Paul Lawrence Farber, A review of: Richard Weikart, From Darwin to Hitler: Evolutionary Ethics, Eugenics, and Racism in Germany (2005)
Journal of the History of Biology 2005, vol. 38, s. 390-391.
Paul Lawrence Farber
Richard Weikart, From Darwin to Hitler: Evolutionary Ethics, Eugenics, and Racism in
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Germany<strong> (New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2004), xi + 312 pp., $59.95.
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<em>Journal of the History of Biology<em> 2005, vol. 38, s. 390-391.
In an often-cited letter written to Charles Darwin on Christmas Eve Day in 1859, Adam
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Sedgwick expressed his concern about the moral implications of Darwin's newly published<br>
book, On the Origin of Species. Sedgwick noted that were it possible to break the link
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between natural history and natural theology, humankind would experience a brutalizing<br>
degradation. Since then opponents of the theory of evolution have used this criticism
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repeatedly, and it continues to be a central point in contemporary critiques of modern<br>
science, evolutionary biology, and secular worldviews. Once the link with the
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sacredsupernatural is broken, all things are permissible (as Dostoyevsky warned). Richard
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Weikart presents a variation of this critique of Darwin in his new book, From Darwin to<br>
Hitler. The central argument that informs his narrative is that Darwin's naturalism
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devalued human life and made possible the excesses of the Nazi regime.<p>
Like other attempts to tar Darwin with all of the problems of modernity, Weikart's
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suffers from conceptual flaws that detract from his book, which contains some interesting<br>
material on the German eugenics movement, popular Darwinism in Germany, and German
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evolutionary ethics. Weikart is critical of Daniel Gasman's attempt to link Haeckel and<br>
Nazi ideology, and he notes that all Darwinians were not eugenicists, all eugenicists were
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not Darwinians, and all Nazis were not Darwinians. Yet, he insists that the critical moral<br>
breakdown that permitted some German eugenicists to espouse euthanasia, and ultimately
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racial extermination, was the Darwinian theory that presented human history in<br>
naturalistic terms, not as part of a divine drama. But it is a very long way from
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barnacles to the death camps. Weikart sidesteps the issue that German materialism, as<br>
reflected by Ludwig Büchner (1855), was far more radical and relied more on experimental
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physiology than natural history for its scientific legitimacy. Similarly, he<br>
overemphasizes the power of ideas in driving history. Intellectual historians have come to
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realize that economic forces, social structures, and political conflicts play key roles in<br>
historical developments.
Although Weikart mentions various individuals outside the German speaking areas, he
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doesn't explore the comparative aspects of his story. Evolution and eugenics were also<br>
popular in the United States and Britain, Russia and Scandinavia. That interest, and the
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secular forces in those countries, did not lead to the enactment and enforcement of social<br>
policies we associate with the Racial Hygiene movement in Nazi Germany. Why not? And, has
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a concept of the sacred been an effective shield against the taking of human life? The<br>
Thirty Year's War was as barbaric an event as Western history has experienced, and
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religion was not lacking at the time. Modern history is not lacking in examples of<br>
religiously inspired killing. I suspect that few suicide bombers have Darwin fishes on
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their bumpers or in their hearts.<p>
Weikart's book will comfort those who believe that the materialism and naturalism
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characteristic of contemporary science need to be rejected in favor of a more religious<br>
perspective, be it Intelligent Design or strict Creationism. It ignores the many syntheses
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that have been crafted by deeply religious individuals who have embraced modern science,<br>
and presents a flawed narrative along the lines of "for want of a nail, a kingdom was
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lost." The great figures in Western Science, for example Copernicus, Darwin, Einstein,<br>
and Freud, have all been the subject of mythmaking as well as demonizing. Historians of
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science spend a lot of time writing and teaching to present a more balanced account.<br>
Weikart's book, unfortunately, is likely to spawn more urban myths about Darwin that
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will have to be addressed.<p>