Eugenics: Difference between revisions

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[[Image:Eugenics.gif|thumb|right|450px|page of a pamphlet describing the lectures of Albert Wiggan on Eugenics. Courtesy of the Special Collections Department, University of Iowa Libraries]]
[[Image:Eugenics.gif|thumb|right|450px|page of a pamphlet describing the lectures of Albert Wiggan on Eugenics. Courtesy of the Special Collections Department, University of Iowa Libraries]]
'''Eugenics''' was the general name for a series of supposedly scientific claims about inheritance among humans, which sought to eliminate traits, such as "imbecility" or criminal behavior, by selective sterilization, regulation of family size, and restrictions on who could marry whom.
'''Eugenics''' was the general name for a series of supposedly scientific claims about inheritance among humans, which sought to eliminate traits, such as "imbecility" or criminal behavior, by selective sterilization, regulation of family size, and restrictions on who could marry whom.  It was based upon a number of false premises:
 
* That "imbeciity" -- a catch-all phrase used to label many persons without what today would be recognized as mental deficiencies -- was necessarily the result of inheritance, and heritable.
 
* That human "race" as a category was substantial and determinative, and that certain races, such as the "Anglo Saxon," were innately superior to others.
 
* That "nervous exhaustion", "moral looseness" and other socaially-acquired traits were inherited and heritable.
 
* That families with more children dispersed and diluted the "moral force" of each offspring.
 
* That immigrant children were less desireable, and that the "white race" or the native-born American were endangered due to lower fertility rate.
 
* That "genius" was readily identified, inherited, and heritable.

Revision as of 17:46, 1 June 2007

page of a pamphlet describing the lectures of Albert Wiggan on Eugenics. Courtesy of the Special Collections Department, University of Iowa Libraries

Eugenics was the general name for a series of supposedly scientific claims about inheritance among humans, which sought to eliminate traits, such as "imbecility" or criminal behavior, by selective sterilization, regulation of family size, and restrictions on who could marry whom. It was based upon a number of false premises:

  • That "imbeciity" -- a catch-all phrase used to label many persons without what today would be recognized as mental deficiencies -- was necessarily the result of inheritance, and heritable.
  • That human "race" as a category was substantial and determinative, and that certain races, such as the "Anglo Saxon," were innately superior to others.
  • That "nervous exhaustion", "moral looseness" and other socaially-acquired traits were inherited and heritable.
  • That families with more children dispersed and diluted the "moral force" of each offspring.
  • That immigrant children were less desireable, and that the "white race" or the native-born American were endangered due to lower fertility rate.
  • That "genius" was readily identified, inherited, and heritable.