Eugenics

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Eugenics is an applied science and/or social movement which advocates the improvement of (human) hereditary traits. A technique for improving the genetic quality of a population. The goals have included preventing diseases, improving physical and mental traits, saving society's resources, lessening human suffering, and counteracting dysgenics.

Earlier proposed means of achieving these goals focused on selective breeding, while modern ones focus on prenatal testing and screening, genetic counseling, birth control, in vitro fertilization, and genetic engineering. Dissemination of information regarding eugenics and dysgenics has also been considered important.

Biotechnologies and genetic engineering today furnish the technical and practical means of improving the human genome, not solely for therapeutic reasons, but for political ones as well. Biotechnology now makes it possible to practice a positive eugenics that directly intervenes in the genome to improve heredity, doing so more effectively and rapidly than older techniques based on selection by marriage. This Promethean challenge posed by eugenics was long anticipated in Europe’s archaic pagan imagination. But it evidently poses a terrible problem in offending sensibilities rooted in monotheistic creationism and anthropocentrism.

Not only does man become the creator of himself, self-manipulating, but he finds himself immersed in the living, like a ‘biological object’, similar to other animals. Dual revolution, above and below: Man makes himself, being both a demiurge, a rival of the divine, and, in the same stroke, becomes malleable human material to be shaped and moulded. The combined death of anthropocentrism and metaphysical deism.

Eugenics shocks tender-hearted egalitarians: isn’t it a matter of diabolically creating the ‘Overman’? Yes, of course. The essential thing is to master the process, to submit it to a political will, and not let it become part of an unregulated eugenic ‘market’. To prevent such a development, as the dominant ideology demands, is hardly tenable. The celebrated British physicist Stephen Hawking recently declared that biotechnology will permit ‘the creation of a master race’ and ‘a much improved human being’.

Biotechnology will very soon also make possible artificial, extra-uterine births, in ‘incubators’ (i.e., without pregnancy), as human and cultural genetic matter are introduced in vitro. This procedure could become a powerful means of redressing European natality, now threatened by depopulation . . . It would, of course, be preferable to do this through natural births. But in tragic situations, half a loaf is better than none . . . Between two evils, one chooses the lesser.

Misuse of the word "eugenics" is not uncommon by critics, who may incorrectly use it as a synonym for racism, National Socialism, and so on.

Etymology

File:Sir Francis Galton.png
Englishman Sir Francis Galton, founder of the Eugenics Movement. He produced over 340 papers and books. Selective breeding was suggested at least as far back as Plato, who believed human reproduction should be controlled by government. He recorded these ideals in The Republic: "The best men must have intercourse with the best women as frequently as possible, and the opposite is true of the very inferior." Plato proposed that the process be concealed from the public via a form of lottery (Plato, The Republic, Book VI). Other ancient examples include Sparta's purported practice of infanticide. However, they would leave all babies outside for a length of time, and the survivors were considered stronger, while many "weaker" babies perished.

The word eugenics etymologically derives from the Greek word eus ("good" or "well") and the suffix - genēs ("born"), eugenes "“well-born”) and was coined by Francis Galton in 1883.

History

File:Eugenics & heredity poster .png
Poster promoting eugenics; "With savages, the weak in body or mind are soon eliminated; and those that survive commonly exhibit a vigorous state of health. We civilised men, on the other hand, do our utmost to check the process of elimination; we build asylums for the imbecile, the maimed, and the sick; we institute poor-laws; and our medical men exert their utmost skill to save the life of every one to the last moment. There is reason to believe that vaccination has preserved thousands, who from a weak constitution would formerly have succumbed to small-pox. Thus the weak members of civilised societies propagate their kind. No one who has attended to the breeding of domestic animals will doubt that this must be highly injurious to the race of man. It is surprising how soon a want of care, or care wrongly directed, leads to the degeneration of a domestic race; but excepting in the case of man himself, hardly any one is so ignorant as to allow his worst animals to breed."Charles Darwin, in: The Descent of Man
File:Eugenics Congress 1932.png
Book of papers presented at the international 3rd Eugenics Congress, 1932
File:Eugenics Review.png
Before WWII, the Eugenics Society was one of the largest pressure groups in the UK.

Certain early historical practices may have had eugenic effects, but before an accurate understanding of genetics it is not clear that such effects were intended. However, humans must early have realized that at least the physical appearance of the offspring of humans and animals is influenced by the characteristics of the parents. Early agricultural treatises described selective breeding of animals and plants.

Plato's The Republic proposed human eugenic policies based on the selective breeding of animal livestock, which was well-known in ancient Athens. Proposed eugenic policies can also be found in later writings, such as the City of the Sun (1602) by Tommaso Campanella.[1]

The modern field and term were first formulated by Francis Galton, drawing on the recent work of his cousin Charles Darwin. In particular, Galton was concerned with dysgenics in modern societies, due to the earlier natural selection being dramatically changed by the scientific/industrial/agricultural revolutions, and Galton saw eugenics as a method for counteracting such effects.

