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Social Darwinism

Social Darwinism. The Appliance of Science to Philosophy! . Charles Darwin 1809 - 1882. British Naturalist HMS Beagle 1831 – 1836 Plymouth Galapagos Tortoises Finches Long Gestation Period Ultra-Cautious Combines own observations, fossils and embryos 6,000 years old?

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Social Darwinism

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  1. Social Darwinism The Appliance of Science to Philosophy!

  2. Charles Darwin1809 - 1882 • British Naturalist • HMS Beagle 1831 – 1836 • Plymouth • Galapagos • Tortoises • Finches • Long Gestation Period • Ultra-Cautious • Combines own observations, fossils and embryos • 6,000 years old? • Articulates work of many other biologists • Lamarck, • Cannot explain ‘how’ • Malthus Influence • Balance • Not enough food to feed all • Struggle for survival

  3. Evolutionary Theory • The resources of an environment are limited. Creatures produce more offspring than can possibly survive. Members of a species must compete for limited resources and for survival. • No two members of a species are exactly alike. Each organism contains an individual combination of inherited traits. Some traits are useful for survival; other traits are not. • Organisms that have useful traits reproduce in greater numbers. Their offspring inherit the traits. Organisms with unfavourable traits eventually die off. The fittest survive. • Nature selects different traits at different times. Varieties within a species gradually create a new species.

  4. The Origin of Species1859 • Full title • On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural Selection, or the Preservation of Favoured Races in the Struggle for Life • Theory One • Evolution does occur (Descent with Modification) • Theory Two • Evolutionary change is gradual • Theory Three • Evolution takes place through natural selection • Theory Four • Millions of species descend from a single life form through specialisation

  5. Natural Selection • “As many more individuals of each species are born than can possibly survive, and as consequently there is a frequently recurring struggle for existence, it follows that any being, if it vary in any manner profitable to itself, under the complex and sometimes varying conditions of life, will have a better chance of survival and thus be naturally selected. From the strong principle of inheritance, any selected variety will tend to propagate its new and modified form.”

  6. The Descent of Man1871 • Charles Darwin considers whether humans, like every other species, are descended from some pre-existing form; • the manner of human development; • the value of the differences between the so-called races of humans.

  7. Whose side is he on? • He thought himself a Liberal • Challenges Liberalism • Are all men born equal? • If differences required • What point are all men equal • Supports Liberalism • Supports progress and change • Impresses Karl Marx • Competition • "an extension to the animal and vegetable world of laissez faire economics." • Bertrand Russell • Romantic Appeal • Naturalism • Challenges Church • Biblical Immutability • Creationism • “An embarrassing discovery and the less said about it the better.”

  8. Herbert Spencer • Predates & Overlaps Darwin • The Development Hypothesis 1852 • A Theory of Population, Deduced from the General Law of Animal Fertility 1852 • Natural Selection Mechanism • But exclusively Human • he proposed that those humans who invested less in reproduction and more in education were better off and would therefore eventually become the select members of their generation • Father of Social Darwinism • Coins “Evolution” and “Survival of the Fittest”

  9. Herbert Spencer’s ‘Survival of the Fittest’ • And here it must be remarked, that the effect of pressure of population [...] is not a uniform effect, but an average one. [...] For as those prematurely carried off must, in the average of cases, be those in whom the power of self-preservation is the least, it unavoidably follows, that those left behind to continue the race are those in whom the power of self-preservation is the greatest--are the select of their generation.

  10. Social Darwinism • Social Scientists Applying a Law of Nature to Human Societies • The notion that Human affairs are a jungle in which only the fittest of nations, classes, or individuals will survive. • Both societies and organisms grow during most of their existence; baby to adult, town to city. • As they grow, they become increasingly complex. • Imperialists are big fans

  11. Justifying Imperalism • “Within the human species, nations are locked in a struggle for survival. Everywhere, civilized nations are supplanting barbarous nations. Advanced civilization, obviously, has inherited valuable traits from its ancestors. Underdeveloped cultures, except in hostile climates, will soon die off. Therefore, natural order obligates powerful, civilized nations to appropriate the limited resources of the weak.”

  12. Social Evolution • Societies move from simple structures to various levels of compound structures. • Simple: consists of separate families. • Compound: consists of families organized into clans. • Doubly Compound: Clans are organized into tribes. • Trebly Compound: Tribes are further organized into nations. • An increase in size of the society results in increase in structure, which in turn produces differences in power and roles of the members. Different members or groups of members also start to play different, specialized roles. • There is a movement from a military to an industrial society. • At the beginning, society is characterized by the compulsory cooperation of its members -- the military society. • The industrial society is characterized by the voluntary cooperation of its members. • The highest order is called the Ethical State, where common resources may be used to perfect the human character

  13. Racial Theories • Appealed to Nationalists and Romantics • Idea of Unique Racial Kinship Groups • Blood forms a distinct and special stream • Caucasian Race invented late 18th Century • Aryan Race first used to refer to Caucasians in 1848 • England • Experiments to prove Anglo-Saxon descendents more intelligent than Celtic descendents

  14. Houston Stewart Chamberlain1855 - 1927 • Englishman living in Germany • Challenges Social Darwinist Inevitability • Race Struggle • Credits Teutons as the most Creative Culture • Germans are the last true Aryan branch • Blames the Jew Paul for racial chaos of Roman Empire • “True history begins from the moment when the German with mighty hand seizes the inheritance of antiquity” • Anti-Semite • “Whoever maintains that Christ was a Jew is either ignorant or dishonest” • Germans need to suppress Judaism to save world from racial intermingling, degeneracy & racial chaos

  15. Rousseau Charles Darwin Herbert Spencer Kant Houston Chamberlain Hegel Schopenhauer Nationalism/ Fascism Nietzsche

  16. Question • “The fascist regimes which emerged in the 1920s and 1930s adopted an aggressive nationalism which was developed from the Romantic movement of the nineteenth century.” To what extent do you agree with this statement

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