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Palmistry

Palmistry is the pseudoscientific practice of fortune-telling through the study of the palm. Also known as palm reading, chiromancy, chirology or cheirology, the practice is found all over the world, with numerous cultural variations. Those who practice palmistry are generally called palmists, hand readers, hand analysts, or chirologists.

A fortune-teller conducting a palm reading, with lines and mounts marked out on the person's left palm
Gold stamped front cover of The Psychonomy of the Hand

There are many—and often conflicting—interpretations of various lines and palmar features across various teachings of palmistry. Palmistry is widely viewed as a pseudoscience due to various contradictions between different interpretations and the lack of evidence for palmistry's predictions.[1][2]

History edit

 
The Fortune Teller, by Caravaggio (1594–95; canvas; Louvre), depicting a palm reading
 
The Fortune Teller, by Enrique Simonet (1899), depicting a palm reading

Ancient palmistry edit

Palmistry is a practice common to many different places on the Eurasian landmass;[3] it has been practiced in the cultures of Sumer, Babylonia, Arabia, Canaan, Persia, India, Nepal, Tibet and China.

The acupuncturist Yoshiaki Omura describes its roots in Hindu astrology (known in Sanskrit as jyotish), Chinese Yijing (I Ching), and Roma fortune tellers.[4] Several thousand years ago, the Hindu sage Valmiki is thought[5][better source needed] to have written a book comprising 567 stanzas, the title of which translates in English as The Teachings of Valmiki Maharishi on Male Palmistry.[5][6] Since ancient times, palmistry is considered to be a branch of Samudrika Shastra (Sanskrit: सामुद्रिक शास्त्र) which included the studies of marks all over a person's body such as astrology and palmistry (Hast-samudrika), as well as phrenology (kapal-samudrik) and face reading (physiognomy, mukh-samudrik).[7][8] From India, the art of palmistry spread to China, Tibet and to other countries in Europe.[4][9]

Palmistry also progressed independently in Greece where Anaxagoras practiced it.[4] Aristotle (384–322 B.C.E.) reportedly discovered a treatise on the subject of palmistry on an altar of Hermes, which he then presented to Alexander the Great (356–323 B.C.E.), who took great interest in examining the character of his officers by analyzing the lines on their hands.[10] A chapter of a 17th-century sex manual, misattributed to Aristotle, is occasionally incorrectly cited as being the treatise in question. The text it is not contained in his canonical works.

 
The infant Jesus having his fortune told whilst sitting on the lap of the Madonna by Josefa de Óbidos (1667)

In Renaissance magic, palmistry (known as "chiromancy") was classified as one of the seven "forbidden arts", along with necromancy, geomancy, aeromancy, pyromancy, hydromancy, and spatulamancy (scapulimancy).[11] During the 16th century the art of palmistry was actively suppressed by the Catholic Church. Both Pope Paul IV and Pope Sixtus V issued papal edicts against various forms of divination, including palmistry.[12]

Modern palmistry edit

Palmistry experienced a revival in the modern era starting with Captain Casimir Stanislas D'Arpentigny's publication La Chirognomie in 1839.[9]

The Chirological Society of Great Britain was founded in London by Katharine St. Hill in 1889 with the stated aim to advance and systematise the art of palmistry and to prevent charlatans from abusing the art.[13][14] Edgar de Valcourt-Vermont (Comte C. de Saint-Germain) founded the American Chirological Society in 1897.

A pivotal figure in the modern palmistry movement was the Irish William John Warner, known by his sobriquet, Cheiro. After studying under gurus in India, he set up a palmistry practice in London and enjoyed a wide following of famous clients from around the world, including famous celebrities like Mark Twain, W. T. Stead, Sarah Bernhardt, Mata Hari, Oscar Wilde, Grover Cleveland, Thomas Edison, the Prince of Wales, General Kitchener, William Ewart Gladstone, and Joseph Chamberlain. So popular was Cheiro as a "society palmist" that even those who were not believers in the occult had their hands read by him. The skeptical Mark Twain wrote in Cheiro's visitor's book that he had "exposed my character to me with humiliating accuracy".

Edward Heron-Allen, an English polymath, published various works including the 1883 book, Palmistry: A Manual of Cheirosophy, which is still in print.[9][15] There were attempts at formulating some sort of scientific basis for the art, most notably in the 1900 publication The Laws of Scientific Hand Reading by William Gurney Benham.[16]

In 1970, Parker Brothers published a game designed by Maxine Lucille Fiel called "Touch-Game of Palmistry" which allowed players have "palm reading and analysis" through selecting cards that matched designated palm features.[17]

In 2007, British palm reader Johnny Fincham contributed to the works of palmistry by introducing a more line-focused method instead of the traditional fortune-telling method. These changes can be seen is his book Palmistry: From Apprentice to Pro.

