The Hand Phrenologically Considered Being a Glimpse at the Relation of the Mind with the Organisation of the Body

audiobook

The Hand Phrenologically Considered Being a Glimpse at the Relation of the Mind with the Organisation of the Body

by Anonymous

EN·~1 hours·7 chapters

Chapters

7 total
1

THE HAND PHRENOLOGICALLY CONSIDERED:

0:54
2

PREFACE.

1:40
3

CHAPTER I.

13:12
4

CHAPTER II.

5:44
5

CHAPTER III.

34:15
6

CHAPTER IV.

30:44
7

FOOTNOTES:

0:30

Description

This volume revisits the long‑standing fascination with the hand as a mirror of character, tracing ideas from Renaissance chiromancy through the nineteenth‑century revival sparked by Sir C. Bell’s work. Drawing on recent French and German investigations, the author links the shape of fingers, lines, and palm contours to mental tendencies, presenting the hand as a “hand‑maiden of the intellect,” a tool through which the brain receives and expresses sensation. Readers are invited to consider whether the subtle variations of our own hands might hint at underlying habits of thought.

Building on the observations of D’Arpentigny and Professor Carus, the writer offers revised classifications that aim to separate reliable patterns from earlier conjecture. Practical examples show how certain hand formations correspond to traits such as deliberation, creativity, or steadiness, while acknowledging the limits of current knowledge. The tone balances scholarly care with gentle curiosity, leaving listeners with a richer appreciation of how body and mind may echo one another, without claiming definitive prediction.

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Details

Full title

The Hand Phrenologically Considered Being a Glimpse at the Relation of the Mind with the Organisation of the Body Being a Glimpse at the Relation of the Mind with the Organisation of the Body

Language

en

Duration

~1 hours (83K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Release date

2016-02-29

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

A

Anonymous

Some of the world’s most enduring books come from writers whose names were never recorded or never revealed. “Anonymous” on a title page can mean many different things: a lost identity, a deliberate choice, or a work shaped by tradition over time.

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