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A note on eugenics, social darwinism and evolutionary theory

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Logo from the Second International Congress of Eugenics, 1921

Notoriously, the Second International Congress on Eugenics [1921] defined Eugenics as the self-direction of human evolution and saw eugenics as applied evolutionary science with intellectual, logical and factual roots in several linked branches of science, medicine and scholarship.

If you doubt this, simply examine the logo to the right.

Perhaps the best summary of the then prevailing mentality comes from Scientific Monthly, in an article on the congress — noting how it highlights a keynote by a son of Darwin:

>>THE SECOND INTERNATIONAL CONGRESS OF EUGENICS

In this journal special attention has always been given to problems of evolution, heredity and eugenics. As older readers of the THE POPULAR SCIENCE MONTHLY will remember, it gave the first American publication to the work of Spencer, and, to a certain extent of Darwin, Huxley and the other leaders in the develop- ment of the doctrine of evolution. It was indeed under the elder You- mans a journal primarily devoted to the cause of evolution at a time when the word stood for heresy not only with the general public, but also among most men of science.

During the past twenty years under its present editorial control, THE SCI- ENTIFIC MONTHLY has continued to devote a considerable part of its space to work bearing on heredity and eugenics. Francis Galton printed here articles laying the foundation of eugenics, and the leading American students of genetics-Brooks, Wilson, Morgan, Conklin, Davenport, Jen- nings, Pearl and many others have communicated the results of their work to the wider scientific and edu- cated public through this journal. In like manner, many articles by leaders in the subject have been printed on human heredity in so far as it is open to experimental or statistical study, and in other subjects on which a sci- ence of eugenics must rest-popula- tion, birth and death rates, immigra- tion, racial differences, human be- havior, etc.

We are consequently pleased to be able to record the holding in New York City of the second International Congress of Eugenics and to print in the present issue of the MONTHLY several of the more important ad- dresses by foreign representatives.

Shakespeare left no descendants, and Ben Jonson remarked that nature, having made her masterpiece, broke the mold. The four sons of Charles Darwin have followed scientific ca- reers, a fine example of family heredity and tradition. It is a special privilege to welcome to the United States and to print the address in advocacy of eugenics of Major Leon- ard Darwin, based so largely on the works of his father, Charles Dar- win, and of his cousin, Francis Galton. We hope to be able to publish in subsequent issues a gen- eral account of the congress by Dr. C. C. Little, the secretary, and several of the papers containing the results of more special scientific research.

The program was strong in genetics, in which America now. probably is leading. But all the divisions main- tained good standards, the more doubtful theories and premature ap- plications of ignorance, to which newer sciences such as eugenics and psychology are subject, having been in general avoided.>>

The Canadian Eugenics Archive adds:

>>The Congress was made up of four section[s], the first was “Human and Comparative Heredity,” the second was “Eugenics and the Family”, the third was “Human Racial Differences,” and the fourth was “Eugenics and the State” (International Eugenics Congress, 1934). An Exhibition was also prepared for the public at large, include those without academic training (International Eugenics Congress, 1934). The goal of the Congress was to discuss eugenics, but particularly in a climate of international cooperation for eugenics goals (International Eugenics Congress, 1934).

Over 300 people attended the conference. It was generally considered a success, and a committee was formed after the Congress to help educate and promote eugenic ideas in America. This committee eventually became the American Eugenics Society.

The logo of the conference was a tree – an enduring symbol of the eugenics movement.>>

Such, should already establish how the relevant thinking was, by general consent of the guild of scientific scholarship and that of the wider “educated public”

— [e.g. honorary Conference President was Alexander Graham Bell, inventor of telephony and tied to the Grosvenor family which for years dominated National Geographic, which is similar in current impact to the above cited], —

a matter of science rooted in the work of Darwin and Galton. That was the “scientific consensus” of the day; itself a lesson on the intellectual and moral hazards of appeal to consensus in science. Also, we must note the significance of influential media and campaigns by editors embarking on crusades in the building of such a consensus. At that time, G K Chesterton was very much an outlier, a lone voice pointing out the errors and hazards.

It is the consequences over the next twenty-five years and the general horror that resulted, which led to a change of approach.

In this light, let us now view some of Darwin’s key remarks in his second book, Descent of Man:

>[CH 5:] The lower animals, . . .  must have their bodily structure modified in order to survive under greatly changed conditions. They must be rendered stronger, or acquire more effective teeth or claws, for defence against new enemies; or they must be reduced in size, so as to escape detection and danger. When they migrate into a colder climate, they must become clothed with thicker fur, or have their constitutions altered. If they fail to be thus modified, they will cease to exist.