Criticism edit

Criticism of palmistry often rests with the lack of empirical evidence supporting its efficacy. Scientific literature typically regards palmistry as a pseudoscientific or superstitious belief.[19] Psychologist and noted skeptic Ray Hyman has written:[20]

I started reading palms in my teens as a way to supplement my income from doing magic and mental shows. When I started I did not believe in palmistry. But I knew that to "sell" it I had to act as if I did. After a few years I became a firm believer in palmistry. One day the late Stanley Jaks, who was a professional mentalist and a man I respected, tactfully suggested that it would make an interesting experiment if I deliberately gave readings opposite to what the lines indicated. I tried this out with a few clients. To my surprise and horror my readings were just as successful as ever. Ever since then I have been interested in the powerful forces that convince us, reader and client alike, that something is so when it really isn't.

Skeptics often include palmists on lists of alleged psychics who practice cold reading. Cold reading is the practice that allows readers of all kinds, including palmists, to appear psychic by using high-probability guessing and inferring details based on signals or cues from the other person.[21][22]

Although some Christians condemn palmistry as a form of divination, Jewish and Christian traditions are largely ambivalent about divination in general.[23] During the 16th century the Catholic Church condemned the practice of palmistry.[12] However, there is a long tradition of practicing palmistry within both Jewish and Christian mysticism,[24] and some practitioners, such as Comte C. de Saint-Germain, have argued that the Bible does not oppose it.[25]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Park, Michael Alan (1986). "Palmistry or HandJive?". In Frazier, Kendrick (ed.). Science Confronts the Paranormal. Prometheus. pp. 198–201. ISBN 978-1-61592-619-0.
  2. ^ Chamorro-Premuzic, Tomas; Furnham, Adrian (2010). The Psychology of Personnel Selection. Cambridge University Press. p. 19. ISBN 978-0-521-86829-7. A more popular pseudoscience is chiromancy (or palmistry), the art of characterisation and foretelling the future through the study of the palm.
  3. ^ Dwivedi 1970, pp. 16–20
  4. ^ a b c Omura 2003, pp. 172–174 According to this theory, palmistry developed in India and then extended across the world.
  5. ^ a b Dwivedi 1970, pp. 25–26
  6. ^ Sharma 1995, p. 95
  7. ^ Modern Asian Studies Volume 41. Cambridge University Press. 2007. p. 504.
  8. ^ Robert Svoboda & Hart De Fouw - Light On Life. Lotus Press. 2003. p. 14. ISBN 0-940985-69-1.
  9. ^ a b c Chinn 2000, p. 24: "It was not until the mid- to late nineteenth century that palmreading took off in Britain, France and the United States thanks to three major figures: Casimir Stanislas d'Arpentigny, Edward Heron-Allen and Cheiro."
  10. ^ Benham, William George (1900). The Laws of Scientific Hand Reading: A Practical Treatise on the Art Commonly Called Palmistry. Putnam.
  11. ^ Johannes Hartlieb (Munich, 1456) The Book of All Forbidden Arts; quoted in Láng, p. 124.
  12. ^ a b Byrne, Laura (8 October 2013). "Palm Reading". 1000 Things. Royal Academy of Fine Art in The Hague. Retrieved 10 November 2020.
  13. ^ "The London Cheirological Society".
  14. ^ Guiley, Rosemary (2006). The Encyclopedia of Magic and Alchemy. New York: Facts On File. pp. 240–241. ISBN 1438130007.
  15. ^ Heron-Allen 2008
  16. ^ "Palmistry: Origins & History" (PDF).
  17. ^ . Post Star. Glens Falls, New York. 28 April 2020. Archived from the original on 22 November 2020.
  18. ^ Sara Sirolli (2008). "Palmistry diagram of hand".
  19. ^ Preece, P. F.; Baxter, J. H. (2000). "Scepticism and gullibility: The superstitious and pseudo-scientific beliefs of secondary school students". International Journal of Science Education. 22 (11): 1147–1156. Bibcode:2000IJSEd..22.1147P. doi:10.1080/09500690050166724. S2CID 143202676.
  20. ^ Hyman, Ray (1976–77). "Cold Reading: How to Convince Strangers That You Know All about Them". Zetetic. 1 (2): 18–37.
  21. ^ Vernon, David (1989). Donald Laycock; David Vernon; Colin Groves; Simon Brown (eds.). Skeptical – A Handbook of Pseudoscience and the Paranormal. Canberra: Imagecraft. p. 44. ISBN 0-7316-5794-2.
  22. ^ Steiner, Bob. (2002). Cold Reading. In Michael Shermer. The Skeptic Encyclopedia of Pseudoscience. ABC-CLIO. pp. 63–66. ISBN 1-57607-654-7
  23. ^ Jones, Lindsay, ed. (2005). Encyclopedia of Religion (2nd ed.). Detroit: Macmillan Reference. p. 2373. ISBN 978-0028657332.
  24. ^ Roth, Cecil, ed. (1972). Encyclopaedia Judaica. New York: Macmillan. pp. 478–480.
  25. ^ Saint-Germain, Comte C. de (1935). Practical Palmistry: Hand Reading Simplified (New illustrated ed.). Chicago: Albert Whitman. pp. 18–19.


