• Although Physiognomonics is the earliest work surviving in Greek devoted to the subject, texts preserved on clay tablets provide evidence of physiognomy manuals...
  • Physiognomonics (Greek: ΦΥΣΙΟΓΝΩΜΟΝΙΚΑ; Latin: Physiognomonica) attributed to Aristotle. Translated by Thomas Loveday and Edward Forster.
  • Request PDF | On Jan 1, 2014, T. Loveday and others published Physiognomonics | Find, read and cite all the research you need on ResearchGate.
  • physiognomonic from Greek physiognōmonikos, from physiognōmonia physiognomy + -ikos -ic; physiognomonical from Greek physiognōmonikos + English -al.
  • Physiognomy or Physiognomonics is the assessment of a person’s character/personality through outer appearance, especially from the face.
  • PHYSIOGNOMONICS. In J. Barnes (Ed.), The Complete Works of Aristotle, Volume One: The Revised Oxford Translation (pp. 1237-1250).
  • The ‘science’ is first treated systematically in a handbook from the third-century B.C., the Physiognomonics, consisting of two parts...
  • 808b 11–14. Translation from T. Loveday and E.S. Forster, “Physiognomonics,” The Complete Works of Aristotle: The Revised Oxford Translation (ed.