Results for 'biotypology'

10 found
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  1.  34
    Biotypology IV. morphological typology of the individual and of groups.Walter Brandt - 1949 - Acta Biotheoretica 9 (1-2):41-56.
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  2.  33
    Biotypology II. growth as factor of development of the individual types and of the ecological types of man.Walter Brandt - 1938 - Acta Biotheoretica 4 (2):119-132.
  3.  30
    Biotypology.Walter Brandt - 1947 - Acta Biotheoretica 8 (3):77-86.
    L'auteur décrit dans cette troisième communication le développement de la constitution humaine basant sur une différente célérité de la différentiation des parties élémentaires du corps. L'isodromie des parties homologiques de deux individus est représentée par la même célérité de leurs phases de la différentiation, l'anisodromie par une célérité différente. Chapitre B: Le phénomène de la retardation ou de l'accélération de la differentiation est appliqué à une classification typologique de l'homme. Chapitre C: La normalité biologique est le degré moyen de la (...)
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  4.  28
    The theoretical basis of biotypology.Henry Winthrop - 1943 - Philosophy of Science 10 (2):131-139.
    Constitutional schemata have been of continuing interest in medicine and psychology ever since the time of Hippocrates. With the work of Sheldon, Stevens and Tucker, biotypology has been placed on a new basis. The reader who wishes to orient himself quickly and without too much detail, to the subject matter of typology, will find an interesting and substantial review by Anastasi. Wertheimer and Hesketh have produced a comprehensive, but brief, historical and analytic treatment of the constitutional approach in their (...)
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  5. The Emergence of Biotypology in Brazilian Medicine: The Italian Model, Textbooks, and Discipline Building, 1930–1940.Ana Carolina Vimieiro Gomes - 2015 - In Kostas Gavroglu, Maria Paula Diogo & Ana Simões (eds.), Sciences in the Universities of Europe, Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries: Academic Landscapes. Dordrecht: Springer Verlag.
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  6.  10
    Defeating the ‘social danger’ of homosexuality while ‘forging the fatherland’: Sexual science and biotypology in Mexico’s national development, 1927–57.Ryan M. Jones - 2023 - History of the Human Sciences 36 (5):122-151.
    This article situates Mexican sexology, and how it engaged homosexuality and gender nonconformity, within more familiar nation-building projects in Mexico following the Revolution (1910–20). It argues that much like with understandings of race, Mexican sexologists, influenced by neo-Lamarckism and ‘Latin' eugenics, viewed sexuality as caused largely by social and environmental factors, rather than simply as a congenital characteristic. Such experts advocated for social solutions for what they saw as the ‘state of danger’ that homosexuality represented, targeting their interventions at youths, (...)
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  7.  30
    Types, norms, and normalisation: Hormone research and treatments in Italy, Argentina, and Brazil, c. 1900–50.Chiara Beccalossi - 2021 - History of the Human Sciences 34 (2):113-137.
    Displacing the physiological model that had held sway in 19th-century medical thinking, early 20th-century hormone research promoted an understanding of the body and sexual desires in which variations in sex characteristics and non-reproductive sexual behaviours such as homosexuality were attributed to anomalies in the internal secretions produced by the testes or the ovaries. Biotypology, a new brand of medical science conceived and led by the Italian endocrinologist Nicola Pende, employed hormone research to study human types and hormone treatments to (...)
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  8.  22
    Normality: A collection of essays.Peter Cryle & Elizabeth Stephens - 2021 - History of the Human Sciences 34 (2):3-8.
    This article introduces a collection of articles written in response to a recently published intellectual and cultural history of normality by Peter Cryle and Elizabeth Stephens. It points to the fact that this special issue considerably extends and enriches the topical range of the book. The articles that follow discuss, in order, schooling in France at the time of the Revolution, phrenology in Europe and the US from 1840 to 1940, relations between commercial practice and scientific craniometry in 19th-century Britain (...)
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  9.  10
    Optimizing and normalizing the population through hormone therapies in Italian science, c. 1926–1950.Chiara Beccalossi - 2020 - British Journal for the History of Science 53 (1):67-88.
    This essay explores how hormone treatments were used to optimize and normalize individuals under Italian Fascism. It does so by taking the activities of the Biotypological Orthogenetic Institute − an Italian eugenics and endocrinological centre founded by Nicola Pende in 1926 − as the prime example of a version of eugenics, biotypology, which was based on hormone therapies. This essay first demonstrates that Italian Fascist biopolitics was not only concerned with increasing the size of the Italian population, but also (...)
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  10.  13
    Sexology, sexual development, and hormone treatments in Southern Europe and Latin America, c.1920–40.Chiara Beccalossi - 2023 - History of the Human Sciences 36 (5):94-121.
    Displacing the physiological model that had held sway in 19th-century medical thinking, early 20th-century medical scientists working on hormones promoted a new understanding of the body, psychological reactions, and the sexual instinct, arguing that each were fundamentally malleable. Hormones came to be understood as the chemical messengers that regulated an individual's growth and sexual development, and sexologists interested in this area focused primarily on children and adolescents. Hormone research also promoted a view of the body in which ‘hermaphroditism’, homosexuality, and (...)
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