The case, however, is widely different, as Mr. Wallace has with justice insisted, in relation to the intellectual and moral faculties of man. These faculties are variable; and we have every reason to believe that the variations tend to be inherited. [–> notice, the key issue of superior/inferior descent among human populations]  Therefore, if they were formerly of high importance to primeval man and to his ape-like progenitors, they would have been perfected or advanced through natural selection. [–> notice, natural selection] Of the high importance of the intellectual faculties there can be no doubt, for man mainly owes to them his predominant position in the world.

We can see, that in the rudest state of society, the individuals who were the most sagacious, who invented and used the best weapons or traps, and who were best able to defend themselves, would rear the greatest number of offspring. The tribes, which included the largest number of men thus endowed, would increase in number and supplant other tribes. [–> as in, eliminate and/or replace] Numbers depend primarily on the means of subsistence, and this depends partly on the physical nature of the country, but in a much higher degree on the arts which are there practised. As a tribe increases and is victorious, it is often still further increased by the absorption of other tribes.* The stature and strength of the men of a tribe are likewise of some importance for its success, and these depend in part on the nature and amount of the food which can be obtained.

In Europe the men of the Bronze period were supplanted by a race more powerful, and, judging from their sword-handles, with larger hands;*(2) but their success was probably still more due to their superiority in the arts.>>

That already demonstrates the basic point. But in Ch 6, we find much more:

>>[CH 6:] EVEN if it be granted that the difference between man and his nearest allies is as great in corporeal structure as some naturalists maintain, and although we must grant that the difference between them is immense in mental power, yet the facts given in the earlier chapters appear to declare, in the plainest manner, that man is descended from some lower form, notwithstanding that connecting-links have not hitherto been discovered. Man is liable to numerous, slight, and diversified variations, which are induced by the same general causes, are governed and transmitted in accordance with the same general laws, as in the lower animals.

Man has multiplied so rapidly, that he has necessarily been exposed to struggle for existence [–> key phrase], and consequently to natural selection. [–> again] He has given rise to many races, some of which differ so much from each other, that they have often been ranked by naturalists as distinct species. [–> key racist principle, here, cf. the sub-title of Origin, about preservation of favoured races in the struggle for survival] His body is constructed on the same homological plan as that of other mammals. He passes through the same phases of embryological development. He retains many rudimentary and useless structures, which no doubt were once serviceable. Characters occasionally make their re-appearance in him, which we have reason to believe were possessed by his early progenitors. If the origin of man had been wholly different from that of all other animals, these various appearances would be mere empty deceptions; but such an admission is incredible. [–> notice, yet another theological appeal by Darwin] These appearances, on the other hand, are intelligible, at least to a large extent, if man is the co-descendant with other mammals of some unknown and lower form . . . .

The great break in the organic chain between man and his nearest allies, which cannot be bridged over by any extinct or living species, has often been advanced as a grave objection to the belief that man is descended from some lower form [–> notice, the fossil gaps question]; but this objection will not appear of much weight to those who, from general reasons, believe in the general principle of evolution.

[–> a double-edged sword, this: at what point does cumulative systematic evidence of gaps begin to count? for many, patently, never]

Breaks often occur in all parts of the series, some being wide, sharp and defined, others less so in various degrees; as between the orang and its nearest allies- between the Tarsius and the other Lemuridae- between the elephant, and in a more striking manner between the Ornithorhynchus or Echidna, and all other mammals. But these breaks depend merely on the number of related forms which have become extinct.

At some future period, not very distant as measured by centuries, the civilised races of man will almost certainly exterminate, and replace, the savage races throughout the world. At the same time the anthropomorphous apes, as Professor Schaaffhausen has remarked,* [ * Anthropological Review, April, 1867, p. 236] will no doubt be exterminated. The break between man and his nearest allies will then be wider, for it will intervene between man in a more civilised state, as we may hope, even than the Caucasian, and some ape as low as a baboon, instead of as now between the negro or Australian and the gorilla.  With respect to the absence of fossil remains, serving to connect man with his ape-like progenitors, no one will lay much stress on this fact who reads Sir C. Lyell’s discussion,* where he shews that in all the vertebrate classes the discovery of fossil remains has been a very slow and fortuitous process. Nor should it be forgotten that those regions which are the most likely to afford remains connecting man with some extinct ape-like creature, have not as yet been searched by geologists. [–> the familiar argument, now 140+ years old . . . 1/4 million fossil species, millions of exemplars in museums etc, billions more seen in the ground] >>

