Spurzheim biography of michael
Johann Gaspar Spurzheim* (), Gall's disciple and the man most responsible for popularizing phrenology:
Spurzheim in Boston, Mass, |
Spurzheim (centre with clasped hands); this engraving was described by his son-in-law as particularly accurate.
A Lutheran farmer's son from Longuich near Trier, Spurzheim was, like Gall, originally intended for the clergy.
Spurzheim studied divinity and philosophy at the University of Trier but he fled to Vienna in , purportedly to escape the invading French. In Vienna Spurzheim studied medicine and supported himself by tutoring a nobleman's children. Gall was the nobleman's physician and this is how Gall and Spurzheim first met in Spurzheim attended Gall's lectures avidly, and was eventually allowed to attend gratis until they were interdicted in December Beginning in Spurzheim was employed by Gall as dissectionist and famulus.
Spurzheim accompanied Gall in this roll on the latter's triumphant European lecture tour
In when Gall composed a Memoir of his anatomical discoveries to the French National Institute in Paris, he added Spurzheim's name to the title page, planning to prepare Spurzheim to be his successor. In , Gall published the first of a four-volume work on his system.
The first two volumes also bear the name of Spurzheim.
Spurzheim biography of michael His wife was from Paris and used her remarkable artistic skills to help illustrate his books and presentations on phrenology and the brain, in general [ 8 ]. Paris : F. Archived from the original on Boston , Massachusetts , United States.Spurzheim helped with comments and notes and arranged the illustrations, but the text was Gall's. In or Spurzheim and Gall had a falling out which has yet to be fully explained. Spurzheim travelled to Vienna where he completed his medical degree in and then travelled to London, arriving in March He lectured on what he termed 'Drs. Gall and Spurzheim's physiognomical System' and in published his first book.
Spurzheim made many alterations to Gall's system.
Biography of michael jackson Bristol, Thoemmes Press, Combe, trans. In , Spurzheim left his partnership with Gall and struck out on his own [ 6 , 7 ]. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources.In The Physiognomical System he boasted: "This book itself will show how much I have improved our doctrine in the last few years" because the system "must assume a more scientific arrangement, and be considered in a more philosophical manner, than Dr. Gall has been accustomed to do in his lectures." Spurzheim increased the number of organs from twenty-seven to thirty-three and changed the names of several.
(see the Organs page) Spurzheim also arranged the faculties into a hierarchical taxonomic system of two orders and five genera ascending from organs common to man and "lower" animals, such as Philoprogenitiveness, the love of offspring (starting at the back of the head and moving forwards), organs of "the moral sentiments" some of which were shared by Man and animals and other "intellectual" organs peculiar to Man such as Veneration, Size, and Language located in the forehead.
Spurzheim was the first to publish the image of a head to illustrate the craniographic layout of organs. Gall and his admirers on the continent had all produced images of skulls with organ markings but Spurzheim chose a representation more palatable to a lay audience, less technical and more easily applied to head readings.
Spurzheim's images, and terminology, became phrenology.
While lecturing in Dublin Spurzheim first read the June issue of the widely-read and respected Whig Edinburgh Review which contained a damning review of his book and Gall's system in general. All was dismissed as "a piece of thorough quackery from beginning to end".
Although anonymous like most articles of the time, the authorship of this ironic and calumnious review was not long concealed. The reviewer was the anatomist Dr. John Gordon () a former student of John Barclay and Dugald Stewart and since an extra-mural lecturer on anatomy and physiology in Surgeons' Square Edinburgh.
Gordon, ten years Spurzheim's junior, was an aspiring man. The son of a banker and wine merchant, Gordon had risen through the ranks by talent and patronage, especially from his teacher Dr. John Thomson, Regius Professor of Military Surgery. In Gordon was elected a fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons and in a fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh.