Further reading edit

  • Beamish, Richard. The psychonomy of the hand: or, The hand an index of mental development according to Mm. d'Arpentigny and Desbarrolles
  • Chauran, Alexandra (2013). Palmistry Every Day. Llewellyn Worldwide. ISBN 978-0-7387-3494-1.
  • Cheiro (1916). Palmistry for All at Project Gutenberg
  • Chinn, Sarah E. (2000). 'Technology and the logic of American racism'. Continuum. ISBN 978-0-8264-4750-0.
  • de Saint-Germain, Comte C. (1897). Practical Palmistry. Chicago: Laird & Lee Publishers.
  • Dwivedi, Bhorai (1970). Wonders of Palmistry. New Delhi: Diamond Pocket Books. ISBN 978-81-284-0099-5.
  • Heron-Allen, Edward (2008). Palmistry – A Manual of Cheirosophy (reprint ed.). Baltzell Press. ISBN 978-1-4437-6535-0.
  • Omura, Yoshiaki (2003). Acupuncture Medicine: Its Historical and Clinical Background. Dover Publications Inc. ISBN 978-0-486-42850-5.
  • Sharma, Hari Dutta (1995). The A–Z of Palmistry. New Delhi: Sterling Publishers Pvt. Ltd. ISBN 978-81-207-1661-2.
  • van Dijk-Rijneke, Magda. Universal Hand Analysis, 2017 Elmar Publishers ISBN 978-9038925912

