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1. Tech Ethics - Eugenics1883 - 1940
2. Slide 1 - ORIGINS The word “eugenics” was coined in 1883 by Sir Francis Galton
eu meaning good, and genes meaning born
3. Slide 2 - Definition “The science which deals with all influences that improve the inborn qualities of a race; also with those that develop them to the utmost advantage.”
- Galton, Eugenics: It’s Definition, Scope and Aims
4. Slide 3 – Ancient History Plato (ca. 427 – 347 B.C.)
In The Republic, discusses the need to supply society with genetically improved human beings and how this could be done.
Rome and Sparta
Infanticide to weed out “weak” babies
5. Slide 4 - Two Types of Eugenics
Positive Eugenics - Measures to increase reproduction in families with desirable traits (i.e. encouraging the “fit” to have more children)
Negative Eugenics - Measures to limit reproduction in families with undesirable traits (e.g. sterilization via vasectomy and tubal ligation) Negative eugenics was the predominant view
6. Slide 5 - Eugenics was influenced by Origin of Species: Natural Selection
“Survival of the fittest”
Mendel’s studies on the inheritance of traits
Agriculture/Animal Breeding
7. Slide 6 - Mendel’s Influence Mendel’s experiments applied to animals and humans
“Applied genetics”
8. Slide 7 – Father of Eugenics Charles Davenport, Founder of the Eugenics Record Office, credited with the popularization of eugenics
Relied heavily on Mendel’s work
Respectable studies on eye color, hair color, hair texture, and pigmentation
BUT, goes on to apply results to complex human traits, like intelligence
9. Slide 8 - Scientific Research Eugenicists contributed greatly to what we know about many inherited disorders including:
Hemophilia
Ataxia
Albinism
Polydatyly
The problem was the general belief that all traits, including behavioral ones, followed Mendel’s inheritance ratios
10. Slide 9 – Unscientific Research Eugenics claimed through science they were able to identify……
Undesirables
Pauperism
Alcoholism
Feeblemindedness
Promiscuity
Criminality
Desirables
Emotional stability
Strong character
Considerateness for other people
Intelligence
Tendency to uphold or improve moral standards
The quality which makes people feel a personal responsibility for the public welfare
11. Slide 10 - 20th Century Eugenics 1900 – 1920s, several organizations were formed
The Eugenics Record Office (ERO)
The American Breeders Association (ABA)
The Race Betterment Foundation
The American Eugenics Society
The Galton Society
International Eugenics Congresses of 1912, 1921 and 1932
Attended by the likes of Alexander Graham Bell and Winston Churchill
12. Slide 11 – Teaching Eugenics Courses offered in some of America’s top universities – Harvard, Columbia, Cornell – by 1914
Eugenics was a topic in 376 college courses
High school textbooks preached the “unfit” vs. “fit”
Fitter Families Contests in 1920s
13. Slide 12 - US Laws supporting Eugenics The Laws
Miscegenation laws against mixing races
-Virginia’s Racial Integrity Act of 1924, followed by Alabama and Georgia
Immigration Laws
- Immigration Restriction Act of 1924
- Limits on Eastern and Southern Europeans (based on IQ tests, inmate/asylum studies
Sterilization Laws
- Indiana was first in 1907
- Model Eugenical Sterilization Law (Laughlin, 1922) defines socially inadequate classes
14. Slide 13 - US Supreme Court Case The case of Buck vs. Bell
Carrie Buck
First to be sterilized in VA
Mother, Emma, was in asylum
Gave birth at age 17 out of wedlock
Daughter, Vivian, was examined at seven months and deemed feebleminded
Charged with feeblemindedness, immorality, prostitution, and untruthfulness
Supreme Court Ruling: “It is better for all the world, if instead of waiting to execute degenerate offspring for crime, or to let them starve for their imbecility, society can prevent those who are manifestly unfit from continuing their kind…Three generations of imbeciles is enough.” – Justice Oliver Holmes
15. About 60 000 Americans believed to have been sterilized based on eugenic principles
16. Slide 15 - Eugenics Worldwide Movements were founded in France, Norway, Sweden, Denmark, Russia, Cuba, Brazil, Mexico, Canada, and Japan.
Eugenic sterilization laws passed in Alberta (1928), Sweden and Norway (1934)
17. Slide 16 - Nazi Germany Government adopts Laughlin’s Model Eugenical Sterilization Law, and by 1933, sterilize more than 350,000 people
Laughlin awarded honorary degree from the University of Heidelberg in 1936 for work in “the science of racial cleansing”
18. Slide 17 - Nazi Germany Hitler’s “Aryan” society
Marriage Laws of 1935 prohibiting unions between “Aryans” and Jews and the eugenically unfit
~400,000 sterilized by 1939
The Final Solution
-killing of 6 million Jews
- 70,000 mental patients
- Gypsies, Slavs, and Social Democrats
19. Slide 18 - Flaws of Eugenics Failure to recognize the complexity of human traits
Disregard of environmental/social factors
Skewed results
Linking undesirable traits with racial and ethnic groups
Disregard of effects on genetic diversity
Flawed IQ testing
Deemed a pseudo-science: mainly a social movement
20. Slide 19 - The Fall of Eugenics Mainly due to atrocities committed by Nazis
Emerging evidence against Eugenic claims
Reginald Punnet
Hardy-Weinberg
Opposition from the Church