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Biology, medicine and society, 1840-1940 / edited by Charles Webster.

Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextSeries: Past and present publicationsPublisher: Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 1981Description: 1 online resource (ix, 344 pages) : digital, PDF file(s)Content type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9780511562822 (ebook)
Other title:
  • Biology, Medicine & Society 1840-1940
Subject(s): Additional physical formats: Print version: : No titleDDC classification:
  • 610/.9/034 19
LOC classification:
  • QH305 .B54 1981
Online resources:
Partial contents:
Introduction / Charles Webster -- Women's health and the women's movement in Britain : 1840-1940 / Brian Harrison -- Working-class mothers and infant mortality in England, 1895-1914 / Carol Dyhouse -- Theories of the cell state in Imperial Germany / Paul Weindling -- Innate character in animals and man : a perspective on the origins of ethology / John R. Durant -- Genetics in the United States and Breat Britain 1890-1930 : a review with speculations / Daniel J. Kevles -- Eugenics and class / G.R. Searle -- Sociobiologies in competition : the biometrician-Mendelian debate / Donald Mackenzie -- Psychologists and class / Bernard Norton -- Measuring intelligence : English local education authorities and mental testing 1919-1939 / Gillian Sutherland.
Summary: During the period 1840-1940 biology and medicine were transformed, and took on major implications for social amelioration and population growth. New biological disciplines such as genetics and psychology consciously used scientific explanation to redefine the life of the individual. This volume originates from a Past and Present conference on 'The Roots of Sociobiology' held in 1978 and incorporates the results of recent research on problems in the social relations of the biological sciences. The authors describe different historical aspects of the interrelationship of technical experience and social policy in the fields of health, education and social welfare. Insight is provided into contemporary debates on physical and racial deterioration, the sources and distribution of intelligence, the application of evolutionary biology to social and political theory, and the analysis of human societies. The authors raise issues of topical interest, such as the emergence and influence of eugenics, the origin and impact of intelligence testing, the relationship between eugenics, genetics and evolutionary theory, and the causes of the twentieth-century reduction in infant and maternal mortality. The area of coverage is Britain, America and Germany. The introduction provides a review of recent research on the social relations of biology and medicine.
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Title from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 05 Oct 2015).

Rev. papers from a conference held by the Past and Present Society in conjunction with the British Society for the History of Science on Sept. 29, 1978.

Introduction / Charles Webster -- Women's health and the women's movement in Britain : 1840-1940 / Brian Harrison -- Working-class mothers and infant mortality in England, 1895-1914 / Carol Dyhouse -- Theories of the cell state in Imperial Germany / Paul Weindling -- Innate character in animals and man : a perspective on the origins of ethology / John R. Durant -- Genetics in the United States and Breat Britain 1890-1930 : a review with speculations / Daniel J. Kevles -- Eugenics and class / G.R. Searle -- Sociobiologies in competition : the biometrician-Mendelian debate / Donald Mackenzie -- Psychologists and class / Bernard Norton -- Measuring intelligence : English local education authorities and mental testing 1919-1939 / Gillian Sutherland.

During the period 1840-1940 biology and medicine were transformed, and took on major implications for social amelioration and population growth. New biological disciplines such as genetics and psychology consciously used scientific explanation to redefine the life of the individual. This volume originates from a Past and Present conference on 'The Roots of Sociobiology' held in 1978 and incorporates the results of recent research on problems in the social relations of the biological sciences. The authors describe different historical aspects of the interrelationship of technical experience and social policy in the fields of health, education and social welfare. Insight is provided into contemporary debates on physical and racial deterioration, the sources and distribution of intelligence, the application of evolutionary biology to social and political theory, and the analysis of human societies. The authors raise issues of topical interest, such as the emergence and influence of eugenics, the origin and impact of intelligence testing, the relationship between eugenics, genetics and evolutionary theory, and the causes of the twentieth-century reduction in infant and maternal mortality. The area of coverage is Britain, America and Germany. The introduction provides a review of recent research on the social relations of biology and medicine.

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