modern Greek—solutions for which models are hard to find, since there scarcely exists a translation tradition from modern … of the language and literature of modern Greece has been of …
… physiognomy; not a man who does not judge of all things that pass through his hands by their physiognomy… an objection to the truth of physiognomy, is founded upon physiognomy. Why …
D Laraway - Symposium: A Quarterly Journal in Modern Literatures, 1999 - Taylor & Francis
… ’s explanatory pretenses: “‘Suppose the physiognomist ever did take the measure of a man, it would only require a courageous resolve on the part of the man to make himself …
P Haldar - Law and the Question of the Animal, 2013 - api.taylorfrancis.com
… by focusing only on his physiognomy, La Mettrie discerns … genius are painted on his physiognomy. His face is convoluted… theory begin to look slightly more modern. TH Huxley’s …
… racist pseudoscience, previously known as physiognomy. Kosinski defended his study by … We have many known examples of how modern artificial intelligence technology can be …
… century (as will be seen, physiognomy or phrenology are the most typical examples of this). In this discursive context, it naturally follows that the depths must have a truth, which should …
… with alterations of facial appearance and physiognomy. Happily, the authors … physiognomy concludes that the practice has little validity, somewhat underestimating the ``kernel of truth…
… Such physiognomic beliefs are related to the belief that biology is relatively fixed and immutable, and belief in a just world (perhaps reflecting the idea that ‘people get the face that they …