From its inception, eugenics as an applied science and social movement was supported by many prominent people. Funding was provided from many prestigious sources. It was supported from both the left and the right. The eugenics movement included a disproportionate number of women. A variety of eugenic methods were proposed and/or implemented.[2]

The decline of the eugenics movement in Western countries is argued to be due to the adoption of it by National Socialist Germany, and practices promoted by people such as Ernst Rüdin. It is sometimes even assumed that eugenics ceased to be practiced worldwide after the Second World War. However, many other countries had eugenic policies, such as involuntary sterilizations, both long before and long after the Second World War, such as Sweden. (See also the section on National Socialist Germany below for more details on this subject.)

Another view is that the support for eugenics in the Western World was relatively strong into the 1960s. "Then in the late 1960s, the majority of jewish social scientists and journalists in Europe and North America did an about-face, reversing their position to one of harsh denunciation of eugenics, and since there was no organized opposition, their beliefs became both the academic orthodoxy and the “conventional wisdom.” This has lasted to the present day." One explanation for this is the birth of The Holohoax Memorial Movement. Another argued explanation is that genetics denialism, which must also deny the significance of eugenics, increased in influence during this time period. It has also been argued that some eugenics and genetics opponents must have known that the opposition lacked scientific support, but the opposition to eugenics/genetics (which was perceived as having contributed to the Holohoax) was perceived as morally right, even if this meant deliberate lying.[3]

It has even been argued that some jewish opponents may have had other motivations:

The fact that jewish activists have dominated the anti-eugenics movement in the West and that they tend to hold hostile views toward the traditional people and culture of the West suggest that their opposition to eugenics may also have another motive lurking in the background besides their hatred for anything associated with National Socialism: facilitating the genetic decline of the West as an outgroup. jewish promotion of massive non-White immigration may also be similarly motivated.[3]

Other forms of opposition to eugenics are religious. This may be due to factors such as religious opposition to contraception, to abortion (including also of embryos and therefore several modern eugenic methods), and to genetic changes generally due to creationist beliefs. Regardless, when eugenics and religion previously both were stronger forces in Western countries, then the eugenics movement sometimes had religious support, for reasons such as altruism and concern for weakest members of society, demonstrating that the situation can change.

Other suggested factors in the decline of support include decline in share of the population with experience of farming and the breeding of animals done there, many eugenics supporters being killed during WWI, and opposition by leftist and religious ideological egalitarians. "Socialism thrives on two unattractive emotions: envy and guilt. The envy of the have-nots blinds them to the fact that the haves probably got that way because they were talented and hard-working. The guilt of the haves, some of whom may have inherited wealth from talented ancestors, is fueled by have-not theories of biological equivalence. Studies that show how much of a person’s intelligence and even personality are governed by genes rather than environment or class are terrible threats to egalitarianism."[4]

Regardless, in several countries (including Israel), eugenics continues to be practiced. Developments in genetic and reproductive technologies at the end of the 20th century have raised many new questions and concerns about what exactly constitutes the meaning of eugenics and what its ethical and moral status is.

Eugenics and the Industrial Revolution

"Dutton and Woodley focus on the last millennium or so of European civilization. During most of this evolutionarily recent period as well, there has been positive selection for intelligence. That is because higher intelligence usually translates into socioeconomic success (correlating at 0.7), which tends to result in larger families. In A Farewell to Alms (2007), economic historian Gregory Clark has carefully documented this pattern in England from the fifteenth century (as far back as the records allow). He calls it “the survival of the richest.” Dutton and Woodley summarize: "Between the 1400s and the mid-19th century, in every generation, the richer 50% of the population had more surviving children than the poorer 50%. As economic status and intelligence are positively correlated, this led to us becoming more and more intelligent every generation." To test this hypothesis, Clark looked to a number of proxies for intelligence, including literacy, numeracy and even interest rates (which tend to go down as intelligence rises because smarter populations display lower time preference, resulting in less demand for loans). The results confirm the hypothesis: intelligence continued to rise "until the most intelligent people—the outlier, super-clever geniuses—were so numerous and so capable that their innovations actually allowed us to take control of our environment to an unprecedented extent. Here we had the Industrial Revolution".[5]

Animal and plant eugenics

Selective breeding and other methods used by humans, in order to improve the genetics of animals and plants, have a very long history and may be considered a form of non-human eugenics. Such non-human eugenics has not decreased after WWII, but has instead become increasingly more sophisticated, as knowledge of genetics has improved.

Almost all foods consumed by humans have to some degree been changed by such agricultural practices from their original "wild" forms. However, recent advanced methods such as genetic engineering, instead of the traditionally used methods, such as selective breeding have caused various concerns, such as regarding safety and unintended consequences.

Positive and negative eugenics

Eugenic policies have often been conceptually divided into two categories: positive eugenics, which encourage "more fit" to reproduce more often; and negative eugenics, which discourage or prevent "less fit" from reproducing.

However, this categorization, based on the method of selective breeding, does not necessarily apply to modern methods such genetic engineering.

