- Franz Joseph Gall
Franz Joseph Gall (
March 9 ,1758 -August 22 ,1828 ) was aneuroanatomist , physiologist, and pioneer in the study of the localization of mental functions in thebrain .Gall was born in
Baden , in the village of Tiefenbronn to a wealthy Roman Catholic wool merchant. The Galls had been the leading family in the area for over a century. As the second eldest son, he was intended for the priesthood but chose instead to study medicine at theUniversity of Strasbourg . He later completed his degree inVienna ,Austria . Around 1800, he developed "cranioscopy ", a method to determine the personality and development of mental and moral faculties on the basis of the external shape of the skull. Cranioscopy («"cranium"»: skull, «"scopos"»: vision) was later renamed tophrenology («"phrenos"»: mind, «"logos"»: study) by his followerJohann Spurzheim .Gall's concepts on brain localization were revolutionary, and caused religious leaders and some scientists to take exception. The
Roman Catholic Church considered his theory as contrary toreligion (that the mind, created by God, should have a physical seat in brain matter wasanathema ). Established science also condemned these ideas for lack ofscientific proof of his theory. His ideas were also not acceptable to the court of Franz Josef II (the brother of Marie Antoinette). Due to this opposition, Gall left his lecturer position in Austria. He sought a teaching position in Germany and eventually settled in Paris. Revolutionary France was most likely the most hospitable place for Gall's theories. However,Napoleon Bonaparte , the rulingemperor , and the scientific establishment led by theInstitute of France , pronounced his science as invalid. Despite all this, Gall was able to secure a comfortable existence on the basis of his speciality. Gall became a celebrity of sorts as he was accepted into Parisian intellectual salons.Gall's phrenological theories and practices were best accepted in England, where the ruling class used it to justify the "inferiority" of its colonial subjects. It also became very popular in the USA from 1820 to 1850. The misuse of Gall's ideas and work to justify discrimination were deliberately furthered by his associates, including
Johann Spurzheim . Later, others tried to improve on his theories with systems such ascharacterology .In spite of the many problems associated with his work, Gall made significant contributions to neurological science. He was the first to suggest that character, thoughts, and emotions were not located in the heart but in the brain. At the time these were revolutionary ideas.
Gall died in Paris, on August 22, 1828. Although married he had no direct descendent. However, direct descendants of his brothers lived in Germany until 1949. A collection of his skulls can be seen at the Rollet Museum in Baden bei Wien, Austria, where several of his relatives now live (http://www.bmi.gv.at/oeffentlsicherheit/2006/09_10/Seinerzeit.pdf).
Gall's theories had an influence both on the Italian criminologist
Cesare Lombroso and on his French rival,Alexandre Lacassagne .ource
[http://www.cerebromente.org.br/n01/frenolog/frenologia.htm Phrenology, the History of Brain Localization]
By:Renato M.E. Sabbatini , PhD
In: [http://www.cerebromente.org.br/ Brain & Mind] , March 1997.
Reproduced with permission.
very useful information-http://pages.britishlibrary.net/phrenology/fjgall.html by John van Wyhe.
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