Literature DB >> 25998794

Phrenology, heredity and progress in George Combe's Constitution of Man.

Bill Jenkins1.   

Abstract

The Constitution of Man by George Combe (1828) was probably the most influential phrenological work of the nineteenth century. It not only offered an exposition of the phrenological theory of the mind, but also presented Combe's vision of universal human progress through the inheritance of acquired mental attributes. In the decades before the publication of Darwin's Origin of Species, the Constitution was probably the single most important vehicle for the dissemination of naturalistic progressivism in the English-speaking world. Although there is a significant literature on the social and cultural context of phrenology, the role of heredity in Combe's thought has been less thoroughly explored, although both John van Wyhe and Victor L. Hilts have linked Combe's views on heredity with the transformist theories of Jean-Baptiste Lamarck. In this paper I examine the origin, nature and significance of his ideas and argue that Combe's hereditarianism was not directly related to Lamarckian transformism but formed part of a wider discourse on heredity in the early nineteenth century.

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Year:  2015        PMID: 25998794     DOI: 10.1017/S0007087415000278

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Br J Hist Sci        ISSN: 0007-0874


  1 in total

1.  The production of a physiological puzzle: how Cytisus adami confused and inspired a century's botanists, gardeners, and evolutionists.

Authors:  John Lidwell-Durnin
Journal:  Hist Philos Life Sci       Date:  2018-08-21       Impact factor: 1.205

  1 in total

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