Image for Final Solutions : Biology, Prejudice, and Genocide

Final Solutions : Biology, Prejudice, and Genocide

See all formats and editions

The nature-nurture debate continues to stir controversy in the social and behavioral sciences.

How much of human behavior and development can be attributed to biology and how much to the environment?

Can either be said to "determine" human development? And what are the implications of each view for society?

In this important study, a noted developmental psychologist contributes to this debate by confronting the difficult issue of "doctrines" of human development and the consequences for society of deriving political programs and public policy from them.

Beginning with the premise that scientific ideas are not neutral but can be used for either good or evil, Richard Lerner considers the recent history of one such idea, biological determinism, which at times has had the backing of respected scientists, intellectuals, and political leaders.

During this century, biological determinism has been coupled with political philosophies that hold that some people are inherently better than others.

This has meant that certain groups of people--Jews, Blacks, Native Americans, women--have been stigmatized because of supposedly innate, even "biological, " differences, with sometimes disastrous consequences.

The most notorious instance was Nazi Germany, where "racial science, " given legitimacy by the scientific community, became a cornerstone of the Nazi "Final Solution." Meanwhile, theories of biological determinism continue to find adherents within the scientific community.

Konrad Lorenz, who was awarded a Nobel Prize in 1973, was a critical figure in the development of the most recent manifestation of biological determinism--sociobiology.

Lerner examines the work of Lorenz and current sociobiologists and the implications of their claims for modern society.

He fears that biological determinism may again be co-opted to serve the political agenda of today's reactionary politicians.

In fact, Lerner notes, sociobiologists have had to face the fact that organizations such as the fa

Read More
Available
£44.76 Save 20.00%
RRP £55.95
Add Line Customisation
Usually dispatched within 2 weeks
Add to List
Product Details
0271007931 / 9780271007939
Hardback
150
20/03/1992
United States
English
260 pages, 5 Halftones, black and white
152 x 229 mm, 567 grams
Professional & Vocational/Tertiary Education (US: College) Learn More