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Cesare Lombroso: an anthropologist between evolution and degeneration

Academic Article
Publication Date:
2011
abstract:
Cesare Lombroso (1835-1909) was a prominent Italian medical doctor and intellectual in the second half of the nineteenth century. He became world famous for his theory that criminality, madness and genius were all sides of the same psychobiological condition: an expression of degeneration, a sort of regression along the phylogenetic scale, and an arrest at an early stage of evolution. Degeneration affected criminals especially, in particular the "born delinquent" whose development had stopped at an early stage, making them the most "atavistic" types of human being. Lombroso also advocated the theory that genius was closely linked with madness. A man of genius was a degenerate, an example of retrograde evolution in whom madness was a form of "biological compensation" for excessive intellectual development. To confirm this theory, in August 1897, Lombroso, while attending the Twelfth International Medical Congress in Moscow, decided to meet the great Russian writer Lev Tolstoy in order to directly verify, in him, his theory of degeneration in the genius. Lombroso's anthropological ideas fuelled a heated debate on the biological determinism of human behaviour
Iris type:
1.1 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
Lombroso; Anthropology; Evolution; Degeneration
List of contributors:
Mazzarello, PAOLO ANGELO
Authors of the University:
MAZZARELLO PAOLO ANGELO
Handle:
https://iris.unipv.it/handle/11571/377422
Published in:
FUNCTIONAL NEUROLOGY
Journal
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URL

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3814446/
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