Signaletic Instructions: Including The Theory And Practice Of Anthropometrical Identification (1896) - Couverture rigide

Bertillon, Alphonse

 
9781165055012: Signaletic Instructions: Including The Theory And Practice Of Anthropometrical Identification (1896)

Synopsis

Signaletic Instructions: Including The Theory And Practice Of Anthropometrical Identification is a book written by Alphonse Bertillon in 1896. Bertillon was a French criminologist who developed a system of physical measurements, called anthropometry, to identify criminals. This book is a comprehensive guide to the use of anthropometry in criminal investigations. It includes detailed instructions on how to take and record measurements of various parts of the body, such as the head, face, hands, and feet. The book also covers the theory behind the use of anthropometric measurements for identification, including the statistical analysis of measurements and the development of standardized classification systems. In addition, the book includes numerous illustrations and photographs to aid in the identification process. This book is an important historical document in the development of forensic science and criminal investigation techniques.This scarce antiquarian book is a facsimile reprint of the old original and may contain some imperfections such as library marks and notations. Because we believe this work is culturally important, we have made it available as part of our commitment for protecting, preserving, and promoting the world's literature in affordable, high quality, modern editions, that are true to their original work.

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Présentation de l'éditeur

Excerpt from Signaletic Instructions: Including the Theory and Practice of Anthropometrical Identification

A very considerable portion of the crimes and wrongs which disturb the order of human society result either directly or indirectly from the apparent impossibility of distinguishing in every case and with unerring certainty one individual from another. It is for this reason, especially, that so many of the professional and habitual criminals who abound in every land have hitherto gone "unwhipt of justice."

Men would be unlikely to render themselves liable to the penalties of the law if they knew that, wherever they might flee, their identity could not fail to be discovered. A sure means of identification would not only have the effect of deterring from crime in general, but would evidently nullify all attempts of whatever kind at u substitution of persons. No impersonations of a pensioner, or a missing heir, or a business man could ever hope to be successful.

How much more precious still would such a means of identification be if it could be applied, not only to the living man, but to his dead body, even when crushed, mangled or dismembered beyond the recognition of his nearest friends and relatives! The life insurance companies and associations of mutual benevolence, for example, could not be robbed under cover of the pretended death of the holder of a policy, indicated by the finding of a body resembling his, or unrecognizable by ordinary means on account of mutilation, fire or decay, but dressed in his clothes and furnished with his papers. Then, too, those who fell in battle, no matter how mutilated they might be, would not need to be buried in nameless graves, but could be recognized and taken, when peace returned, to lie among their own kin.

This powerful instrument of social order is already in existence. One of the most remarkable steps in modern progress is the development of a new form of applied science which has for its...

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