The review made Spurzheim's name in Britain and in Spurzheim travelled to Edinburgh where he famously refuted Gordon in his own lecture theatre by dissecting brains before large audiences. The controversy in Edinburgh led to the conversion of the first zealous proselytises for phrenology.
A writer in the Medico-Chirugical Journal and Review (, p.
Spurzheim biography of michael jackson Spurzheim, in the proportion of at least twenty to one. Gall has been accustomed to do in his lectures. This dissertation has been particularly influenced by the scholarship of Michel Foucault, and by his conjectures regarding the 'panoptic' and 'disciplinary' nature of modern society. Gall Against an order issued by Francis the First, Emperor of Germany, prohibiting him from delivering lectures on the functions of the brain, without special permission previously asked and obtained.) described the confrontation between Spurzheim and Gordon when the former gave a public dissection to prove his claims:
In Spurzheim returned to live and lecture in Paris where he married a French widow in In his lectures were banned and Spurzheim returned to Britain where he took up residence in London. He published many books (see my bibliography) and took part in further controversies over phrenology, especially with Sir William Hamilton, professor of Universal History in Edinburgh.
After the death of his wife in the winter /30 Spurzheim travelled more frequently from Paris, to Dublin, then Belfast back to London and to Paris. In Spurzheim travelled to the United States of America where he conducted a highly successful lecture tour. Unfortunately for Spurzheim, his zeal in earning money and love of fame prevented him from suspending his lectures when he became ill and he died in Boston in Although Spurzheim assiduously spread an false version of the history of phrenology, one in which he played a partnership role with Gall in the creation of the system, Spurzheim was the man most singularly responsible for popularising and spreading phrenology to a wide audience.
Online works of Spurzheim:
Gall, F.J., & Spurzheim, J.G., Anatomie et physionomie du système nerveux en général et du cerveau en particulier .
Premier volume. Anatomie et physiologie du système nerveux en général et anatomie du cerveau en particulier . Paris, F. Schoell, ; Gall, F.J., & Spurzheim, J.G., Anatomie et physionomie du système nerveux en général et du cerveau en particulier . Premier volume. Anatomie et physiologie du système nerveux en général et anatomie du cerveau en particulier .
Paris, F. Schoell, ; Gall, F.J., & Spurzheim, J.G., vol 2, ; Gall, F.J., vol 3 ,; Gall, F.J., vol 4, ***
Gall, F.J., & Spurzheim, J.G., Des dispositions innées de l'âme et de l'esprit : du matérialisme, du fatalisme et de la liberté morale, avec des réflexions sur l'éducation et sur la législation criminelle Paris, ***
Gall, F.J., & Spurzheim, J.G., Recherches sur le système nerveux en général, et sur celui du cerveau en particulier Paris, ***
Spurzheim, J.G., Phrenology: or the doctrine of the mental phenomena.
Spurzheim biography of michael j: The same as his published book. About this article. Gall first declares that insanity due to brain illness or defect. He was the son of a farmer and was raised according to the Lutheran church.
Philadelphia, [A late edition of The physiognomical System Illustrated html]
Spurzheim, J.G., Observations sur la folie ou Sur les dérangements des fonctions morales et intellectuelles de l'homme. Paris, Treuttel et Würtz, VIII pp. ***
Spurzheim, J.G., Observations sur la phrénologie, ou La connaissance de l'homme moral et intellectuel fondée sur les fonctions du système nerveux Paris, Treuttel : Würtz, ***
Spurzheim, J.
G.,Outlines of Phrenology; being also a manual of reference for the marked busts. London, [Illustrated html]
Spurzheim, J.G., Manuel de phrénologie.
Paris : Porthmann, ***
See also:Franz Joseph Gall - The Combe brothers
*Anglo-American historians very often give Spurzheim the erroneous middle name of Christoph. See for example the Dictionary of Scientific Biography. There is no doubt that the correct name is Gaspar.
It is on his parish birth record, and all of his publications and letters are signed with G. or J.G. Spurzheim.