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Triumph of Evolution - American Scientists and the Heredity-Environment Controversy, 1900-41 (Hardcover)
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Triumph of Evolution - American Scientists and the Heredity-Environment Controversy, 1900-41 (Hardcover)
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Hamilton Cravens, a historian at the University of Iowa, focuses on
the heredity-environment issue in terms of developments in the old
or newly emerging disciplines of the human sciences - genetics,
psychology, anthropology, sociology - during the first four decades
of the century. He singles out the eminent personalities and the
innovators who rose to challenge cherished beliefs. During the
early decades, when the scholarly elite was almost 100% WASP,
heredity was assumed to dominate environment and many a scholar
paid lip service or more to the eugenics movement. With the rise of
new secular universities and the land-grant colleges, however, and
with the growth of the experimental approach, momentum began to
build toward a synthesis: heredity and environment. By the Forties
the heredity vs. environment issue was no issue or a nonsensical
one. Academia was united in the belief that evolutionary principles
accounted for mankind's evolving - and also evolving a capacity for
culture; genes and society both shaped the individual. Thus the
"triumph" of the title - in itself undeniable. But Cravens'
approach seems too safe and sanguine, his portrayals dispassionate
and cool. One does not feel any moral outrage at the excesses of
the eugenics movement and the sterilization and immigration
restrictions that resulted. Moreover, it is one thing to say that
the human sciences, in agreeing on the interaction of
nature/nurture, have a common paradigm; another to find a unifying
paradigm within the separate fields (except perhaps for biology
itself). Nor, in the light of renewed flare-ups of the Shockley
variety, and academic controversy over the evolutionary process,
can we quite call the issue closed. The book is better approached
as a scholarly treatise of educational developments in the human
sciences than as a demonstration of evolution's triumph. (Kirkus
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