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Eugenics
Ethical Decision Making within Eugenics
Around the turn of the century, eugenics was becoming an accepted method in the attempt to breed better humans. The notion of a superior race, racial purity, and inheritable intelligence is the backbone of the eugenics movement. In the United States, the eugenics movement forcibly sterilized tens of thousands of Americans because of a belief that they were “feebleminded” or “of inferior stock.” Many people are unaware that Adolph Hitler received most of his eugenic information and ideas from publications originating in the United States (Parker). Unfortunately, Hitler did not stop with sterilizing citizens with perceived genetic defects; he began exterminating them. Hitler’s extreme use of eugenics caused the U.S. population to contemplate the morality of eugenics; however, it did not stop its use. Today, eugenics is becoming more hi-tech.
Francis Galton coined the term eugenics in 1883. He used the Greek eu meaning “good” and combined it with a derivative of genetics, meaning “born” to form a word whose meaning was “good birth” (Encyclopedia Britannica). According to Galton, “Eugenics is the study of agencies under social control that may improve or impai
Approximate Word count = 1897
Approximate Pages = 8 (250 words per page double spaced)
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