John Bulwer
John Bulwer
- Bulwer, J. (1648) Philocopus, or the Deaf and Dumbe Mans Friend , London: Humphrey and Moseley.”Exhibiting the philosophical verity of that subtle art, which may enable one with an observant eye, to hear what any man speaks by the moving of his lips.”"Upon the same ground, with the advantage of historical exemplification, apparently proving, that a man born deaf and dumb may be taught to hear the sound of words with his eye, and thence learn to speak with his tongue.”
- Bulwer, J. (1649) Pathomyotamia, or, A dissection of the significative muscles of the affections of the minde, London: Humphrey and Moseley.”Being an essay to a new method of observing the most important movings of the muscles of the head, as they are the neerest and immediate organs of the voluntarie or impetuous motions of the mind : with the proposal of a new nomenclature of the muscles.”
- Bulwer, J. (1644) Chirologia, or, The naturall language of the hand , London: Tho. Harper”Composed of the speaking motions, and discoursing gestures thereof. Whereunto is added, Chironomia; or, The art of manual rhetoricke. Consisting of the naturall expressions, digested by art in the hand, as the chiefest instrument of eloquence, by historicall manifesto’s, exemplified out of the authentique registers of common life, and civil conversation, with types, or chyrograms, along-wish’d for illustration of this argument.”
