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-
- THE EVOLUTION OF A MONSTER!
-
- Adolf Hitler and Eugenics
-
- BY ED GARRETT, B.S.
- This article is taken from the magazine:
- CREATION
- EX NIHILO
- SEPTEMBER, 1986
-
- When Darwin proposed his theory of evolution, it was hailed by many
- as the end of any scientific justification for the existence of a
- Creator God. Science was now freed from having to conform to `outdated'
- Biblical ideas. In the resulting vacuum of religious authority, men
- such as Darwin's agnostic cousin, Francis Galton, founded a new
- religion based on the idea of improving the human race according to the
- theory of evolution. In 1883, Galton called this improved-race idea
- `eugenics.'
-
- A group arose called the `Social Darwinists', and taking their clue
- from evolutionary theory they divided humanity into the `fit' and the
- `unfit'. Eugenics was seen as a way of making sure that the `fit' had
- children and the `unfit' did not. Books on eugenics were written by
- scientists which argued that the most humane method of preventing
- reproduction of the unworthy was a `gentle, painless death.' It was
- claimed `where the life of the state is threatened [by the presence of
- mental defectives] extreme measures may and must be taken.'
-
- In Germany, the leaders of the eugenics movement, using evolution as
- their justification, caused sterilization laws and immigration
- restriction laws to be enacted during the 1930's. Immigration
- should be limited, they said, owing to the `biological inferiority' of
- people from southern and eastern Europe. The racism of such leaders
- was founded on evolution, and the German people were being prepared to
- regard themselves as the superior race.
-
- Many scientists came to see the promotion of eugenic programs as
- almost a religious duty imposed by the theory of evolution. Leading
- eugenists became Nazi officials, and the eugenics movement in Germany
- became totally interwoven into the Nazi system. Eugenics became the
- scientific justification for Hitler's extermination program.
-
- Many scientists had seen the dangers. In 1916, Franz Boas, Margaret
- Mead's trusted counselor, had issued a condemnation of eugenics in the
- November issue to The Scientific Monthly. This began a split in the
- biological science community, with Boas as the leader of the group that
- believed that social stimulus was much more of a determining factor
- than genetic inheritance. He warned that the idea of eliminating
- the unfit was not a panacea that would cure human ills. but a
- dangerous sword which might well turn against those who relied on its
- strength.
-
- In the 1920's, Ironically, eugenics as applied to humans was found
- to be incorrect owing to a misunderstanding of Mendel's laws of
- heredity. Humans were more complex than the peas which were the basis
- of Mendel's experiments. Apparently, however, many eugenists had made
- a religious commitment to the movement sufficient to continue expansion
- of eugenic ideas. Statements were still being made in 1940 by top
- American scientists about the `inexcusable process of allowing the
- feebleminded to reproduce their kind.'
-
- Modern-day apologists for evolution might say that eugenics was a
- perversion of evolution. But the fact remains that this `perversion'
- became very popular. It could become popular primarily because
- evolution had seemed to do away with the need for a sovereign
- Creator with absolute moral laws. And the `good' evolutionists had no
- right to say that the `bad' eugenists were wrong, since change - not
- moral law - was the only constant. There was no foundation on which to
- base their argument for the immorality of `eugenic selection' - that
- is, sterilizing or removing those judged to be unfit - except their own
- intuition. However, they could not expect the eugenists to yield to
- intuition.
-
- SUPER-RACE
-
- After the world had seen what Hitler was actually doing, and the
- lengths to which he was taking his `super-race' idea, the history of
- eugenics was promptly forgotten. For instance, a 1971 book on genetic
- improvement titled The Heredity Factor did not mention the word
- `eugenics.' A history of genetics given in the book, beginning
- with Darwin, gave no hint of the existence of anything called
- `eugenics', although it gave a glowing review of the contribution of
- Francis Galton to genetics. The popular encyclopedia, World Book, had
- and article under the heading `eugenics' in the 1955 edition which
- explained how eugenics led to Hitler. In the 1983 edition, all
- reference to Hitler had been deleted.
-
- Hitler did not form his ideas in a mysterious vacuum, which is the
- impression that history books give us. He was instructed by the IDEA
- called `eugenics, ' which was derived from the so-called `fact' of
- evolution by a cousin of the originator of the scientific
- respectability of evolution.
-
- As much as they wish that the general public would forget all about
- eugenics, evolutionists must accept the fact that their favorite idea,
- `the fact of evolution, ' was the basis for eugenics, which led
- directly to Hitler's death camps. The idea of an evolutionary
- theory, which Darwin timidly proposed, was seized upon by many men of
- great intellect and forced on the scientific world as fact. The
- motivation of those men should be clear - by excluding God and
- accepting themselves as members of the evolutionary superior species,
- they decided they could be as God.
-
- Media analysts sometimes use Hitler to give warnings of the dangers
- of religious zeal. It is interesting that the `religious zeal' that
- really contributed to the rise of Hitler - zeal for evolution as fact -
- is never associated with him.
-
- Hitler's case teaches us the danger of denying the existence of a
- sovereign Creator, who judges disobedience to His law. To be sure,
- Hitler believed in gods, but not the Creator God of the Bible.
- Even so, the basis for his actions had been laid down before by those
- men of great intellect who so eagerly promoted the idea of eugenics
- which had no real place for any religion except secular humanism.
-
- Geneticists and others in the scientific community are quite aware
- of the history of eugenics, but somehow it never gets into print,
- especially with the logical connection of evolution with eugenics, and
- eugenics with Hitler. These men are knowingly forgetting history and
- dooming themselves to repeat it.
-
-