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Disease, philosophical treatment of,

455.

Disputation, love of, 157-8.
Diversity, natural, of human minds,
230, 243, 253.
Dog, small size of the brain of the
bull-dog, 287.

Dream, singular, 278.-invention in
dreams, 573.

Dublin, Phrenology in, 190. -Dublin
Phrenological Society, 229, 558.

Duelling, barbarous, 369.
Duff, Rev. Alexander, his speech on
the mode of converting the Hindoos,

443.

Dumoutier, Mons. 139.

Duncan, James Foulis, on the means of
facilitating the study and improv.
ing the treatment of insanity, 309.
Dundee Lunatic Asylum, 144, 475.-
Phrenology in Dundee, 285, 570.
Dunfermline, Phrenology in, 285.
Dunstane Lodge Lunatic Asylum,
521.

Dyspepsia often caused by cerebral
disease, 431, 487.

Edinburgh Society for the diffusion of
moral and economical knowledge,
576.-Edinburgh Reviewer and Dr
Spurzheim, 526.- Edinburgh Phi-
losophical Association, 284.

Edmondson, Richard, on the functions
of the organs of Weight, 142, 208,
624, and Constructiveness, 636.

Education, review of Mr Simpson's
work on the Necessity of Popular,
28. must precede religious instruc-
tion, 30.-moral training ne
necessary
33, 430. classical education too ex-
clusively attended to, 5, 33.-in-
struction of children in mental and
political philosophy, 36.-study of
civil history, 37. should national
education be free or paid for? 38.
-proposed code and board of edu-
cation, 40. ought religion to be
taught in national schools? 41.-
Dr Bell the original inventor of the
Madras system of education, 42,
191-2. review of Dr Combe's Prin.
ciples of Physiology applied to the
improvement of education, &c. 74.-
review of "The Teacher, by Jacob
Abbott," 250. utility of mental
philosophy in relation to, 251, 465,
482. how dull boys ought to be
treated, 253. severity, whether to
be used in, 255. - strictness of dis.
cipline, 256.-system in, 257. es-
say-writing at schools, 257.-details

ought to be long dwelt on, 258.-
teachers apt to become arrogant, 258.
-greatly modifies the natural dis-
positions, 264, 489. - utility of the
study of literature, 265. - does edu-
cation tend to increase or diminish
crime? 267. is genius the result
of? 303.- hints on the formation
and conduct of a Model Normal
school, 397.- review of Dr Brig-
ham on the influence of mental cul-
tivation and mental excitement up-
on health, 424.- mental precocity
generally a sign of disease, 427.-
tasking, 428, 433. - Dr Brigham on
infant schools, 429.-play-ground
ought to be there most attended to
433. infant schools in America, 433,
note. the mental faculties improv
able only by improving their organs,
482.-Dr Caldwell on infant schools,
485. system of education at the
Rev. J. C. Bruce's academy in
Newcastle, 545. errors in religi
ous education, 574. cheap lectures
to the working classes, 576. Dr
Combe on the importance of Physio-
logy with reference to, 620.-physi-
cal, 23, 26, 424. Dr Caldwell on
physical, 481.

Educational Magazine, notices of, 479,
566. quoted, 574.
Edwards, Dr W. F., review of his
work on the physiological characters
of races of mankind, considered in
their relations to history, 97.
Egyptian mummy, skull and probable
character of an, 356.

Elliotson, Dr, 91. his examination of
skulls from the Mauritius, 658.
Ellis, Dr, his mode of treating insane
patients at Hanwell Asylum, 44.
Encyclopædia Britannica, life of Dr
Gall in the, 288.
Engledue, Dr, his lectures on Phreno-

logy in Portsmouth, 571.
Ennius quoted on hatred, 415.
Envy, whence originating, 413.
Epps, Dr, case of epilepsy by, 188.-
case of injury of the brain, 569.-
his lectures, 570.
Equilibrium, faculty of, 194, 624.
Erskine, Rev. Ebenezer, account of
his wife's illness, 377.
Esquirol's lunatic asylum, 316.
Ethics and Phrenology, 385.
Eustache, a negro, his head and cha-

racter, 134, 150.
Eventuality, pain of balked, 419.
Example greatly modifies the natural
dispositions, 265.