External links edit

palmistry, cheirology, redirects, here, manual, alphabets, fingerspelling, sign, language, phonology, cherology, palm, reader, redirects, here, other, uses, palm, reader, disambiguation, pseudoscientific, practice, fortune, telling, through, study, palm, also,. Cheirology redirects here For manual alphabets see Fingerspelling For sign language phonology see Cherology Palm reader redirects here For other uses see Palm Reader disambiguation Palmistry is the pseudoscientific practice of fortune telling through the study of the palm Also known as palm reading chiromancy chirology or cheirology the practice is found all over the world with numerous cultural variations Those who practice palmistry are generally called palmists hand readers hand analysts or chirologists A fortune teller conducting a palm reading with lines and mounts marked out on the person s left palm Gold stamped front cover of The Psychonomy of the Hand There are many and often conflicting interpretations of various lines and palmar features across various teachings of palmistry Palmistry is widely viewed as a pseudoscience due to various contradictions between different interpretations and the lack of evidence for palmistry s predictions 1 2 Contents 1 History 1 1 Ancient palmistry 1 2 Modern palmistry 2 Criticism 3 See also 4 References 5 Further reading 6 External linksHistory edit nbsp The Fortune Teller by Caravaggio 1594 95 canvas Louvre depicting a palm reading nbsp The Fortune Teller by Enrique Simonet 1899 depicting a palm reading Ancient palmistry edit Palmistry is a practice common to many different places on the Eurasian landmass 3 it has been practiced in the cultures of Sumer Babylonia Arabia Canaan Persia India Nepal Tibet and China The acupuncturist Yoshiaki Omura describes its roots in Hindu astrology known in Sanskrit as jyotish Chinese Yijing I Ching and Roma fortune tellers 4 Several thousand years ago the Hindu sage Valmiki is thought 5 better source needed to have written a book comprising 567 stanzas the title of which translates in English as The Teachings of Valmiki Maharishi on Male Palmistry 5 6 Since ancient times palmistry is considered to be a branch of Samudrika Shastra Sanskrit स म द र क श स त र which included the studies of marks all over a person s body such as astrology and palmistry Hast samudrika as well as phrenology kapal samudrik and face reading physiognomy mukh samudrik 7 8 From India the art of palmistry spread to China Tibet and to other countries in Europe 4 9 Palmistry also progressed independently in Greece where Anaxagoras practiced it 4 Aristotle 384 322 B C E reportedly discovered a treatise on the subject of palmistry on an altar of Hermes which he then presented to Alexander the Great 356 323 B C E who took great interest in examining the character of his officers by analyzing the lines on their hands 10 A chapter of a 17th century sex manual misattributed to Aristotle is occasionally incorrectly cited as being the treatise in question The text it is not contained in his canonical works nbsp The infant Jesus having his fortune told whilst sitting on the lap of the Madonna by Josefa de obidos 1667 In Renaissance magic palmistry known as chiromancy was classified as one of the seven forbidden arts along with necromancy geomancy aeromancy pyromancy hydromancy and spatulamancy scapulimancy 11 During the 16th century the art of palmistry was actively suppressed by the Catholic Church Both Pope Paul IV and Pope Sixtus V issued papal edicts against various forms of divination including palmistry 12 Modern palmistry edit Palmistry experienced a revival in the modern era starting with Captain Casimir Stanislas D Arpentigny s publication La Chirognomie in 1839 9 The Chirological Society of Great Britain was founded in London by Katharine St Hill in 1889 with the stated aim to advance and systematise the art of palmistry and to prevent charlatans from abusing the art 13 14 Edgar de Valcourt Vermont Comte C de Saint Germain founded the American Chirological Society in 1897 A pivotal figure in the modern palmistry movement was the Irish William John Warner known by his sobriquet Cheiro After studying under gurus in India he set up a palmistry practice in London and enjoyed a wide following of famous clients from around the world including famous celebrities like Mark Twain W T Stead Sarah Bernhardt Mata Hari Oscar Wilde Grover Cleveland Thomas Edison the Prince of Wales General Kitchener William Ewart Gladstone and Joseph Chamberlain So popular was Cheiro as a society palmist that even those who were not believers in the occult had their hands read by him The skeptical Mark Twain wrote in Cheiro s visitor s book that he had exposed my character to me with humiliating accuracy Edward Heron Allen an English polymath published various works including the 1883 book Palmistry A Manual of Cheirosophy which is still in print 9 15 There were attempts at formulating some sort of scientific basis for the art most notably in the 1900 publication The Laws of Scientific Hand Reading by William Gurney Benham 16 In 1970 Parker Brothers published a game designed by Maxine Lucille Fiel called Touch Game of Palmistry which allowed players have palm reading and analysis through selecting cards that matched designated palm features 17 In 2007 British palm reader Johnny Fincham contributed to the works of palmistry by introducing a more line focused method instead of the traditional fortune telling method These changes can be seen is his book Palmistry From Apprentice to Pro nbsp Cheiro an influential exponent of palmistry in the late 19th and early 20th centuries nbsp A modern palm reader s shop in Yangon Myanmar nbsp Some of the lines of the hand in palmistry Life lineHead lineHeart lineGirdle of VenusSun lineMercury lineFate line nbsp The mounts in palmistry Jupiter Saturn Apollo Mercury Mars positive Mars negative plain of Mars Luna mount Neptune mount Venus mount 