Applied Eugenics
CHAPTER IX
!THE DYSGENIC CLASSES!
!
Before examining
the methods by which a eugenic society can put into effect some
!measure of
negative or restrictive eugenics, it may be well to decide what classes of the population
can properly fall within the scope of such treatment. Strictly speaking, the
problem is of course one of individuals rather than classes, but for the sake
of convenience it will be treated as one of classes, it being understood that
no individual should be put under restriction with eugenic intent merely
because he may be supposed to belong to a given class; but that each case must
be investigated on its own merits,--and investigated with much more care than
has hitherto usually been thought necessary by many of those who have advocated
restrictive eugenic measures.
The first class
demanding attention is that of those feeble-minded whose condition is due to
eugenic heredity. There is reason to believe that at least
two-thirds of
the feeble-minded in the United States owe their condition directly to
heredity,[80] and will transmit it to a large per cent of
their
descendants, if they have any. Feeble-minded persons from sound stock, whose
arrested development is due to scarlet fever or some similar disease of
childhood, or to accident, are of course not of
!direct concern
to scientists of eugenics.
The
feeble-minded are never of much value to society--they never present such
instances as are found among the insane, of persons with some mental lack of
balance, who are yet geniuses. If restrictive eugenics
!dealt with no
other class than the hereditarily feeble-minded, and dealt with that class
effectively, it would richly justify its existence.
But there are
other classes on which it can act with safety as well as profit, and one of
these is made up by the germinally insane. According to the census of 1910,
there are 187,791 insane in institutions in the United States; there are also a
certain number outside of institutions, as to whom information can not easily
be obtained. The number in the hospitals represented a ratio of 204.3 per
100,000 of the general population. In 1880, when the enumeration of insane was
particularly complete, a total of 91,959 was reported--a ratio of 188.3 per
100,000 of the total population at that time. This apparent increase of
insanity has been subjected to much analysis, and it is admitted that part of
it
!can be
explained away. People are living longer now than formerly, and as insanity is
primarily a disease of old age, the number of insane is thus increased.
!But when all is
said, the fact remains that there are several hundred thousand insane persons
in the United States, many of whom are not prevented from reproducing their
kind, and that by this failure to restrain them society is putting a heavy
burden of expense, unhappiness and a fearful dysgenic drag on coming
generations.
The word
"insanity," as is frequently objected, means little or nothing from a
biological point of view--it is a sort of catch-all to describe
many different
kinds of nervous disturbance. No one can properly be made the subject of
restrictive measures for eugenic reasons, merely because
!he is said to
be "insane." It would be wholly immoral so to treat, for example, a
man or woman who was suffering from the form of insanity which sometimes
follows typhoid fever. But there are certain forms of mental disease, generally
lumped under the term "insanity," which indicate a hereditarily
disordered nervous organisation, and individuals suffering from one of these
diseases should certainly not be given any chance to perpetuate their insanity
to posterity.
In general, the
insane are more adequately restricted than any other dysgenic class in the
community; not because the community recognises the disadvantage of letting them
reproduce their kind, but because there is a general fear of them, which leads
to their strict segregation; and because an insane person is not considered
legally competent to enter into a marriage contract. In general, the present
isolation of the sexes
at institutions
for the insane is satisfactory; the principal problem which insanity presents
lies in the fact that an individual is frequently committed to a hospital or
asylum, kept there a few years
until apparently
cured, and then discharged; whereupon he returns to his family to beget
offspring that are fairly likely to become insane at
!some period in
their lives. Every case of insanity should be accompanied by an investigation
of the patient's ancestry, and if there is unmistakable evidence of serious
neuropathic taint, such steps as are necessary should be taken to prevent that
individual from becoming a parent at any time.
!The hereditary
nature of most types of epilepsy is generally held to be established,[81] and
restrictive measures should be used to prevent the increase of the number of
epileptics in the country. It has been calculated that the number of epileptics
in the state of New Jersey, where the most careful investigation of the problem
has been made, will double every 30 years under present conditions.
