As I happen to have been declared "insane" and not to trust the Western intelligentsia, it's doubtful that you will convince me to consign to my own systematic elimination. To me, the concept of mental illness just makes the entire field untenable. — thewonder
Sure, though, family planning is a good thing, but is it Eugenics? Sir Francis Galton's theory was explicitly Social Darwinist and it did become a fundamental basis for late Nineteenth and Twentieth Century genocides. Sure, we salvaged Friedrich Nietzsche and even Martin Heidegger, but, when this theory, at best, amounts to social murder, what would the point of rescuing it from its abuse be? — thewonder
Neither of those things, however, have anything to do with Eugenics. — thewonder
The only way that Eugenics can be salvaged is to turn it into something else entirely. At that point, why not just advocate for something else?
All of which is still besides the point, as the idea for this thread is to create a thought experiment to determine whether a theory can work in practice. — thewonder
Well if by attempting to create a healthier baby leads to this kind of thinking, which I haven't seen yet, then there's an argument to be made that gene alterations should be limited only to preventing illness. — Manuel
Sure.
But then what would be a hypothetical of a "gifted eugenicist" society look like? Like babies only born with IQ over 140? — Manuel
He reformed the field to be more so concerned with the prevention of reproduction. I think that it's fairly clear that sterilizing people with genetic disorders in the interests of an ostensive purity is just kind of implicitly totalitarian, but, should anyone think that merely preventing them from reproducing isn't all that bad, I will ask as to just what it entails. — thewonder
When I am certifiably "insane", what reason do I have to consign myself to failure? If you can not answer that question, then you can not convince me otherwise. — thewonder
The point of the thought experiment is to uncover as to whether or not the theory can be abused. The caveat, "to support Social Darwinism", is there to sidestep this debate on Eugenics. It's just designed as a litmus under the assumption that, if an idea can be misused, then, it will be. — thewonder
In the case of 2, we'd want to provide the best services available to prevent tragedies from occurring. There are existing laws that protect children, but these might need be amplified. How to do this is very hard, because it does enter and clash with privacy concern and over-reach of power. — Manuel
Then I think you should modify the title of the thread or the gist of the OP, to something like: are there circumstances in which modifying humans or preventing diseases lead to consequences like eugenics, if taken far enough? — Manuel
Because although now you are clarifying what you mean, in the OP it does seem as if you'd want someone to defend Eugenics in the social Darwinist vein. — Manuel
What is a gifted Eugenicist? — Wheatley
Could a gifted Eugenicist suit (any given theory) to support Social Darwinism? If the answer is "yes", then it can not be assumed to work in practice. — thewonder
Free market capitalism?? The eugenics can promote free market idealogy keeping in mind that a lot of people who can't compete (and he will deem them as "unfit") will die off. All done in support of Social Darwinism.Could a gifted Eugenicist suit (any given theory) to support Social Darwinism?" — thewonder
I'm not at you, but sometimes a spade is just a spade. — thewonder
I dont see this as a good objection to a theory. You can twist a lot of innocent theories to your menovelant means, not just social Darwinism. That's just a testiment to human creativity.Could a gifted Eugenicist suit (any given theory) to support Social Darwinism? If the answer is "yes", then it can not be assumed to work in practice. — thewonder
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