Controlling Human Heredity, 1865 to the PresentHumanities Press, 1995 - Broj stranica: 158 In the late nineteenth and the early twentieth century, it was widely assumed that society ought to foster the breeding of those who possessed favorable traits and discourage the breeding of those who did not. Controlled human breeding, "eugenics" as it was labeled by Francis Galton, seemed only good common sense. How did eugenics come to exert such powerful and broad appeal? What events shaped its direction? Whose interests did it finally serve? Why did it fall into disrepute? Has it survived in other guises? These are some of the questions that Diane Paul sets out to answer - questions that have acquired a new urgency in light of developments in genetic medicine. The eugenics movement appeared to be dead - associated with race and class prejudice, in particular the crimes of the Third Reich - or was it just sleeping? Has eugenics returned in the guise of medical genetics? In Controlling Human Heredity, Professor Paul aims to bridge the gap between expert and lay understandings of the history of eugenics and thereby enrich the debate on the perplexing contemporary choices in genetic medicine. |
Iz unutrašnjosti knjige
Rezultati 1 - 3 od 37.
Stranica 110
... biological argument about the dangers of race - mixing . Coolidge , like Johnson , did not need test results to know that the crossing of some groups produces biological deterioration . That argument had been made long before the advent ...
... biological argument about the dangers of race - mixing . Coolidge , like Johnson , did not need test results to know that the crossing of some groups produces biological deterioration . That argument had been made long before the advent ...
Stranica 142
... Biology and the Advancement of Man . New York : E. P. Dutton . Jennings , H. S. 1927. “ Health Progress and Race Progress : Are They Incom- patible ? " Journal of Heredity 18 : 271-76 . Jennings , H. S. 1930. The Biological Basis of ...
... Biology and the Advancement of Man . New York : E. P. Dutton . Jennings , H. S. 1927. “ Health Progress and Race Progress : Are They Incom- patible ? " Journal of Heredity 18 : 271-76 . Jennings , H. S. 1930. The Biological Basis of ...
Stranica 146
... Biological Regen- eration in Twentieth - Century France . Cambridge : Cambridge University Press . Schuster , Edgar ... Biology to Legitimate Inequality : The Eu- genics Movement within the High School Biology Textbook , 1914–1949 " In ...
... Biological Regen- eration in Twentieth - Century France . Cambridge : Cambridge University Press . Schuster , Edgar ... Biology to Legitimate Inequality : The Eu- genics Movement within the High School Biology Textbook , 1914–1949 " In ...
Sadržaj
Evolutionary Anxieties | 22 |
From Soft to Hard Heredity | 40 |
Eugenic Solutions | 72 |
Autorska prava | |
Broj ostalih dijelova koji nisu prikazani: 4
Ostala izdanja - Prikaži sve
Uobičajeni izrazi i fraze
Alfred Russel Wallace American Eugenics American Eugenics Society argued argument army asserted attitudes behavior biological birth control breeding Britain British character Charles Davenport claimed compulsory sterilization contraception counselors crime criminals Darwin degeneration disease economic environment eugenicists eugenics movement Eugenics Record Office Eugenics Society evolution evolutionary explained Fabian feebleminded Francis Galton Galton genes genetic counseling geneticists German Goddard Harry Laughlin hereditary heredity history of eugenics human genetics Human Heredity Huntington's chorea immigrants improve individuals inheritance insane institutions intelligence Jennings Journal Jukes Kallikak Family labor Lamarckian Laughlin medical genetics Mendel mental defectives mental tests moral morons Muller natural selection Nazi Nordic normal offspring parents pauperism percent persons physical political Popenoe and Johnson population prevent produce race suicide racial racism reform reproductive Sanger scientific social socialist sterilization laws struggle studies theory thought traits unfit United University Press Wallace women wrote York