In dealing with
both insanity and epilepsy, the eugenist faces the difficulty that occasionally
people of the very kind whose production he most wishes to see encouraged--real
geniuses--may carry the taint. The exaggerated claims of the Italian
anthropologist C. Lombroso and his school, in regard to the close relation
between genius and insanity, have been largely disproved; yet there remains
little doubt that the two
sometimes do go
together; and such supposed epileptics as Mohammed, Julius Cæsar, and Napoleon will at once be called to mind. To apply sweeping
restrictive measures would prevent the production of a certain amount of talent
of a very high order. The situation can only be met by dealing with every case
on its individual merits, and recognising that
!it is to the
interests of society to allow some very superior individuals to reproduce, even
though part of their posterity may be mentally or physically somewhat unsound.
!In addition to
these well-recognised classes of hopelessly defective, there is a class of
defectives embracing very diverse characteristics, which demands careful
consideration. In it are those who are germinally physical weaklings or
deformed, those born with a hereditary diathesis or predisposition toward some
serious disease (e.g., Huntington's Chorea), and those with some gross defect
of the organs of special sense. The germinally blind and deaf will particularly
occur to mind in the latter connection. Cases falling in this category demand
careful scrutiny by biological and psychological experts, before any action can
be taken in the interest of eugenics; in many cases the affected individual
himself will be glad to co-operate with society by remaining celibate or by the
practice of birth control, to the end of leaving no offspring to bear what he
has borne.
In a
consideration of the chronic inebriate, the problem of environmental influences
is again met in an acute form, aggravated by the venom of controversy
engendered by bigotry and self-interest. That many chronic inebriates owe their
condition almost wholly to heredity, and are likely to leave offspring of the
same character, is
indisputable. As
to the possibility of "reforming" such an individual, there may be
room for a difference of opinion; as to the possibility of reforming his
germ-plasm, there can be none. Society owes them the best possible care, and
part of its care should certainly be to see that they
!do not
reproduce their kind. As to the borderland cases--and in the matter of
inebriety borderland is perhaps bigger than mainland--it is doubtful whether
much direct action can be taken in the present state of scientific knowledge
and of public sentiment. Education of public opinion to avoid marriage with
drunkards will probably be the most effective means of procedure.
Finally, there
is the criminal class, over which the respective champions of heredity and
environment have so often waged partisan warfare. There is probably no field in
which restrictive eugenics would
think of
interfering, where it encounters so much danger as here--danger of wronging
both the individual and society. Laws such as have been passed in several
states, providing for the sterilisation of criminals
as such, must be
deplored by the eugenist as much as they are by the pseudo-sociologist who
"does not believe in heredity"; but this is not saying that there are
not many cases in which eugenic action is desirable; for inheritance of a lack
of emotional control makes a man in one sense a "born criminal."[83]
He is not, in most respects, the
creature which
he was made out to be by Lombroso and his followers; but he exists,
nevertheless, and no ameliorative treatment given him will be
!of such value
to society as preventing his reproduction.
!
This, we
believe, covers all the classes which are at this time proper
subjects for
direct restrictive action with eugenic intent; and we repeat that the problem
is not to deal with classes as a whole, but to deal with individuals of the
kind described, for the sake of convenience, in the above categories.
Artificial class names mean nothing to evolution. It would be a crime to cut
off the posterity of a
!desirable
member of society merely because he happened to have been popularly stigmatised
by some class name that carried opprobrium with it. Similarly it would be
immoral to encourage or permit the reproduction of a manifestly defective
member of society of the kinds indicated, even though that individual might in
some way have secured the protection of a class name that was generally considered
desirable. Bearing this in mind, we believe no one can object to a proposal to
prevent the reproduction of those feeble-minded, insane, epileptic, grossly
defective or hopelessly delinquent people, whose condition can be proved to be
due to heredity and is therefore probably transmissible to their offspring. We
can imagine only one objection that might be opposed to all the advantages of
such a program--namely, that no proper means can be found for putting it into
effect. This objection is occasionally urged, but we believe it to be wholly
without weight. We now propose to examine the various possible methods of
restrictive eugenics, and to inquire which of them society can most profitably
adopt.
CALEB SALEEBY’S Parenthood & Race Culture: An Outline of Family Eugenics
CALEB SALEEBY’S Parenthood & Race Culture: An Outline of Family Eugenics