Designer babies

Lynn and Harvey (2008) suggested that designer babies (through methods such as genetic screening of embryos or through direct genetic engineering of embryos) may have an important role in counter-acting dysgenics in the future. Initially this may be limited to wealthy couples, who may possibly travel abroad for the procedure if prohibited in their own country, and then gradually spread to increasingly larger groups. Alternatively, authoritarian states may decide to impose measures such as a licensing requirement for having a child, which would only be given to persons of a certain minimum intelligence. The Chinese one-child policy, although not having a stated eugenic purpose, is an example of how fertility can be regulated by authoritarian means.[6]

Criticisms and counter-criticisms

  • Race. Eugenics is sometimes perceived as being intrinsically linked to race, possibly in part by being associated with the use of selective breeding by humans in order to create and improve animal breeds, but eugenics can be applied to arbitrary groups, such as all the inhabitants of a certain area, or even theoretically to the whole human species.
  • Genetic denialism. Various movements which support genetics denialism (both racial and non-racial) are by default opposed to eugenics having an effect on such differences. However, as demonstrated by, for example, the many different dog breeds created by humans, it is possible to influence both physical and psychological characteristics. There is arguably no reason for why not also human characteristics could be changed by eugenics.
The heritability of running speed among horses (a very important characteristic for many horse breeders) has been found to be between 15-35%. This is lower than the lowest estimates for intelligence or psychopathy among humans.[7]
  • Social Darwinism. Eugenics is often conflated with social Darwinism. However, social Darwinism is typically an ideology which sees Darwin's theory of natural selection as a model for certain aspects of human society. Eugenicists have usually not advocated natural selection as a eugenic method, due to problems such as slowness, uncertainty regarding the results, and often painfulness for those involved. Instead, proposed eugenic measures may be seen as alternatives to the "social Darwinist" solution (natural selection due to diseases, starvation, and so on) to problems such as dysgenics.
  • Coerciveness. Eugenics is often perceived to be associated with forced measures, such as involuntary sterilizations, but many forms are voluntary, such as parents wanting to avoid their children having certain genetic diseases common among relatives. The early eugenic movement disseminated information to the public regarding dysgenics and eugenics in order to increase voluntary eugenics. Some measures, such as ones involving financial incentives or disincentives may or may not be perceived as coercive, but such measures are commonly used in other situations in order to encourage or discourage behaviors seen as beneficial or harmful for society. Furthermore, if, for example, a genetic disease could have been prevented by eugenics, but was not, then an unborn child may be viewed as being "coerced" into having this genetic disease.
  • Involuntary sterilizations. Eugenics has historically been associated with involuntary sterilizations of, for example, persons with argued very low intelligence, historically justified for argued reasons such as the well-being of society and offspring. This has also been used as one of the main criticisms of eugenics, for reasons such violating the rights of individuals to have children. However, modern or future methods, such as embryo selection and genetic engineering, could in theory reduce or completely prevent transmission of negative parental genetic characteristics, assuming a controlled conception.
  • Mass murder. Some claimed mass murders are sometimes blamed on eugenics. However, eugenics at most require sterilization in order to prevent transmission of perceived negative genetics to future generations. Thus, these mass murders (assuming they in fact occurred) would have had non-eugenic perceived motivations.
  • Affordability. The costs of genetic analyses and genetic manipulations have been dramatically reduced through technological developments. This affects the cost of potential eugenic methods and will likely continue to do so in the future. As such, potential eugenic methods will become affordable for increasingly larger groups of people in the future. A prohibition of eugenics in one country would in practice only make it more expensive and less available for the poor, as long as it is possible to travel abroad to another country where it is legal.
  • Inbreeding depression. In animal selective breeding, it is not unusual to breed very closely related animals in order to increase the chance of "fixing" a desired trait. However, this also increases the risk of various negative effects due to inbreeding depression. This is sometimes used as an argument against eugenics in general, but is accurately a problem only with this particular method of selective breeding.
  • Reduced genetic diversity. Eugenics may cause reduced genetic diversity, since a particular genetic alternative may be seen as the best and therefore usually selected. This has occurred in agriculture where monoculture is common. An important reason for high genetic diversity existing in "wild" species is because this enables a better genetic response to changes in the environment. However, genetic engineering, other eugenic methods, as well as technology in general could likely relatively quickly respond to a changing environment, without a high genetic diversity being necessary, if in the future eugenics should have significantly reduced overall human genetic diversity. At present, any realistic form of eugenics would only change overall human genetics and genetic diversity slowly. Also, just as there exists an enormous number of different species, which are all well-adapted genetically to different ecological niches, it may also be the case that a well-functioning human society has people with many different kinds of genetic characteristics adapted to different requirements. As such, an optimal eugenics would not necessarily reduce many kinds of human genetic differences.
  • Gene interactions. The same gene variant may have different effects depending on the interactions with other gene variants. A common example is recessive genes, where having two recessive alleles can cause a recessive genetic disease, but only having one such allele may in some cases have positive effects for a person. Thus, removing such gene variants from a population in order to prevent recessive diseases may have negative effects for those not having these diseases. However, this is an argument for preventing persons from having two such recessive alleles, while at the same time allowing persons to have one such recessive allele, rather than an argument against eugenics. More generally, it is an argument for that eugenics should consider gene interactions rather than only isolated gene variants and encourage positive gene interactions and discourage negative gene interactions.
  • Unintended consequences. Another argument against eugenics is that human genetics have very complex and interacting effects, and it often unclear what effects, in particular long-term effects, a genetic change will have. Counterarguments include that genetic knowledge has increased very rapidly and likely will continue to do so, which will improve predictive ability. That there may be unforeseen negative consequences applies to all new technology. Furthermore, in some cases, such as certain very harmful genetic diseases which cause painful deaths to all infants or children having these diseases, it is extremely likely that an individual would benefit from not having such a genetic disease. Also, methods such as cloning of geniuses would likely ensure generally beneficial genetic interactions, even if exact knowledge of how the genetic interactions occur is lacking.