Executions, love of witnessing, 502.
Expression of the eye, 26. of the
countenance, 54.

Faculties, primitive or elementary,
nomenclature of the, 150-1, 407.-
how to be determined, 151, 395.-
different directions of each, 266.-
Mr Cox on their mutual influence,
402.-improvable only by improv-
ing their organs, 482, 621.

Faith, Mr Levison on a supposed or-
gan of, 636.
Fall of man, 387.

Fanaticism, observations on, by Mr
W. A. F. Browne, 289, 532, 577.
Fareham, Mr Miller's lecture on Phre-
nology in, 660.

Fatalizm, objection that Phrenology
leads to, answered, 305.
Feeling, sense of, 211, 350, 539, 541.
Ferussac's bulletin, case of diseased
cerebellum quoted from, 226.

Fickleness, whence, 617.
Fifth-monarchy men, 302.
Fighting, love of, whence, 159.
Findlater, Rev. Charles, anti-phreno-

logical essay by, 233.

Firmness, 70, 618.

Foissac, Dr, 138.

:

Force, mechanical, faculty for the per-

ception of, 193, 349, 624.
Forfar Phrenological Society, 661.
Form,
case of William Ma-

organ of,
nuel, a precocious child, in whom it
is very large, 192, 344-large in
Thomas Bewick, 635.
Fossati, Dr, 139, 505.

Fox, George, at one time probably in-
sane, 535.
France, crime and education in, 267.
Fraser's Magazine on Phrenology, 95.
Fretfulness, what, 423.

Friends, their bitterness towards each
other after a quarrel, 416.-grief
for the death of, sharpens the tem-
per, 421.

Future state, Burns on the existence
of a, 69. tendency to believe in a,

643.

Gall, Dr, his message on deathbed to
Cuvier, 139. his method of ascer
taining the functions of the diffe-
rent parts of the brain, 147-8. on
the means of determining the fun-
damental faculties, 151_whether
he borrowed from Herder, 184, note,
188 account of him in the Ency-
clopædia Britannica, 288. his let-
ter to Retzer in 1798, 505.-light

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Game-laws, 367.
Genius not the result of education,
303. irritability of men of genius,
410, 487.-unfavourable to longe.
vity, 487.

Geology, its connexion with religion,
2, 15, 393.
Germany, Phrenology in, 191.
Gheel lunatic village, 85.
Glasgow, Phrenology in, 91, 189, 285,
474, 570.

Gibson, William, case of derangement
of the faculty of Language, by, 515.
Golden, silver, brazen, and iron ages,

360.

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Greeks, how far civilized, 362.-Phre-
nological allusions in Homer and
Apollonius, 383.

Greenock Phrenological Society, 286.
Lectures in, 571.

Gregory, Dr John, on the mutual in-
fluence of mind and body, 76.-
Grief excites Destructiveness, 421
Guerry, Mons., his tables shewing the
parts of France in which crime
abounds most, 267.1

Haggart, David, 654.
Haller the father of modern physio-
logy, 452.
Hancock, George, on the functions of
the organs of Comparison and Wit,
435.-comments on his views, by
Mr H. C. Watson, 494.
Hancock, William, jun., on Concen-
trativeness, 617.

Hanwell Lunatic Asylum, treatment
of patients in, 44, 192, 317.

Happiness, what, 405.
Hatred, whence originating, 413.
Hats, different sizes of, for persons of
different ages and ranks, 220-1.
Head, large when mind very power.
ful, 48. this exemplified in the
case of Robert Burns, 58.-three
classes of heads; good, bad, and mid-
dling, 55.-Dr Sarlandière's instru-

Imitation greatly modifies the natu.
ral dispositions, 264. - Mr Levison
on the faculty of, 276.

