In psychology, he developed a new version of somatotypology by classifying people into endomorphic, mesomorphic, and ectomorphic types, based on many photographs and measurements of nude figures at Ivy League schools.[4]Ron Rosenbaum writes: "He believed that every individual harbored within him different degrees of each of the three character components. By using body measurements and ratios derived from nude photographs, Sheldon believed he could assign every individual a three-digit number representing the three components, components that Sheldon believed were inborn -- genetic -- and remained unwavering determinants of character regardless of transitory weight change. In other words, physique equals destiny."[1]
Sheldon also argued that physique was closely correlated with temperamental viscerotonic patterns that powerfully influenced attitudes to food, comfort and luxury, ceremoniousness, sociability, nostalgia, pain, and a great variety of other aspects of human experience. Aldous Huxley took a considerable interest in and popularized knowledge of Sheldon's work, writing that "Sheldon has worked out what is, without question, the best and most adequate classification of human differences," [6] and Sheldon's concepts influenced Huxley's understanding of himself, friends and family, characters in his own work and the work of others, various historical figures, and even entire schools of philosophy and religions.[7]
Numismatic work
In numismatics, William Herbert Sheldon authored Early American Cents in 1949, and later revised that work within Penny Whimsy in 1958, (these were the most exhaustive catalogues of the varieties of early American large cents at that time). The book, still considered the standard reference on the series, was re-printed in 1976 and 1990. The Sheldon variety list for Early American Cents is still in use today.
He also developed the "Sheldon scale" that graded coins on a numeric basis from 1 to 70, which is still standard among American numismatists.[8]
Controversy, theft and posthumous lawsuits
William Herbert Sheldon was also a specialist in United States cents. After his death, he was accused by the American Numismatic Society (ANS) of substitution of lower grade examples of his cent coins with high grade examples from the cabinets of the ANS.[9][10] In all, he substituted 129 coins from the ANS for ones from his personal collection, and since then, the coins have gradually been returned by fellow collectors who have purchased them unknowingly.[11]
Sheldon was also known for having anti-Semitic attitudes, which led to his firing from the university.[12]
^"Nude Photos Are Sealed At Smithsonian". New York Times. January 21, 1995. Archived from the original on May 6, 2020. Retrieved December 1, 2011. Later, other photographs were taken by W. H. Sheldon, a researcher who believed that there was a relationship between body shape and Temperament traits. Mr. Sheldon has since died.
^Aldous Huxley, The Perennnial Philosophy (New York: Harper & Row/Harper Colophon, 1970; originally published 1945), p. 149; see also essays collected in Themes and Variations (1950).
^Philip Thody, Aldous Huxley: A Biographical Introduction (New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1973), pp. 98-99.
^ANS search for 129 missing cents becomes legal battle: Society attorney names late William Sheldon as suspect," by Bill Gibbs, Coin World Aug. 23, 1993; ANS Magazine, vol. 3. no. 2, Summer 2004, by ANS curator Robert W. Hoge
^"More on Collector Ted Naftzger and the Switched Large Cents," by John Kleeberg, The E-sylum, Vol. 11, No. 24, June 15, 2008, Article 17.