Legal abortion

File:Woman And The New Race by Margaret Louise Higgins Sanger.png
Birth control activist, sex educator, writer, and nurse Margaret Louise Higgins Sanger (1879–1966): “In passing, we should here recognize the difficulties presented by the idea of ‘fit‘ and ‘unfit.‘ Who is to decide this question? The grosser, the more obvious, the undeniably feeble-minded should, indeed, not only be discouraged but prevented from propagating their kind.“ For Sanger, the consequences of “irresponsible and chance parenthood” were “feeble-mindedness, crime, and syphilis.”[8] In The Pivot of Civilization (1922), Sanger spent several pages detailing an anecdote about a black feeble-minded girl, whose uncontrolled reproduction resulted in sixteen children, all of which either died at a young age or turned into criminals. In the end, Sanger believed that nothing would replace birth control as the necessary eugenic tool for achieving "racial betterment".

Legal abortion has been argued to have eugenic effects.[9]

Specific countries/groups

File:Eugenics Research Poster by American Philosophical Society.png
Eugenics Research Poster by American Philosophical Society

There was popular, elite and governmental support for eugenics in the United States, Canada, Mexico, Great Britain, Germany, Sweden, Italy, and other countries. Eugenics societies existed worldwide, including a small army of scientists, to promote eugenics. They held annual conferences where the papers read would be published in Proceedings volumes.

“If we cut up beasts simply because they cannot prevent us and because we are backing our own side in the struggle for existence, it is only logical to cut up imbeciles, criminals, enemies, or capitalists for the same reasons.” ― British scholar Clive Staples Lewis, in: "God in the Dock" (1970)

Sweden

Sweden had quite early eugenics legislation on their statute books. Compulsory sterilisations were carried out in Sweden, without a valid consent of the subject, during the years 1906–1975.

USA

In 1902, Charles B. Davenport, then a Professor of Zoology at the University of Chicago, approached the Carnegie Institution with a request for $45,000 to create a “Biological Experiment Station for the study of evolution” on the Cold Spring Harbor Campus.4 His aim would be the “analytic and experimental study of the causes of specific differentiation—of race change.” He proposed to accomplish this “by the cross breeding of animals and plants to find the laws of commingling of qualities … the study of the laws and limits of inheritance.” Within this brief two-page proposal, Davenport commingles the scientific genetic approach that dated back to Mendel with his personal fascination with the perceived human racial differences of his day. It took until 1910 for Davenport to begin studies on human inheritance with the creation of the Eugenics Record Office. Financial support came from Mrs. E.H. Harriman (a wealthy philanthropist), John Harvey Kellogg (the breakfast cereal magnate), and the American Breeders' Association. This association was the first membership-based group whose mission included the promotion of eugenics research in the United States through a subcommittee chaired by ichthyologist and Stanford University President David Starr Jordan. By 1918, H. H. Laughlin was hired as the superintendent of the Eugenics Records Office, which transitioned from a freestanding, self-supporting endeavor to a sub-department of the Experimental Evolution Department under the control of the Carnegie Institution. Davenport conceived of this office to mainly “serve eugenical interests in the capacity of repository and clearing house” and to “provide data adequate to making eugenical studies.” Their method was to collect family histories from “better families” and “subnormal families” based upon methods previously described by Galton. Laughlin's publication of Eugenical Sterilization in the United States in 1922 included the drafting of a “model law” for compulsory sterilization that was the bedrock of forced sterilization programs throughout the country.[10] In the 1923 report of the Second International Congress of Eugenics, titled Eugenics, Genetics, and the Family, Henry F. Osborn, then president of the American Museum of Natural History in New York (the site of the meeting), stated in the opening address:

In the US we are slowly waking to the consciousness that education and environment do not fundamentally alter racial values. We are engaged in a serious struggle to maintain our historic republican institutions through barring the entrance of those unfit to share in the duties and responsibilities of our well-founded government. … In the matter of racial virtues, my opinion is that from biological principles there is little promise in the melting-pot theory. Put three races together (Caucasian, Mongolian, and the Negroid) you are likely to unite the vices of all three as the virtues. … For the worlds work give me a pure-blooded … ascertain through observation and experiment what each race is best fitted to accomplish. … If the Negro fails in government, he may become a fine agriculturist or a fine mechanic. … The right of the state to safeguard the character and integrity of the race or races on which its future depends is, to my mind, as incontestable as the right of the state to safeguard the health and morals of its peoples.