It is clear from these writings, that the science is deeply connected to what would be elaborated as eugenics etc. We need to frankly face that, acknowledge it and learn from it if we are to make genuine onward progress. END

Comments
GUN, News is right to emphasise what was consensus and what its impact was. I also think you may need to read again from Ch 6 as clipped; that reference to Australians and gorillas cannot be wished away or airbrushed out. We need to face and learn from history, especially history that had disastrous consequences. KF PS: Maybe, I need to point out how one of Huxley's students tried to sound warnings in several Sci Fi novels which were very popular: H G Wells. Time Machine, Island of Dr Moreau and War of the Worlds spoke in extremely widely read literature. Notice this, from literally the opening of War of the Worlds:
No one would have believed in the last years of the nineteenth century that this world was being watched keenly and closely by intelligences greater than man's and yet as mortal as his own; that as men busied themselves about their various concerns they were scrutinised and studied, perhaps almost as narrowly as a man with a microscope might scrutinise the transient creatures that swarm and multiply in a drop of water . . . No one gave a thought to the older worlds of space as sources of human danger, or thought of them only to dismiss the idea of life upon them as impossible or improbable. It is curious to recall some of the mental habits of those departed days. At most terrestrial men fancied there might be other men upon Mars, perhaps inferior to themselves and ready to welcome a missionary enterprise. Yet across the gulf of space, minds that are to our minds as ours are to those of the beasts that perish, intellects vast and cool and unsympathetic, regarded this earth with envious eyes, and slowly and surely drew their plans against us . . . . looking across space with instruments, and intelligences such as we have scarcely dreamed of, they see, at its nearest distance only 35,000,000 of miles sunward of them, a morning star of hope, our own warmer planet, green with vegetation and grey with water, with a cloudy atmosphere eloquent of fertility, with glimpses through its drifting cloud wisps of broad stretches of populous country and narrow, navy-crowded seas. And we men, the creatures who inhabit this earth, must be to them at least as alien and lowly as are the monkeys and lemurs to us. The intellectual side of man already admits that life is an incessant struggle for existence, and it would seem that this too is the belief of the minds upon Mars. Their world is far gone in its cooling and this world is still crowded with life, but crowded only with what they regard as inferior animals. To carry warfare sunward is, indeed, their only escape from the destruction that, generation after generation, creeps upon them. And before we judge of them too harshly we must remember what ruthless and utter destruction our own species has wrought, not only upon animals, such as the vanished bison and the dodo, but upon its inferior races. The Tasmanians, in spite of their human likeness, were entirely swept out of existence in a war of extermination waged by European immigrants, in the space of fifty years. Are we such apostles of mercy as to complain if the Martians warred in the same spirit?
kairosfocus
June 14, 2018
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BO'H: This was at first level a specific response on a particular claim. At second level, it is an instance of the pessimistic induction, in the form of a case study where a scientific and popular consensus sustained for many decades and backed by big names in science was disastrously wrong; opening the door to horrific Government abuses. That should be a cautionary science in society case study. As, BTW, should be the story of the rise of nuclear weapons. And as BA pointed out, the consensus vs "denialism" card (complete with projective allusions to what happened in and around Germany within living memory) is still around and we need to understand why the collective appeal to consensus and thus authority can go dangerously wrong. That's an epistemology, logic and ethics issue. One we still need to heed. KFkairosfocus
June 14, 2018
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Good research, goodusername at 8. But neither Agassiz nor these other figures had nearly the effect on culture that Darwin did. Darwin's version of racism got inherited and the polygenists' didn't. We were stuck with the former, not the latter. We are undoing the damage but it takes time. Revisionism does not help. In 2009, a reader sent these quotations from Descent of Man a while back, to give readers some sense of Darwin’s view.News
June 14, 2018
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Here's an instance of where racism in evolution studies put us off the track: Was Neanderthal man fully human? The role racism played in assessing the evidenceNews
June 14, 2018
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“[Racism] was the ‘scientific consensus’ of the day; itself a lesson on the intellectual and moral hazards of appeal to consensus in science.” But more, Darwinism – specifically – played a major role in shaping that consensus, which is what needs to be honestly faced, without resorting to flimsy excuses.
No one denies that racism was the consensus of its day, and Darwin was certainly racist. It was such a consensus that there wasn't even a word for "racist" or “racism”. The view was so normal that it wouldn't have even occurred to anyone to have a word for it. The part that many are missing was that it was the consensus pre-Darwinism as well - and, in fact, was a racism far more extreme than after Darwinism. It was a racism that Darwin himself battled.