18 nbsp A Japanese palm reader waits along the street for a customer 2015Criticism editCriticism of palmistry often rests with the lack of empirical evidence supporting its efficacy Scientific literature typically regards palmistry as a pseudoscientific or superstitious belief 19 Psychologist and noted skeptic Ray Hyman has written 20 I started reading palms in my teens as a way to supplement my income from doing magic and mental shows When I started I did not believe in palmistry But I knew that to sell it I had to act as if I did After a few years I became a firm believer in palmistry One day the late Stanley Jaks who was a professional mentalist and a man I respected tactfully suggested that it would make an interesting experiment if I deliberately gave readings opposite to what the lines indicated I tried this out with a few clients To my surprise and horror my readings were just as successful as ever Ever since then I have been interested in the powerful forces that convince us reader and client alike that something is so when it really isn t Skeptics often include palmists on lists of alleged psychics who practice cold reading Cold reading is the practice that allows readers of all kinds including palmists to appear psychic by using high probability guessing and inferring details based on signals or cues from the other person 21 22 Although some Christians condemn palmistry as a form of divination Jewish and Christian traditions are largely ambivalent about divination in general 23 During the 16th century the Catholic Church condemned the practice of palmistry 12 However there is a long tradition of practicing palmistry within both Jewish and Christian mysticism 24 and some practitioners such as Comte C de Saint Germain have argued that the Bible does not oppose it 25 See also editList of topics characterized as pseudoscience Methods of divination Alectryomancy Chironomia Digit ratio Graphology Onychomancy Phrenology Physiognomy Reflexology Single transverse palmar crease Tarot TasseographyReferences edit Park Michael Alan 1986 Palmistry or HandJive In Frazier Kendrick ed Science Confronts the Paranormal Prometheus pp 198 201 ISBN 978 1 61592 619 0 Chamorro Premuzic Tomas Furnham Adrian 2010 The Psychology of Personnel Selection Cambridge University Press p 19 ISBN 978 0 521 86829 7 A more popular pseudoscience is chiromancy or palmistry the art of characterisation and foretelling the future through the study of the palm Dwivedi 1970 pp 16 20 a b c Omura 2003 pp 172 174 According to this theory palmistry developed in India and then extended across the world a b Dwivedi 1970 pp 25 26 Sharma 1995 p 95 Modern Asian Studies Volume 41 Cambridge University Press 2007 p 504 Robert Svoboda amp Hart De Fouw Light On Life Lotus Press 2003 p 14 ISBN 0 940985 69 1 a b c Chinn 2000 p 24 It was not until the mid to late nineteenth century that palmreading took off in Britain France and the United States thanks to three major figures Casimir Stanislas d Arpentigny Edward Heron Allen and Cheiro Benham William George 1900 The Laws of Scientific Hand Reading A Practical Treatise on the Art Commonly Called Palmistry Putnam Johannes Hartlieb Munich 1456 The Book of All Forbidden Arts quoted in Lang p 124 a b Byrne Laura 8 October 2013 Palm Reading 1000 Things Royal Academy of Fine Art in The Hague Retrieved 10 November 2020 The London Cheirological Society Guiley Rosemary 2006 The Encyclopedia of Magic and Alchemy New York Facts On File pp 240 241 ISBN 1438130007 Heron Allen 2008 Palmistry Origins amp History PDF Maxine L Fiel obituary Post Star Glens Falls New York 28 April 2020 Archived from the original on 22 November 2020 Sara Sirolli 2008 Palmistry diagram of hand Preece P F Baxter J H 2000 Scepticism and gullibility The superstitious and pseudo scientific beliefs of secondary school students International Journal of Science Education 22 11 1147 1156 Bibcode 2000IJSEd 22 1147P doi 10 1080 09500690050166724 S2CID 143202676 Hyman Ray 1976 77 Cold Reading How to Convince Strangers That You Know All about Them Zetetic 1 2 18 37 Vernon David 1989 Donald Laycock David Vernon Colin Groves Simon Brown eds Skeptical A Handbook of Pseudoscience and the Paranormal Canberra Imagecraft p 44 ISBN 0 7316 5794 2 Steiner Bob 2002 Cold Reading In Michael Shermer The Skeptic Encyclopedia of Pseudoscience ABC CLIO pp 63 66 ISBN 1 57607 654 7 Jones Lindsay ed 2005 Encyclopedia of Religion 2nd ed Detroit Macmillan Reference p 2373 ISBN 978 0028657332 Roth Cecil ed 1972 Encyclopaedia Judaica New York Macmillan pp 478 480 Saint Germain Comte C de 1935 Practical Palmistry Hand Reading Simplified New illustrated ed Chicago Albert Whitman pp 18 19 Further reading editBeamish Richard The psychonomy of the hand or The hand an index of mental development according to Mm d Arpentigny and Desbarrolles Chauran Alexandra 2013 Palmistry Every Day Llewellyn Worldwide ISBN 978 0 7387 3494 1 Cheiro 1916 Palmistry for All at Project Gutenberg Chinn Sarah E 2000 Technology and the logic of American racism Continuum ISBN 978 0 8264 4750 0 de Saint Germain Comte C 1897 Practical Palmistry Chicago Laird amp Lee Publishers Dwivedi Bhorai 1970 Wonders of Palmistry New Delhi Diamond Pocket Books ISBN 978 81 284 0099 5 Heron Allen Edward 2008 Palmistry A Manual of Cheirosophy reprint ed Baltzell Press ISBN 978 1 4437 6535 0 Omura Yoshiaki 2003 Acupuncture Medicine Its Historical and Clinical Background Dover Publications Inc ISBN 978 0 486 42850 5 Sharma Hari Dutta 1995 The A Z of Palmistry New Delhi Sterling Publishers Pvt Ltd ISBN 978 81 207 1661 2 van Dijk Rijneke Magda Universal Hand Analysis 2017 Elmar Publishers ISBN 978 9038925912External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to chiromancy Palmistry Skeptic s Dictionary Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Palmistry amp oldid 1220436174, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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