It is important to appreciate that within the U.S. and European scientific communities these ideas were not fringe but widely held and taught in universities. The report of the Eugenics meeting was the lead story in the journal Science on 7 October 1921, and this opening address was published, in its entirety, beginning on the first page of the issue. The State of California also had quite early eugenics legislation which sought to prevent people with mental illness or physical disabilities from being able to have children. California had the U.S.A.'s largest forced sterilization programme, sterilizing about 20,000 people beginning in 1909 to 1979.[11]

In America, the eugenics movement began in the 1900s with the work of Charles Davenport, who was a well-known leader of the American eugenics effort. Also known as the father of the American eugenics movement, Davenport was a biologist who conducted early studies on heredity in animals and shifted his focus to humans. Davenport was also inspired by Galton’s work with eugenics and how to reduce undesirable traits in the human race. He became a member of the American Breeders Association (ABA), which had a scientific body that supported eugenic research with the goal to improve human breeding. In 1910, Davenport formed the Eugenics Record Office (ERO) at Cold Spring Harbor in Long Island, New York, where Harry Laughlin worked by his side as the superintendent of the ERO (Micklos & Carlson, 2000). The ERO collected information on family pedigrees that had physically, mentally, or morally desired traits. However, one of the ERO’s main focuses was the inheritance of undesirable traits, as during this time the goal of the movement was to eliminate them (Bouche & Rivard, 2014). The most notable funding for the ERO was from John Harvey Kellogg and the ABA. Kellogg, best known as the doctor that invented Kellogg’s Corn Flakes cereal, was also an American eugenicist. He focused mainly on race degeneracy, as he believed racial mixing and mental defects would damage the human race (Leung, n.d.). In 1911, John Harvey Kellogg organized the Race Betterment Foundation (RBF), which had a pedigree registry and hosted national conferences in 1914, 1915, and 1928 (“Eugenics”, 2019). [...] Many eugenicists accepted birth control as a method for reducing procreation of defective offspring. Leading the birth control movement, Margaret Sanger used the eugenics effort to support her agenda. Sanger was public about her desire to prevent breeding of the unfit (“Eugenics and Birth Control”, n.d.). Just as other eugenicists, Sanger also supported sterilization of those mentally unfit (Lathan, 2018). Sanger stated that birth control is a way to prevent the “defectives” from producing offspring (Sanger, 1920, p. 66).[12]

Quotes

  • “The year 2100 will see eugenics universally established. In past ages, the law governing the survival of the fittest roughly weeded out the less desirable strains. Then man's new sense of pity began to interfere with the ruthless workings of nature. As a result, we continue to keep alive and to breed the unfit. The only method compatible with our notions of civilization and the race is to prevent the breeding of the unfit by sterilization and the deliberate guidance of the mating instinct, Several European countries and a number of states of the American Union sterilize the criminal and the insane. This is not sufficient. The trend of opinion among eugenists is that we must make marriage more difficult. Certainly no one who is not a desirable parent should be permitted to produce progeny. A century from now it will no more occur to a normal person to mate with a person eugenically unfit than to marry a habitual criminal.”Nikola Tesla
  • “While I personally believe in the sterilization of the feeble-minded, the insane and the syphiletic [sic], I have not been able to discover that these measures are more than superficial deterrents when applied to the constantly growing stream of the unfit. They are excellent means of meeting a certain phase of the situation, but I believe in regard to these, as in regard to other eugenic means, that they do not go to the bottom of the matter. [...] “The emergency problem of segregation and sterilization must be faced immediately [...]. Moreover, when we realize that each feeble-minded person is a potential source of an endless progeny of defect, we prefer the policy of immediate sterilization, of making sure that parenthood is absolutely prohibited to the feeble-minded [...]” ― Margaret Sanger
  • “My firm conviction is that if wide-spread Eugenic reforms are not adopted during the next hundred years or so, our Western Civilization is inevitably destined to such a slow and gradual decay as that which has been experienced in the past by every great ancient civilization. The size and the importance of the United States throws on you a special responsibility in your endeavours to safeguard the future of our race. Those who are attending your Congress will be aiding in this endeavour, and though you will gain no thanks from your own generation, posterity will, I believe, learn to realize the great dept it owes to all the workers in this field.” ― Leonard Darwin, English politician, economist and eugenicist. He was a son of the naturalist Charles Darwin, and also a mentor to Ronald Fisher, a statistician and evolutionary biologist.
File:German Eugenics legislation 1933.png
German Eugenics Legislation published on 25 July 1933 in the "Reich Law Gazette"

Germany

File:Neues-Volk-1-March-1936-p.-37.png
Eugenicists operated nationally and internationally, fostering collaboration, in theory, and practice. In the mid-1930s, Germany stated correctly that their programme of compulsory sterilisation was in no way different from other similar legislation introduced in countries such as the USA and Sweden, and planned in Japan and in other European countries such as Britain, Hungary, and Poland. “We are not alone,” they said, garnering international support for their plans to eliminate hereditary disease offspring from society.