Incendiarism, propensity to, 500.
Independence, love of, 65, 413.
Indigestion often caused by cerebral
disease, 431, 487.
Infant schools, Dr Brigham on, 429.
-Cobbett's opinion of, 432.-how
they ought to be conducted, 433.
Dr Caldwell on, 485. - Mr Owen
the originator of, 490.
Infants, heads of, 506.
Inhabitiveness. See Concentrative-

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Injure, propensity to, 159, 407.
Insanity, cases of, 17, 118, 133, 149,
204, 334, 459, 471, 515, 520-3.-ас-
count of Hanwell Pauper Lunatic
Asylum, 44.- Dr A. Combe on the
mode in which the insane ought to
be treated, 76.- lunatic village of
Gheel, 85. Dundee Lunatic Asy-
lum, 144, 475.- notice of Scipio Pi-
Physiologie de l'Homme
Aliéné," &c. 259.-improvement ef-
fected by the elder Pinel in the
treatment of, 259, 316.-fanaticism
considered as a form of, 289, 532,
577. MrJ. F. Duncan on the means
of facilitating the study and improv-
ing the treatment of, 309. - Mr No-
ble on the application of Phrenolo-
gy to the investigation of, 447.-ab-
surd opinions formerly prevalent re-
specting it, 449.- monomania, 453.-
philosophical treatment of insanity,
455. its effect on the skull, 468-
470. Montrose Lunatic Asylum,
475.-cases of destructive insanity,
500, 501. the sense of feeling of-
ten apparently obtuse in the insane,
539, 541. insanity on one side of
brain, and not on the other, 611,

ment for measuring the head, 141.
whether it attains its full size at
seven years of age, 220.-hatter's
measurement of, 221. tapering
head of Thersites, 383. - heads of
idiots and infants, 506._hints about
examining heads, 517.-cases where
dispositions were inferred from
heads, 459, 512, 520, et seq. 553.

Health, physiology applied to the
preservation of, 74. review of Dr
Brigham on the influence of men-
tal cultivation and mental excite-
ment on, 424.

Heart, emotions popularly referred to
the, 238.

Henderson, W. R., his bequest for the
benefit of Phrenology, 375, 575.

Henin, a French pilot, 510.
Herbivorous animals not destitute of
Destructiveness, 406, note.

Herder, whether Gall borrowed from,

184, note, 188.
Hereditary transmission of talents and
dispositions, 27. - Dr Edwards on
the transmission of physiological
characteristics of races of mankind,
97.-effects of the mixture of races,
99. hereditary rank and titles, 367.
Hindoos, is their Benevolence large ?
273.how convertible to Chris-
tianity, 443.

Hippocrates, his opinion of insanity,

449.

History, how hitherto written, 37.-
the physiological characters of races
of mankind considered in their re-
lations to, 97.

Hobbies, 615.

Holm, Mr, his controversy with Mr
Owen, 489.

Homer, his genius innate, 303.-his
description of the head and charac-
ter of Thersites, 383; of the grief
of Achilles, 422.

Hoppe, Dr, on Concentrativeness,

612.

Houston, Dr, on the authenticity of
the skulls of Swift and Stella, 603.
Hunger sharpens the temper, 420.

Ideality large in the head of Burns,
70. cultivated by the study of li-
terature, 265. ought to be grati-
fied, 374.-is Destructiveness roused
by offending it? 418.

Ideler, Professor, of Berlin, his opinion
of Phrenology, 191.
Idiocy, case of, 126. - Dr Voisin's ob-
servations on the heads of idiots,

506.

note.

Intoxication, how does it peculiarly
excite Combativeness and Destruc-
tiveness? 306. a mark of barba-
rism, 369.

Ireland, Phrenology in, 477. — See
Dublin. Belfast.
Irish, how convertible trom Popery,

444.

Irving, Edward, 597.
Itinerant phrenologists, 382, 479.

Jealousy, whence originating, 413.-
excites Destructiveness, 654.
Jesuits and Jansenites, controversy
between them, 537.

