Nazi eugenics

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    Himmler was not the first to regulate a section of the populations’ marital and reproductive decisions; the German Society for Race Hygiene had also implemented a marriage pledge, however, Himmler’s policy was the first to apply eugenics measures to a large group, particularly with the intention of promoting population growth. Marriage was seen as the base point for his population policies, Himmler ordering each SS officer to have at least four children, to combat Germany’s low…

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    Emperor's New Clothes; Biological Theories of Race at the Millennium, by Joseph L. Graves Jr. discusses the concept of race throughout human history. He discusses how humans perceive race before Darwin’s discoveries, in colonial America, and looks at eugenics. He presents common theories and “truths” about race for the era in each time period. He starts the book by comparing the story the Emperor's New Clothes to how humans perceive race. He makes the connection through the mass majority going…

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    Nature ,the ability to learn from hereditary. Nurture, the ability to learn from the environment. These two ways of Learning have been in debate for hundreds of years. The question is, are we products of nature or nurture. Do we as humans learn from being taught or do we learn from what we inherited ? This question can be answered in many ways starting with how this argument began. In the article "The nature versus nurture debate or controversy" , it spoke of a French philosopher named…

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    In chapter four of the textbook Criminological Theory the Essentials by Stephen G. Tibbetts it discusses some criminological theories as to why some people commit crimes. Including Lombroso’s theory of crime (Tibbetts, 2012, p. 68), Binet’s IQ testing (Tibbetts, 2012, p. 73), and Sheldon’s body-type theory (Tibbetts, 2012, p. 76). Lombroso based his work on Darwin’s theories of evolution and idea of superior groups (Tibbetts, 2012, p. 68). Lombroso believed that some people were born atavism,…

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    In Michael Shermer’s book The Moral Arc: How Science Makes Us better people, one of the first topics that is introduced to the reader is the one of the oldest arguments in history, Nature vs Nurture. In his book, Shermer proposes the theory that we are all born into this world with some sort of moral compass. Therefore, we all have basic knowledge of what is right and what is wrong. However, the degree to how wrong or right someone views something to be can be shaped by how they are nurtured.…

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    Social Darwinism is the theory that groups of people or races can be compared to the same laws of natural selection as Charles Darwin did with plants and animals in nature. During the period of 1930 and 1970, social Darwinist theories played a major role in negatively impacting the lives of Aborigines in Australia to a great extent. They used the social Darwinist theories as an excuse for the white Australians to apply Darwinist theories like 'survival of the fittest' and 'white superiority' and…

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    The Evolution Of Eugenics

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    Eugenics is a type of science that manipulates mankind by the sterilization of incompetent people with intentions to improve the value of our society. In the mid 1800’s Charles Darwin’s natural selection gave pathway to eugenics. More of the science behind eugenics began to develop in 1902 on the Cold Spring Harbor Campus by a professor know as Charles B. Davenport (Farber, 2008). Mr. Davenport began the study of biological study on evolution on animals which eventually evolved to the study of…

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    During the turn of the 1900’s the eugenics movement would serve to redirect the concerns of asylum keepers. The drive of eugenics, the knowledge of enhancing civilization through precise breeding to surge the amount of necessary genetic features in people, thought that the all-around community was endangered by substandard breeding…

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    Francis Galton was born in the year 1822, half cousin of Charles Darwin. Galton was around during the time that Darwin’s theory of natural selection came about. It was during this time that the concept of people varying from one other started to rise. With Francis Galton taking lead, this idea eventually led to a focus on individual differences in the field of psychology (Goodwin, 2012). Galton’s life was filled with so many different accomplishments and achievements. He was became part of the…

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    Procreative Beneficence Definition Procreative Beneficence is a term coined by Julian Savulescu and is stated as, “Couples (or single reproducers) should select the child they could have who is expected to have the best life, or at least as good a life as the others, based on the relevant, available information” (Savulescu, 2001, 295). Breaking this principle down, it says reproducers should select a child that is likely to have the “best life.” The word, “should,” is explained by Savulescu to…

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