For example, in a recent discussion here, someone claimed that the fact that Darwin dismissed polygeny (the view that human groups evolved separately) countered racism. Nonsense. Polygeny was at odds with most traditions regarding human origins, which saw an original couple as the progenitors of the human race. The “ideas market” for polygeny was small and not likely to grow.
Uh, no. That wasn’t the mainstream polygenist view. I mean, there were evolutionist polygenists, but they were a tiny minority. What’s being referred to is the consensus science of it’s day that there were multiple human races, and that they were created separately (usually by God). They were almost always anti-evolutionists. In fact, if anyone spoke out against polygenism, you can be sure that they’d be accused of being an evolutionist, whether they were or not. This is because in so many people’s minds, only an evolutionist wouldn’t be a polygenist. This is why Darwin wrote: “When the principle of evolution is generally accepted, as it surely will be before long, the dispute between the monogenists and the polygenists will die a silent and unobserved death.” Polygenism was the mainstream science in America in the early 19th century (so much so that it became known as the “American school” of anthropology) but by the mid 19th century it was mainstream in Europe as well. As Thomas Gossett, author of Race: The History of an Idea in America, writes, “With the exception of Bachman, the monogenic origin theory had no real champion among men of science.” This is the problem. Many people like to describe how things changed with the arrival of Darwinism - but they don’t have the slightest idea what things were like in 1858. It makes these discussions incredibly difficult. Take a look at the speeches of Lincoln. He regularly said things in his speeches that would have had anyone seeking the presidency after him booed off the stage because they were so outlandishly racist. And, yet, racism gained respectability AFTER Lincoln? Does that make any sense? And this was the guy championed by the abolitionists, so you can imagine was his political opponents were saying in their speeches. For a taste of mainsteam pre-Darwinism science, here’s Louis Agassiz, the most famous and respected American scientist of the 19th century, from Types of Mankind, which, as Gould describes, was “the leading American text on human racial differences”:
I am prepared to show that the differences existing between the races of men are of the same kind as the differences observed between the different families, genera, and species of monkeys or other animals; and that these different species of animals differ in the same degree one from the other as the races of men – nay, the differences between distinct races are often greater than those distinguishing species of animals one from the other. The chimpanzee and gorilla do not differ more one from the other than the Mandingo and the Guinea Negro: they together do not differ more from the orang than the Malay or white man differs from the Negro. In proof of this assertion, I need only refer the reader to the description of the anthropoid monkeys published by Prof. Owen and by Dr. J. Wyman, and to such descriptions of the races of men as notice more important peculiarities than the mere differences in the color of the skin… I maintain distinctly that the differences observed among the races of men are of the same kind and even greater than those upon which the anthropoid monkeys are considered as distinct species. (Bold added)
Another quote:
“A man must be blind not to be struck by similitudes between some of the lower races of mankind, viewed as connecting links in the animal kingdom; nor can it be rationally affirmed, that the Orang-Outan and Chimpanzee are more widely separated from certain African and Oceanic Negroes than are the latter from the Teutonic or Pelasgic types.”
In other words, not only is the black race closer to apes than the white race – but the black race is closer to apes than to whites. This is something that Darwin spends a good deal of time in Descent arguing against. (It’s a shame that he’d have to, but that’s pre-Darwinian science for you.) Types of Mankind is also filled with talk of racial extinction being perfectly normal and God-willed, and as a good thing. Yes, the leading text of human races was a proponent of genocide. (There are many quotes that are tempting to give but I don’t want this to turn into a copy-and-paste fest.) Pick up just about any of the other leading science texts, journals, newspapers articles, etc and you’ll find the same stuff. Again, this was the mainstream view. Darwin himself saw this mindset everywhere the Beagle landed on it’s journey, and personally witnessed many genocides in action, and spoke out against it.goodusername
June 14, 2018
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Hm, nobody's quoted haven't quoted anything that was published recently: everything comes from before either of my parents were born. If you can't find anything more recent, then I reckon that yes we have moved on.Bob O'H
June 14, 2018