Jews, their physiognomy the same

now as in ancient times, 98.-tes-
tified grief by rending the garments,
422. on credulity, 642.

Kames on moral training, 33. - on
cruelty and harshness of manners,
411, note, 498-on credulity, 642.

Lacenaire, skull of, 661.
Lamarque, head and character of, 137.
Lancaster, Joseph, his controversy

with Dr Bell, 42, 191-2.

Lancet, the, on the mastication of food,
287.

Language, faculty of, affection of it
from injury of the brain, 17.- its
derangement from a blow near the
eye, 118. Mr W. A. F. Browne on
two cases published by Dr Moir,
162. case of William Manuel, a
precocious linguist, 344. - case of
derangement of, by Mr Grattan,
471. another case, with pain above
the eyes, by Mr Gibson, 515.-in-
sanity of the unknown tongues,
593.

natural and artificial, 236, 248.
Laplanders, heads of, 328.-their cha-
racter, 329.

Lauder, Mr W. Tait's lectures on
Phrenology in, 380.

Laws of nature, Mr Sedgwick on the,
2, 3. their independent action, 12,
376.-Dr Spurzheim's work on the,
187, 223.

Legislation, 372.-criminal, 367, 509.
Lemoine, a French criminal, 508.
Leroy, J. A., his observations on the
skull of Madame Tiquet, 511.
Leuret, Mons., his arguments against
Phrenology, 513.

Levison, J. L., 94.-letters from, 181,
271-on marvellousness, 636.
Linguists often shallow-minded, 25.
Linn, a parricide, 651.

Locality, 275, 419; in landscape
painters, 139.
Locke on moral training, 33.
London University, Phrenology in
the, 91.

Longevity of philosophers, 486.
Loudon, J. L., quoted on Phrenology,
287, 5/3.

Love of Approbation, 66, 275, 414, 622.
Lunatic Asylums, 44, 77, 144, 192,
259, 289, 309, 475, 519, 521.-lu-
natic village of Gheel, 85.
Luther's conflict with Satan, 301.
Luxury and refinement of civiliza-
tion, their supposed enervating ef-
fects, 373.

Lymington, Phrenology in, 91.

Lymphatic temperament, 111.

Mackenzie, Sir G. S., on the faculty
of mechanical force, 211, 349. his
prospectus of a British Association
for the advancement of Mental
Science, 281.

Mackintosh, Sir James, remarks on

his views of conscience, 394.
Macnish, Robert, notice of his Book of
Aphorisms, 23. - his controversy
with Mr Carmichael on the proxi-
mate cause of sleep, 164, 318.
Manchester, Phrenology in, 91, 260,
480. case of an idiot in, 126.
Manuel, Wm., a precocious child, case
of, 192, 344.

Mastication of food, 287.
Materialism, answer to the objection
that Phrenology leads to, 304.
Mauritius, skulls from the, 657.
Medical Gazette, 288.
Medicine, history of, 450.
Medico-Chirurgical Journal, defence
of Dr Spurzheim quoted from the,

526.

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Miracles as an evidence of revelation,

444. at the tomb of Abbé Paris, 538.
Misery, what, 405.

Moir, Dr, remarks on two cases of ce-
rebral disease published by, 162.
Monomania, 453.
Montaigne quoted on ferocious cow-
ards, 160. on the cruelties prac-
tised in the French civil wars, 499.
-on the love of cruel amusements,
502.-on credulity, 642.
Montbar, a bucaneer, 417.
Montrose Lunatic Asylum, cases of
fanatical patients in, 289, 532, 577.
-account of, 475.

Moral sentiments, what faculties en-
titled to be so named, 343.
More, Hannah, on the religious utility
of affliction, 378.
Moscati, Marquis, 288.
Mummy, skull and inferred character
of a 356.

Munster, siege of, when occupied by
fanatics, 534.

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tisfactory, 122.

Mutual influence of the mental fa-
culties, 402.

National character, the cause, not the
effect, of national institutions, 247.
national jealousies and antipathies,
368. national education, 38.

