Jump to main content

    Promising Future, Complex Past: Artificial Intelligence and the Legacy of Physiognomy

    Beginning Nov. 12 through Dec. 21, the Mari Michener Galler will host a new traveling exhibit

    Beginning Nov. 12 through Dec. 21, the Mari Michener Galler will host a new traveling exhibit, “Promising Future, Complex Past: Artificial Intelligence and the Legacy of Physiognomy”.

    The exhibit, created by the National Library of Medicine, presents the history of physiognomy – assessing one’s mental character based on physical attributes – and explores its influence on the contemporary artificial intelligence and computer science technologies that gather and interpret bodily data. Now debunked as pseudoscience, physiognomy enjoyed periods of legitimacy and popularity over a history spanning millennia, influencing the fields of medicine, biology, philosophy, anthropology, psychiatry and criminology. After serving as a tool for scientific racism and eugenics, physiognomy was roundly discredited in the 20th century. 

    Harmful aspects of physiognomy have been rejected, but efforts to gain information from human physical characteristics continue with today’s technologies, which have the potential to make the world safer, improve health and affect how we get information. 

    The exhibit is free and open to the public, and Spanish translation is available. 

    More Stories