Racial hygiene

Read more in the Main Article--> Racial hygiene

National Socialist Germany

It has been said that the German eugenics legislation was inspired by that of California. In 1933, "The Law for the Prevention of Hereditarily Diseased Offspring" was passed by the German Government (Reichstag). Claimed applications of eugenics in National Socialist Germany are today among the most often used criticisms against eugenics.

See the article on Action T4 regarding this subject.

See the article on the Lebensborn organization regarding this subject.

See the articles on Ernst Rüdin and Hans F. K. Günther on these German eugenicists.

Revisionist historians agree that jews were persecuted. Deliberate genocide of jews during the Holohoax is, however, disputed by Holohoax revisionists. Such actions have often been claimed to have had eugenic motivations. This view has been criticized.

Richard Lynn (not a Holohoax revisionist) thus writes:

"Hitler did not regard the jews as genetically inferior. No one could have reached such a conclusion in Germany in the 1920s and 1930s because it was a matter of common knowledge and observation that the jews were exceptionally talented. jews were prominent in business, the professions, and intellectual life. Although they constituted only approximately 1 percent of the population, jews won 10 out of 32 Nobel Prizes awarded [after nominations] to German citizens between 1905 and 1931 and were thus over-represented among this highly elite group by a factor of approximately 30 (Gordon, 1984). Anyone who asserted that the jews were genetically inferior and hence eugenically undesirable would have forfeited all credibility, and Hitler certainly did not do so. [...] Hitler believed that the jews and the Aryans were the two most talented races and that they were in competition to secure world supremacy. Thus, he wrote in Mein Kampf that the jews are "the mightiest counterpart to the Aryan" (p. 64). He feared that the outcome of the struggle between these two peoples might easily be "the final victory of this little nation" (p. 300). [...] The correct understanding of Hitler's views on the jews has been summarized by MacDonald (1998): "Hitler believed that races, including the jews, are in a struggle for world domination, and he had a very great respect for the ability of jews to carry on their struggle" (p. 146). The frequent assertion that Hitler exterminated the jews on eugenics grounds is a misunderstanding of his position."[1]

A 2008 study stated:

"The author investigates the charge that eugenics represents a “slippery path” that led to the Holohoax, and concludes that this widely popularized allegation is not supported by the facts. In a documented “timeline” he shows that during the period 1927 through 1939 many of the leading proponents of the eugenics movement were jewish, and that the 1930s movement [in Germany] aimed at the political and genetic exclusion of jews from Germany."[13]

Ideological views which include that different groups are in necessary and justified struggles with one another are no new phenomena created by eugenics (or the science of genetics). Such views can be found, for example, in the Hebrew Bible (or Tanakh), which approvingly describes exterminations of various perceived enemies of jews, and in ideological justifications for communist exterminations of groups perceived as obstacles to the future communist utopia, despite communists opposing eugenics and even genetics and Darwinian evolutionary theory by supporting Lysenkoism.

Also, extensive eugenics existed and continue to exist in many other countries (including Israel), both before and after the Second World War, without this causing mass murder.

Attitudes towards eugenics after WWII in different countries

In 1994–1996, a survey was conducted asking geneticists and physicians around the world whether they agreed with the statement “An important goal of genetic counseling is to reduce the number of deleterious genes in the population.” The percentage agreeing with the statement in different countries:[7]

  • China 100%
  • India 87%
  • Turkey 73%
  • Peru 71%
  • Spain 67%
  • Poland 66%
  • Russia 58%
  • Greece 58%
  • Cuba 57%
  • Mexico 52%
  • Major Western Democracies <33%

jewish and Israeli eugenics

See the article on jews and intelligence regarding possible "eugenic" explanations for a high jewish intelligence. As for other historical cases before modern genetic science, it is dubious that such possible practices had a conscious goal of genetic improvement.

jewish participation in modern eugenics has been argued to show a consistent support in Israel from its birth in 1948 to the present, and among the majority of jews in the West until the late 1960s, at which time most jewish social scientists and journalists reversed their previous support to vehement opposition.[3]

"Unlike the U.S. situation, this anti-eugenics view never even got off the ground in Israel. Behavioral scientist Aviad Raz (b. 1968) of Ben Gurion University is quite open in pointing out that both the word ‘eugenics’ and the actual practice of eugenics enjoy broad approval in that country, and objections to eugenics – at least as far as genetic screening combined with eugenic abortions – are a ‘non-issue’ in Israel: Eugenic ideologies and practices have persisted in Israel, in a thinly disguised mode, even after the holocaust, because they were an inherent and formative part of Zionism . . . [P]renatal genetic testing was eugenic and was indeed supported precisely for that reason, since ‘eugenic’ for them meant the improvement of the health of progeny and carried positive rather than negative connotations."[3]

In Israel, eugenics, abortion, and various modern reproductive/genetic technologies have been argued to not be controversial issues unlike in many Western countries, encouraged by the government, and widely used by the population. "(It should be noted, however, that Palestinians are not encouraged to take part, as their fertility is seen as a threat to the state.)"[3]

See the "History" section above regarding opposition by jews to eugenics in Western countries.

