Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Cesare Lombroso" ¶ 7
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Lombroso and published
Nordau drew upon the writings of the criminologist Cesare Lombroso, whose The Criminal Man, published in 1876, attempted to prove that there were " born criminals " whose atavistic personality traits could be detected by scientifically measuring abnormal physical characteristics.
A collection of papers on Lombroso was published under the title L ' opera di Cesare Lombroso nella scienza e nelle sue applicazioni, ( Turin, 1906 ).

Lombroso and Man
* Hans Kurella, Cesare Lombroso, a Modern Man of Science, translated from German by M. E. Paul, ( London, 1911 )
* ____ With Gina Lombroso-Ferrero ( 1911 ) Criminal Man, According to the Classification of Cesare Lombroso.

Lombroso and book
As an atheist, Lombroso discusses his views on spiritualism and the paranormal in his book After Death – What?

Lombroso and which
Early devices for lie detection include an 1895 invention of Cesare Lombroso used to measure changes in blood pressure for police cases, a 1904 device by Vittorio Benussi used to measure breathing, and an abandoned project by American William Marston which used blood pressure to examine German prisoners of war ( POWs ).
Lombroso rejected the established Classical School, which held that crime was a characteristic trait of human nature.
Lombroso believed that atavism could be identified by a number of measurable physical stigmata, which included protruding jaw, drooping eyes, large ears, twisted and flattish nose, long arms relative to the lower limbs, sloping shoulders, and a coccyx that resembled " the stump of a tail.

Lombroso and argued
Cesare Lombroso, founder of the Italian school of criminology, argued that criminal behavior was the product of biological factors, including race.

Lombroso and artistic
Despite the fact that Nordau was Jewish and a key figure in the Zionist movement ( Lombroso was also Jewish ), his theory of artistic degeneracy would be seized upon by German National Socialists during the Weimar Republic as a rallying point for their anti-Semitic and racist demand for Aryan purity in art.

Lombroso and was
He was a student of Enrico Ferri and Cesare Lombroso.
In addition, the concept of atavism as part of an individualistic explanation of the causes of criminal deviance was popularised by the Italian criminologist Cesare Lombroso in the 1870s.
Cesare Lombroso, born Ezechia Marco Lombroso (; 6 November 1835 – 19 October 1909 ) was an Italian criminologist and physician, founder of the Italian School of Positivist Criminology.
Lombroso was born in Verona on 6 November 1835 to a wealthy Jewish family.
His father was Aronne Lombroso, a tradesman from Verona, and his mother was Zeffora ( or Zefira ) Levi from Chieri near Turin.
He was a disciple of Cesare Lombroso.
He was critical of the concept of the atavistic criminal as developed by Cesare Lombroso.
It was made famous by Cesare Lombroso ( 1835 – 1909 ), the founder of anthropological criminology, who claimed to be able to scientifically identify links between the nature of a crime and the personality or physical appearance of the offender.
Rossi was Jewish and so was his wife, Nora Lombroso ( granddaughter of anthropologist, Cesare Lombroso ), so they had to leave Italy and traveled to America with brief stays in Copenhagen, Denmark and Manchester, England.
Lombroso was convinced he had found the key to degeneration that had concerned liberal circles.
The Italian school of criminology was founded at the end of the 19th century by Cesare Lombroso ( 1835 – 1909 ) and two of his Italian disciples, Enrico Ferri ( 1856 – 1929 ) and Raffaele Garofalo ( 1851 – 1934 ).
" The concept of atavism was glaringly wrong, but like so many others of his time, Lombroso sought to understand behavioral phenomena with reference to the principles of evolution as they were understood at the time.
The most extraordinary was a phenomenon that Lombroso titles " The Levitation of the Medium to the Top of the Table.

Lombroso and form
Born criminals were thus viewed by Lombroso in his earliest writings as a form of human sub-species ( in his later writings he came to view them less as evolutionary throwbacks and more in terms of arrested development and degeneracy ).

Lombroso and .
* 1835 – Cesare Lombroso, Italian psychiatrist and criminologist ( d. 1909 )
* Lombroso, Cesare ( 1896 ) " The Savage Origin of Tattooing ," in Popular Science Monthly, Vol.
The kiss of lovers, according to 19th-century anthropologist Cesare Lombroso, originated and evolved from the maternal kiss.
Lombroso later became professor of psychiatry ( 1896 ) and criminal anthropology ( 1906 ) at the same university.
Through years of postmortem examinations and anthropometric studies of criminals, the insane, and normal individuals, Lombroso became convinced that the " born criminal " ( reo nato, a term given by Ferri ) could be anatomically identified by such items as a sloping forehead, ears of unusual size, asymmetry of the face, prognathism, excessive length of arms, asymmetry of the cranium, and other " physical stigmata.
Lombroso also maintained that criminals had less sensibility to pain and touch ; more acute sight ; a lack of moral sense, including an absence of remorse ; more vanity, impulsiveness, vindictiveness, and cruelty ; and other manifestations, such as a special criminal argot and the excessive use of tattooing.
Besides the " born criminal, " Lombroso also described " criminaloids, " or occasional criminals, criminals by passion, moral imbeciles, and criminal epileptics.
Later in his life Lombroso began investigating psychic phenomena and spiritualism.
* Lombroso, Cesare ( 1876 ) L ' Uomo Delinquente.
In the interests of public safety, the Lombroso institute is set up to test all the men in Britain.
The police aren't given the names of the VMN-negative, but they are allowed to confirm whether or not a particular person is in the Lombroso Institutes system as VMN-negative.

