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What is Social Darwinism? From Natural Selection to Unnatural Selection

Charles Darwin's theory of natural selection, the propensity for strong genes to propagate through evolution and weak genes to die, has been applied unnaturally to society in the form of the eugenics movement and gene-editing technologies. The Daily Dose provides history documentaries like this one delivered to your inbox daily: https://dailydosedocumentary.com Books by the filmmaker: Westward Rising Sons: https://amzn.to/3Nq3NES Turbulence & Alchemy of the 1960s: https://amzn.to/3YiCRND Wings of Glory: https://amzn.to/3A0cvqr Learn more: https://dailydosenow.com/social-darwi... Subscribe for daily emails: https://subscribe.dailydosenow.com/ Become a Patron:   / dailydosenow   Follow us on social media: Twitter:   / thedailydose18   Facebook:   / thedailydosenow   Click to subscribe on YouTube:    / @dailydosedocumentary   #Darwinism #Eugenics #SocialDarwinism Today's Daily Dose short history film covers Social Darwinism, which in the late 1800s and early to mid 20th century was a proposed new science of improving the human race by weeding out the weakest “undesirables” in a given society. The filmmaker has included the original voice over script to further assist your understanding: Today on The Daily Dose, Social Darwinism. According to Darwin’s groundbreaking publication entitled On The Origin of Species, only plants and animals who dominate and evolve in their given environment will survive to pass their genes on to the next generation. In an attempt to make his ideas understood by the public at large, Darwin referenced sociologists Herbert Spencer’s “struggle for existence” with Darwin’s now-famous tag line, “survival of the fittest,” which prompted Spencer to draw parallels between Darwin’s scientific ideas and those of laissez faire or unregulated capitalism during the Industrial Revolution, purporting that only the fittest humans would rise to the top, while the poor and genetically unfit would ultimately remain at the bottom. When Social Darwinism became popular in the late 1800s, British scholar Sir Francis Galton proposed a new science of improving the human race by weeding out the weakest “undesirables” in a given society. Known as eugenics, the movement first caught on in the United States during the first part of the twentieth century, when 32 states passed laws resulting in the forced sterilization of some 64,000 Americans, including immigrants, people of color, the mentally ill, as well as weak-minded women of child-bearing age. When Adolph Hitler came to power, he professed that the survival of the Aryan raced depended on an unpolluted gene pool, leading to the mass extermination of ethnic groups deemed unfit for Germanic procreation. Hitler’s “final solution” led to the holocaust of World War Two, when Nazi Germany exterminated more than six million Jews, gypsies, Poles, Soviets, disabled people and homosexuals. Today, with the advent of gene editing techniques such as CRISPRe, many critics believe that Social Darwinism may someday be on the rise again, when and if parents are allowed to edit the genetic traits of their yet unborn children, making Social Darwinism an ongoing moral and ethical debate over Darwin’s original definition of the term “survival of the fittest.” And there you have it, Social Darwinism, today on The Daily Dose.

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