Singapore

In mainly East Asian Singapore, under the leadership of Lee Kuan Yew, higher earners were given tax breaks for children and a government unit was set up to bring college graduates together in social settings, like dances and cruises, to encourage relationships and procreation. In three short years, the results were impressive. Between 1987 and 1990, births to college educated women went from 36.7 percent of all births to 47.7 percent.[7]

China

Imperial examination system

The historical imperial examination system in China, and similar systems in other East Asian countries, have been argued to have had (unintended) eugenic effects, by increasing opportunities for those with high IQ, although it has been questioned how large a share of the population was affected by this. Another historical "eugenic" explanation causing increasing IQ involves East Asian (and European societies) allowing high social mobility and favoring high IQ, which would over time have replaced the lower classes with downward mobile people, who still had a higher IQ than the previous members of the lower classes, who would often have been unable to reproduce successfully and thus became genetically extinct.[14][15][16]

One-child policy and negative demographics

The previous one-child policy of China, although not officially eugenic, is an example of how fertility can be successfully regulated by an authoritarian state.

The policy has been argued to have concealed eugenic intentions, by reducing the claimed high and more dysgenic fertility of groups such as rural peasants. With the 1995 Maternal and Infant Health Law (known as the Eugenic Law until Western opposition forced a name change), China forbade people carrying heritable mental or physical disorders from marrying, and promoted mass prenatal ultrasound testing for birth defects. China has also been argued to emphasize "biopower": creating the world's highest-quality human capital in terms of the Chinese population's genes, health, and education. With the relaxation of the one-child policy, wealthier couples can now pay to have an extra child.[17] Critics of the theory of such hidden eugenic intentions have argued that the one-child policy is only strictly enforced among the wealthier and more successful urban Chinese, that enforcement is much more lax among rural peasants, and that minority groups are completely exempt, which has caused their share of the population to increase considerably over the last three decades.[14]

In 2016, China changed its one-child policy to a two-child policy and may soon remove also this limitation. Despite this, birth rates in China have continued to decline. Various incentives to reverse this have been implemented and proposed. More coercive measures may be implemented if these do not work.[18]

Dysgenics and the Flynn effect

A 2016 study on China stated that dysgenic fertility had negative effects on average IQ.[19] A 2017 study found dysgenic effects on IQ also in Taiwan, with the effect being stronger for younger adults.[20] However, Richard Lynn has argued that the Flynn effect will continue China, and "as intelligence continues to increase in China and decline in Europe and the United States, China is likely to emerge as the world’s superpower in the second half of the 21st century."[21]

Recent argued and possible future eugenics

"Although eugenics is today anathema throughout the Western world, “[i]n China it is alive and well. The Maternal and Infantile Health Care Law went into effect on 1 June 1995. A media mention states ‘The official Xinhua News Agency reported that China currently has more than 10 million disabled people whose births could have been prevented if such a law had been in effect.’”In another article, “Reproduction Technology for a New Eugenics,” Dr. Whitney reports that “in June of 1999 China opened a government-run ‘notables’ Sperm Bank that accepts donors in three categories: intellectuals with at least a master’s degree, top businessmen, and successful artists, entertainers, and athletes. . . Clinic officials are quoted as saying that they would select sperm with high-quality characteristics’ to fulfill a popular demand for ‘attractive, intelligent children.’”"[22]

Currently, the Chinese state is conducting massive research projects on the genetics of human mental and physical traits. This includes research on the genetics of IQ. The results have been argued to "probably be used mostly in China, for China. Potentially, the results would allow all Chinese couples to maximize the intelligence of their offspring by selecting among their own fertilized eggs for the one or two that include the highest likelihood of the highest intelligence. Given the Mendelian genetic lottery, the kids produced by any one couple typically differ by 5 to 15 IQ points. So this method of "preimplantation embryo selection" might allow IQ within every Chinese family to increase by 5 to 15 IQ points per generation. After a couple of generations, it would be game over for Western global competitiveness."[17]

A 2017 article described very rapid growth in China of genetic research and genetic testing/procedures (such as "PGD") to avoid passing on mutations that can disease or disability. Clinics licensed to do such procedures can currently only use it to avoid serious disease or assist infertility treatments. "To many fertility specialists, what’s most striking about China’s adoption of PGD is the speed and organization of its uptake. China already seems to provide more procedures than the United States, and with growth estimated at 60–70% per year, is on target to catch up in per capita terms in the next few years." More generally, "The Chinese word for eugenics, yousheng, is used explicitly as a positive in almost all conversations about PGD. Yousheng is about giving birth to children of better quality. Not smoking during pregnancy is also part of yousheng." [23]

A review on Richard Lynn's book Eugenics: A Reassessment stated that "the attitudes in China are the most favorable and when that is combined with the advantages of an authoritarian government, a lack of dysgenic immigration, and a high IQ starting point it’s not hard to believe that the Chinese will continue to be the most enthusiastic and efficient users of biotechnology.