published and Man
The Booker Prize Foundation announced in January 2010 the creation of a special award called the " Lost Man Booker Prize ," with the winner chosen from a longlist of 22 novels published in 1970.
The mountain was the setting for a children's story, The Old Man of Lochnagar, told originally by Prince Charles to his younger brothers, Andrew and Edward, and published in 1980 with royalties accruing to The Prince's Trust.
( Originally published under the title Confucius — the Man and the Myth.
* The Dark Mind ( 1964 ) ( also published as Transfinite Man )
Smith's works consist of: a single novel, originally published in two volumes in edited form as The Planet Buyer, also known as The Boy Who Bought Old Earth ( 1964 ) and The Underpeople ( 1968 ), and later restored to its original form as Norstrilia ( 1975 ); and 32 short stories ( collected in The Rediscovery of Man ( 1993 ), including two versions of the short story " War No. 81-Q ").
The Antiquity of Man ( published in early February 1863, just before Huxley's Man's place in nature ) drew these comments from Darwin to Huxley:
In 1971, American novelist Frank Yerby published The Man From Dahomey, a historical novel set partially in Dahomey.
Cover art for paperback edition of The Secret of Saturn's Rings ( 1966 ) Wollheim's first story, " The Man from Ariel ," was published in the January 1934 issue of Wonder Stories when he was nineteen.
He expanded and reworked the material, and eventually published it as Reason: the Only Oracle of Man.
In these years he recovered the manuscript that he and Thomas Young had worked in his youth from Young's widow, who was living in Albany, and began to develop it into the work that was published in 1785 as Reason: the Only Oracle of Man.
* Essay on natural religion by Allen: Reason: The Only Oracle of Man, published 1784
The underlying concept can be traced back to 1864 in the published work of George Perkins Marsh (" Man and Nature ").
Darwin applied the theory of evolution and sexual selection to humans when he published The Descent of Man in 1871.
Three years later, Rosina published Cheveley, or the Man of Honour ( 1839 ), a near-libellous fiction bitterly satirising her husband's hypocrisy.
Other rock fanzines of this period include Flash, 1972, edited by Mark Shipper, Eurock Magazine ( 1973 – 1993 ) edited by Archie Patterson and Bam Balam, written and published by Brian Hogg in East Lothian, Scotland, beginning in 1974, and in the mid-1970s, Back Door Man and denim delinquent.
On 26 August 1789, the Assembly published the Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen, which comprised a statement of principles rather than a constitution with legal effect.
Wells also wrote the preface for the first edition of W. N. P. Barbellion's diaries, The Journal of a Disappointed Man, published in 1919.
Rapp became inspired by the philosophies of Jakob Böhme, Philipp Jakob Spener, Johann Heinrich Jung, and Emanuel Swedenborg, among others, and later wrote Thoughts on the Destiny of Man, published in German in 1824 and in English a year later, in which he outlined his ideas and philosophy.
Two books have been published with write-ups on some of the winners: The Ig Nobel Prize ( 2002, US paperback ISBN 0-452-28573-9, UK paperback ISBN 0-7528-4261-7 ) and The Ig Nobel Prize 2 ( 2005, US hardcover ISBN 0-525-94912-7, UK hardcover ISBN 0-7528-6461-0 ), which was later retitled The Man Who Tried to Clone Himself ( ISBN 0-452-28772-3 ).
* Sleepers of Mars ( 1973 ) a collection of five stories originally published in magazines in the 1930s: Sleepers of Mars, Worlds to Barter, Invisible Monster, The Man from Earth & The Third Vibrator.
He also found time for philosophical speculations, and in 1830 he published his Inquiries concerning the Intellectual Powers of Man and the Investigation of Truth, which was followed in 1833 by a sequel, The Philosophy of the Moral Feelings.
Novel version The Missing Man was published by Putnam in 1975.
He was particularly drawn to Socialist writings, he studied socialist philosopher Hajime Kawakami, and at age 23 translated and published Oscar Wilde ’ s The Soul of Man Under Socialism.
Oscar Wilde, famous anarchist Irish people | Irish writer who published the libertarian socialist work titled The Soul of Man under SocialismThe anarchist writer and bohemian Oscar Wilde wrote in his famous essay The Soul of Man under Socialism that " Art is individualism, and individualism is a disturbing and disintegrating force.

0.156 seconds.