Galton y el surgimiento de la genética humana

Ana Barahona

Resumen


F. Galton and the vise of human genetics

Francis Galton coined the word eugenics in the late nineteenth century in England to characterize the “noble heritage” and the “well-born.” Its statistical approach leads to biometry as the quantitative study of populations. As an organized movement, its main purpose was to apply the available knowledge on inheritance in order to shape the characters of the future generations. Since then, eugenistic studies mingled science with the social values of the ruling classes, distorting scientific practice. The early twentieth century gave rise to human genetics with strong eugenistic roots, assuming the role to prevent the “social degeneration” in modern industrial societies. This negative eugenistic movement developed into mandatory sterilization laws in several European countries and in the United States, and has its most dramatic achievement in the racial cleaning program of National Socialist Germany.

 

Key words: Biometry, Davenport, eugenics, Galton, human genetics, quantitative heritage, pedigree.


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Referencias


Kitcher, P. 1996, Las vidas por venir. Primera edición en español, 2002. Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México.

Se puede consultar las obras de Galton, F. 1908, Memories of my Life. Methuen. London, y Pearson, K. 1914-30. The Life, Letters and Labours of Francis Galton. (3 vols. in 4). Cambridge University Press.

Para una biografía de Galton con un énfasis en sus ideas estadísticas yeugenésicas, ver Kevles, Daniel, J. 1985 (1995), In the Name of Eugenics. Harvard University Press. También Gillham, N. W. 2001, A Life of Sir Francis Galton. Oxford University Press.

Galton, F. 1905, “Eugenics: its definition, scope and aims,” Sociological Papers, Macmillan.

Véase Kevles, D. y Hood, L. (eds.). 1992, The Code of Codes. Scientific and Social Issues in the Human Genome Project. Cambridge: Harvard University Press.

Ver Kühl, S. 1994, The Nazi Connection. Eugenics, American Racism, and German National Socialism. Oxford University Press.

Penrose, L.S., 1967, “The influence of the English tradition in human genetics,”in James F. Crow & James V. Neel (eds.) Proceedings of the Third International Congress of Human Genetics. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, pp. 22-23.


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