So how will this nation of a billion people treat the rest of the world after it’s raised its IQ to 150+? Lynn might be too optimistic here. He believes the Chinese will colonize the world and try to improve the IQs and living standards of their subjects. The Europeans will be kept around for their biological uniqueness and admired for their cultural accomplishments, the way that the Romans subjugated the Greeks but appreciated their philosophy and art. If the Chinese decide that the Europeans should be preserved they’d be doing more for them than whites are currently doing for themselves. A global eugenic superstate led by the Chinese will be the "end of history."

Lynn’s forecasts the next 100 years with a stone-cold detachment. The first government to utilize the power of biotechnology will take over the world. Thanks to third world immigration and egalitarianism, the decline of the West seems inevitable and eugenic policies unlikely. The future of humanity being in the hands of the dictators in Beijing may not be the most comforting idea in the world, but at least the reader of Eugenics may be convinced that intelligence and civilization will continue somewhere."[7]

See also

External links

Article archives

Sources

  • Inge, William Ralph, C.V.O., D.D., F.B.A., Outspoken Essays, Longmans, Green & Co., London, 1922, "Eugenics", p.254-275.
  • Pearson, Dr. Roger, Shockley on Eugenics and Race (Introduction by Hans J Eysenck), Scott-Townsend pubs., Washington D.C., U.S.A., 1992, ISBN: 13:9781878465030
  • Pearson, Dr. Roger, Heredity and Humanity: Race, Eugenics & Modern Science, Scott-Townsend pubs., Washington D.C., U.S.A., 1996, ISBN: 1-878365-15-5.
  • Lynn, Professor Richard, Dysgenics: Genetic Deterioration in Modern Populations, 2nd Revised edition, U.K., 2011, ISBN: 978-0-9568811-0-6

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Lynn, Richard, Eugenics: A Reassessment, 2001, Praeger
  2. Ending a Historical Taboo https://www.amren.com/news/2008/08/ending_a_histor/
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 Against Good Breeding: Understanding jewish Opposition to Eugenics. http://www.counter-currents.com/2014/07/against-good-breeding/
  4. https://www.amren.com/news/2019/03/race-intelligence-bias-academe/
  5. "The Rise and Decline of the West: Review “At Our Wit’s End” by Edward Dutton and Michael A. Woodley of Menie https://www.theoccidentalobserver.net/2019/02/12/the-rise-and-decline-of-the-west-review-at-our-wits-end-by-edward-dutton-and-michael-a-woodley-of-menie/
  6. Lynn, R.; Harvey, J. (2008). "The decline of the world's IQ". Intelligence 36 (2): 112. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.intell.2007.03.004
  7. 7.0 7.1 7.2 7.3 Richard Hoste. The Coming Chinese Superstate: Richard Lynn’s Eugenics. The Occidental Quarterly. Jul 2, 2009 https://www.toqonline.com/blog/the-coming-chinese-superstate/
  8. Margaret Sanger: Birth Control and Racial Betterment, "Birth Control Review", February 1919, p. 12
  9. Heretical Thoughts on Abortion & Eugenics. http://www.counter-currents.com/2015/03/heretical-thoughts-on-abortion-and-eugenics/
  10. U.S. Scientists' Role in the Eugenics Movement (1907–1939): A Contemporary Biologist's Perspective
  11. https://www.uvm.edu/~lkaelber/eugenics/CA/CA.html
  12. Early American Eugenics Movement
  13. Eugenics and the Holohoax: 1927-1939 http://www.mankindquarterly.org/archive/issue/48-4/2
  14. 14.0 14.1 Ron Unz. China: Chinese Eugenics?http://www.theamericanconservative.com/china-chinese-eugenics/
  15. Peter Frost. East Asia's Farewell to Alms. Evo and Proud. http://evoandproud.blogspot.com/2013/03/east-asias-farewell-to-alms.html
  16. Peter Frost. Does the Clark-Unz model apply to Japan and Korea? http://evoandproud.blogspot.ro/2013/03/does-clark-unz-model-apply-to-japan-and.html
  17. 17.0 17.1 Geoffrey Miller. Chinese Eugenics. 2013. Edge. http://edge.org/response-detail/23838
  18. China Stepping Up Measures to Boost the Birth Rate https://www.pop.org/china-stepping-up-measures-to-boost-the-birth-rate/
  19. Wang, M., Fuerst, J., & Ren, J. (2016). Evidence of dysgenic fertility in China. Intelligence, 57, 15-24. http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0160289616301106
  20. Chen, H. Y., Chen, Y. H., Liao, Y. K., Chen, H. P., & Lynn, R. (2017). Dysgenic fertility for intelligence and education in Taiwan. Intelligence, 63, 29-32. http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0160289616303038
  21. A Conversation with Richard Lynn https://www.amren.com/features/2019/06/a-conversation-with-richard-lynn/
  22. The Scientific and Social Policy Implications of Racial Differences https://www.amren.com/news/2019/09/the-scientific-and-social-policy-implications-of-racial-differences/
  23. China’s embrace of embryo selection raises thorny questions https://www.nature.com/news/china-s-embrace-of-embryo-selection-raises-thorny-questions-1.22468