Dr John GordonFRSEFRCSE (19 April 1786 – 14 June 1818) was a short-lived but influential Scottish anatomist. In 1806 he served as president of the Royal Medical Society. In 1815 he caused an international stir by debunking the new science of phrenology and publicly criticising its principal European exponents, Johann Spurzheim and Franz Joseph Gall.
The grave of Dr John Gordon, Greyfriars Kirkyard
He was born on 19 April 1786 in Forres in northern Scotland the son of John Gordon a wine-merchant and banker.[1]
In June 1815 he published "The Doctrines of Gall and Spurzheim", which while criticising phrenology also did much to publicise this then relatively unknown "science". Ironically in his criticism he gave a concise and erudite summary of the complex dimensions of phrenology, enabling it to be understood to a far wider audience.[2] Gordon instead supported the views of Reil.[3]