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Bob: "Haven’t we frankly faced that and moved on?" In addition to KF's and News' responses, I would add that every time an ID proponent or a warming skeptic is dismissed as a "science denier," we have not learned the lesson that science is not a matter of nose counting. In the 1920s the opponents of eugenics were "science deniers," in the sense they were opposing the cutting edge of mainstream science. Those science deniers were right. The cutting edgers were dead (pun intended) wrong. So, Bob, we do not seem to have learned that lesson. Thanks for asking. It reminds me of Jesus rebuke of the Pharisees in Matthew 23: They said "if we had lived in the days of the fathers we would not have killed the prophets." Very ironic in retrospect no?Barry Arrington
June 14, 2018
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News, I see we just about crossed in posting comments. Unfortunately, our civilisation has some re-thinking to do. KFkairosfocus
June 14, 2018
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Bob O'H at 2: No, unfortunately, we have not "frankly faced that and moved on." As kairosfocus writes, "[Racism] was the 'scientific consensus' of the day; itself a lesson on the intellectual and moral hazards of appeal to consensus in science." But more, Darwinism - specifically - played a major role in shaping that consensus, which is what needs to be honestly faced, without resorting to flimsy excuses. For example, in a recent discussion here, someone claimed that the fact that Darwin dismissed polygeny (the view that human groups evolved separately) countered racism. Nonsense. Polygeny was at odds with most traditions regarding human origins, which saw an original couple as the progenitors of the human race. The "ideas market" for polygeny was small and not likely to grow. By contrast, Darwin's idea of universal common ancestry featuring missing links, savages, and gorillas-on-probation fit very well indeed into the science mindset of his and subsequent generations. It made racism up-to-date science. There are vast masses of material on this, unfortunately. If the specific, explicit role of Darwinism in making racism a consensus science belief is not admitted, without qualification, we cannot just move on. There will always be lots more neglected or misrepresented facts to bring to light. I suspect that one reason many would not want to admit that Darwinian racism was literally consensus science is not what is says about Darwinism but what it says about consensus science in general. Oh well, the way things are going, we won't be starved for a news feed.News
June 14, 2018
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BO'H: From the sort of push-the-point-away remarks that led me to put this up, no. The lesson, clearly, has not sunk in; neither the narrow one on eugenics nor the broader one on the moral hazard implied. Where, we are currently carrying out a much worse holocaust, of our living posterity in the womb, and are warping all sorts of pivotal institutions of our civilisation to enable it. 800+ millions in 40+ years, a million more per week. The recent threads on what Anthropologists are saying on practices in Amazonia should also give us pause. KF PS: Just to clench over a nail or two,
[CH 7:] There is, however, no doubt that the various races, when carefully compared and measured, differ much from each other,- as in the texture of the hair, the relative proportions of all parts of the body,* the capacity of the lungs, the form and capacity of the skull, and even in the convolutions of the brain.*(2) But it would be an endless task to specify the numerous points of difference. The races differ also in constitution, in acclimatisation and in liability to certain diseases. Their mental characteristies are likewise very distinct; chiefly as it would appear in their emotional, but partly in their intellectual faculties. Every one who has had the opportunity of comparison, must have been struck with the contrast between the taciturn, even morose, aborigines of S. America and the lighthearted, talkative negroes. There is a nearly similar contrast between the Malays and the Papuans,*(3) who live under the same physical conditions, and are separated from each other only by a narrow space of sea . . . . On the Extinction of the Races of Man.- The partial or complete extinction of many races and sub-races of man is historically known. Humboldt saw in South America a parrot which was the sole living creature that could speak a word of the language of a lost tribe. Ancient monuments and stone implements found in all parts of the world, about which no tradition has been preserved by the present inhabitants, indicate much extinction. Some small and broken tribes, remnants of former races, still survive in isolated and generally mountainous districts. In Europe the ancient races were all, according to Shaaffhausen,* "lower in the scale than the rudest living savages"; they must therefore have differed, to a certain extent, from any existing race. The remains described by Professor Broca from Les Eyzies, though they unfortunately appear to have belonged to a single family, indicate a race with a most singular combination of low or simious, and of high characteristics. This race is "entirely different from any other, ancient or modern, that we have heard of."*(2) It differed, therefore, from the quaternary race of the caverns of Belgium.
More can be sourced, but the picture on the main point should be clear enough.kairosfocus
June 14, 2018
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Haven't we frankly faced that and moved on?Bob O'H
June 14, 2018
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A note on eugenics, social darwinism and evolutionary theorykairosfocus
June 14, 2018
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