Negroes. Head and character of Eus-
tache, 134, 510.

Nerves of sensation and motion, 197,
478.

Nervous temperament, 114.

Newcastle, Mr Combe's lectures in,
519.his visit to the Lunatic
Asylums and prison there, 519. Mr.
Bruce's academy in, 543. Newcas-
tle Phrenological Society, 571, 658.
New Zealanders disfigure their per-
sons in testimony of grief, 421.

47

Nicknames, 27...

Noble, Daniel, on the temperaments,
109, 262.-his essay on the means
of estimating character, 264.-on
the application of Phrenology to
the investigation of insanity, 447.
Nomenclature of the mental faculties,
150, 407.

Normal school, hints for the formation
and conduct of a, 397.

North American Review, Dr Cald-
well's answer to the, 217.
Notices, miscellaneous, 91, 189, 284,
379, 474, 570, 657.

Oppose, Combativeness the propensity
to, 152.

Opposition to Phrenology, beneficial
results of, 303.-motives of oppo-
nents, 458.
Organization and mind, 395.
Organs, cerebral, their mutual influ-
ence, 402. by what their power and
activity are influenced, 403.
Owenism and Phrenology, 489.

Pain a mode of action of the faculties,
404.-rouses Destructiveness, 408,
et seq., and Combativeness, 423.

Painters, 139.

Paris, Abbé, miracles at his tomb, 538.
Paris Phrenological Journal, 131, 382,

506.

Pathology, whether useful to Phre-
nology, 94.
Patterson, Robert, on the skull and
probable character of a mummy, 356.

Peevishness, 157-8, 423.
Perpendicularity, perception of, 142,
208, 624.
Persecution, religious, its origin, 414,
418. for witchcraft, 416.

Peru, remarkable skulls found in the
upper parts of, 123. - Cowardly and
ferocious dispositions of the Peru-
vians, 160.

Philoprogenitiveness strong among
the Caribs, 22._ the organ large
in Burns, 61.

-

of

Phrenological Society, proceedings of
the, 86, 189, 285, 474, 657. - Of Lon-
don, 657. of Forfar, 661. of War-
wick, 87, 190, 380.- of Manchester,
91, 126, 260, 480. of Paris, 131,
382, 506. of Alyth, 190.
Dublin, 229, 558. - of Greenock,
286.-of Boston, U. S., 286, 384.-
of Stirling, 379, 477. of Glasgow,
474, 570. of -of Dundee, 570. of Cu-
par-Fife, 571. of Newcastle, 571,
658. of Portsmouth, 672-Edin-
burgh Ethical Society, 88, 189, 474,
570.


1

Phrenology, unreasonably neglected,
6. Tiedemann's and Arnold's opi-
nions of it, 48. - Dr Caldwell on
the admission of its principles by
those who deny its details, 50. in
London University, 91. the Bri-
tish Association and, 121.- its pro-
gress in Paris, 137, 511.-its uti-
lity 156, 243. - Professor Ideler's
opinion of, 191.- Annals of, review-
cd, 216, 383, 477, 566. in what
spirit usually opposed, 218, 508.-
antiphrenological essay by the Rev.
Charles Findlater, with answer
thereto by Mr Walter Tod, 233.-
principles of, 242.-its utility in
education, 251, 254, 620.-review
of Mr Dean's Lectures on, 302.-
Beneficial results of opposition to,
303.-Answer to the objection that
it leads to materialism and fata-
lism, 304.-relation between phre-
nology and Christianity, 335, 385.
-Verses in praise of, 381.- Dr
Barlow's opinion of, 382.-phreno-
logical allusions in ancient Greek
writers, 383. not to be neglected
with impunity by medical men, 458.
--case illustrative of its utility, 459.
-Dr W. P. Alison's opinion of, 478.
-Owenism and, 489. - Andral on its
harmony with general physiology,
507.-Dr Bailly on the means of
forwarding its progress, 511.-М.
Leuret's arguments against, 513.-
Phrenological quacks, 517, 662.

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