I've been interested in graphology for a long time, but only now am i beginning to get a feel for it.
This has allowed me to be more conscious of my own handwriting. What interests me most is the psychology of what our own handwriting says to us, and its possibilities as a therapeutic medium.
Comparing my handwriting when making notes for myself, to that when writing to a dear friend, I wonder if the difference is a matter of self esteem/love. Therefor the development of our general handwriting could be a pleasant if not spiritual practice.
Does anyone have any reference for this aspect of handwriting analysis or calligraphic theory?
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Secondly, I think that the therapeutic effectiveness of handwriting development and refining practice, although exist to a degree, is quite limited due to the vast flexibility of our mind. It is pretty much like trying to heal the symptoms rather than the core or cause. You might flatten a bump on a rag at one point but a new one will rise at a different point.
I always prefer the direct strategy over the indirect (just like mood change, changes the handwriting), but I would love to read stuff on this if anyone has some.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Graphology#Professional_status
Not that mysticism is such a treasure. As a much less "controlled" and restrictive field, obviously it is a very fertile ground for charlatanism, misbeliefs and pure creepy stuff.
But does that means that all of it is craps? I don't think so. My personal research showed (me) that many holds great wisdom and are closer to reality and truth than many modern days practices and beliefs. But since reality is near infinitely complex, everything should be taken with limited liability.
Human beings are not perfectly rational creatures. Perfect knowledge is not necessary for survival. Our brains our subject to illusions, just like our senses, but it is more difficult to detect because our brain is the thing we use for detecting things. Our desires, emotions, and existing beliefs play into this as well. Hence, we easily and naturally adopt unsupportable beliefs about the world. In other words, mysticism.
The scientific method is a workaround we discovered that enables us overcome our cognitive shortcomings. Science allows us to transcend mysticism, not the other way around.
“Mind precedes all things, mind is chief, and all things are mind-made...” (Dhp v 1)
Rather than analysing your hand-writing, just observe your own mind and purify it of all negative emotions. Instead of training yourself to write more neatly, train yourself to think more clearly.
I'm not a scientist and have no wish to cloud my design work with it. What I do in business, or why clients come to me, is entirely emotional. The perception of type as an emotional medium has been critical to the successes I've enjoyed.
My handwriting changes with my mood. If I change my handwriting consciously, I'm changing my mood consciously. I don't see them separated. My handwriting is the result of a set of learned movements, and although these movements are not as spontaneous as the movements in the muscles of my face that cause smiles and frowns, I see them expressing emotion.
I wouldn't suggest to myself that to feel better I should smile more, but I do suggest that wedding invitations aren't set in Univers.
Well, the techniques by which we create those curves depend on reason. Reason and emotion go hand in hand. It's what I like about type design.
There was a study a few years ago that looked at people who had damage to the part of their brain that generates emotions. They appeared to be normal, but had no emotions. And they were unable to make decisions.
https://youtu.be/VU1KEsg8SO0
What Mark, Thomas, and James are putting forward is not rationalism, it is empiricism.
Empiricism proceeds from experience, so has room for emotion and even for mysticism. But experimental empiricism, of the kind that on which science relies, involves specific processes of testing falsifiable hypotheses, such that claims can be demonstrated to be true or false. In that respect, as Ofir notes, science is less open to charlatanism than mysticism or other non-rational belief systems, because when science makes mistakes new science can correct those mistakes; indeed, it is the only thing that can. [NB: non-rational ≠ irrational; non-rational beliefs proceed from grounds that cannot be arrived at through reason, e.g. revelation, but are still subject to reason; irrational beliefs are contrary to reason. Believing that God exists in three persons is non-rational; believing that I have three hands is irrational.]
I understand the attraction of the idea that some activity that humans do, such as writing, reveals something deep about their subconscious psyches, or the idea that the arrangement of the heavens overhead when they were born reveals something about their destinies. These are not ideas that hold any attraction for me, and I'm personally pleased that they consistently fail to meet the truth criteria of experimental testing. But I understand why some people like these ideas.They do fail testing, though: the claims of the proponents of graphology and astrology don't stand up to experimental enquiry. Now, one can say that the experiments are insufficient, or that there are aspects of these claims that cannot be tested empirically — i.e. that there is something inherently mystical in their nature, even in their outcomes, that cannot be subjected to the methods of science —, but then I would say that these are areas of private, non-rational belief. If someone wants to believe that his or her handwriting reveals something about his or her psyche, that's his or her business. But it really is his or her business: there's no empirical grounds for anyone else share to this belief, and to apply that belief to someone else's writing is at best an imposition and at worst an injustice.
With regard to my own handwriting, I know that it reveals two very specific things about be: a) I didn't learn to hold a pen properly when I was a child, and b) I've not taken the time to consciously correct and improve my writing.
Colors have some kind of emotional resonance with us, and internet advertising with multivariate split testing, what Claude Hopkins called "scientific advertising", has shown that eg construction company web ads do better when they have a dominant yellow color.
Handwriting seems to me to be similar, and while the personality bits of graphology are a cold reading prop, like tarot cards or star signs or palm/skull dimensions or whatever, the classification systems that name elements of handwriting seems to be emenintly useful for type designers like Miles seeking to make better fonts that convince readers of natural handwriting
It's pretty ridiculous to claim that handwriting can reveal incredible insights about us. Just as ridiculous is claiming it cannot reveal anything.
The mystical is fully half of Life.
People can put too much faith in graphology... but also in science.
True, but the areas where the scientific approach fails are generally due to unobtainable information (e.g. the nature of the universe as a whole), sheer complexity (weather reports, human behavior), or erroneous application (human error). The answer to these things is not mysticism, which by definition has zero predictive power (otherwise it would be science). At least heuristics (intuition, gut feelings, etc.) give us a way to handle the complexity problem, albeit not always successfully. The only honest solution to the lack of information of problem is «we don't know», and to the human error, «I'm sorry».
Mark Simonson said: It's precisely the subjective that I'd like to consider. For example, when setting my ascender height in my handwriting, a typeface or a logo, on what emotional level do I evaluate how high to go with it and how should I consider other people's interpretation of this choice.
I personally consider a tall ascender height has culturally learned aspirational quality to it. Tall ascenders don't have an intrinsic emotional quality, only one that is learned culturally. Now, if I decide to incorporate tall ascenders into my handwriting, handwriting becomes an aspirational therapy for me because I'm introducing an affirmation into a daily practice.
Going back to my original post about making notes for myself, or writing a diary entry. I could jot messily or I could slow down and write with care. When doing so I've noticed that there is something deeper going beyond simply elevating the quality of the writing and giving myself time to do that. The style that comes from my hand when doing so is flowing and more expressive to me. I surmise that other people in doing the same practice may produce neat well spaced capital lettering or whatever. As a type designer I find this interesting and personally revealing. In practicing the 'party trick' on myself I've have found it to have a positive, affirming and creative quality and wondered if anyone had written about this, whether or not it be an imposition or injustice.