alexandrabree's review against another edition

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4.0

I did find this hard to get into initially, I have started and DNF'd the audiobook on multiple occasions.

This book is a must read and I was so glad that it is so focused on the various topics and really took the time to pick things apart and explain in detail.

I need to reread this ASAP though because I wasn't aware of the depth I was getting into and was half listening while I was driving and I know I missed huge chunks of information.

anna_kristina_nord's review against another edition

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5.0

My quiet protest against a certain thesis now getting a lot of hype

hades9stages's review against another edition

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3.0

not enough emphasis on the eugenics part which was why i started reading this :( the other stuff was interesting but in some parts outdated. the part on eugenics was actually amazing though

hutchisonterrace's review against another edition

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1.0

boy this book is a slog to get through. there were a few bits and pieces here and there that were interesting but it otherwise felt like he was going around and around in circles. though you have to commend a guy for being against eugenics!

crlpedigo's review against another edition

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informative reflective slow-paced

3.5

margaret_hovestadt's review against another edition

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challenging funny informative reflective medium-paced

4.0

Very appropriate for today and the current discussions on poverty, abortion, euthanasia and other eugenics related things. 

wwatts1734's review against another edition

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5.0

Eugenics is the belief that the lot of humanity can be improved by improving the gene pool. This can be done by encouraging those with supposedly superior genetics to procreate with other supposedly genetically superior individuals. But most often, this is implemented by preventing the supposedly inferior people from reproducing. As disgusting as this sounds, Eugenics was a very popular theory among academics at the turn of the 20th Century. GK Chesterton, who wrote this book in the 1920s, was among the few to recognize its evils at that time.

Chesterton takes on the Eugenicists and discusses the evils of Eugenics in no uncertain terms. His arguments are sound and very reasonable. Chesterton explains that, while the good politician sees poverty as evil and proposes ways to eliminate it, the Eugenicist sees the poor as evil and proposes ways to eliminate them. To the Eugenicist, evils do not consist of ideas, policies or behaviors, they consist of people, and the way to eliminate evil is not to convince people to turn away from them and do good, but rather the Eugenicist seeks to eliminate the people who constitute the evil. Carrying this further, the Eugenicist seeks to destroy things that most decent people would see as goods or rights, such as the right of certain people to prosper, reproduce, and live their lives without harassment. Chesterton extends his criticism, not just to Eugenics, but to other characteristics of what he calls the "scientifically organized state." To Chesterton, Germany was the home of bad ideas about Eugenics and its sister evils. Since this book was written shortly after the First World War, his bashing of Germany along with the evils he denounces would have been welcome by readers in the English speaking world.

Chesterton's criticism of Eugenics was prescient. While influential Germans advocated Eugenics and the Scientifically Organized State before and during the First World War, it was Hitler and the Nazis who took these bad ideas to their grotesque and logical conclusions through the Holocaust and the Concentration Camp system, which were the evil spawn of Eugenicist thinking. Chesterton wrote this book years before the Nazis came to power, so his warnings were prophetic. After the Second World War, Hitler caused the ideas of Eugenics to fall out of favor in the civilized world, and today one does not hear such ideas uttered aloud anywhere except perhaps among the Alt Right. Still, the whisper of Eugenicist thought can be seen underlying many modern ideas and policies. For example, when a statesman responds to an epidemic in the third world, not by supplying the antibiotics and other supplies that could cure the disease, but by pushing contraceptives in the country, thus curing what the Eugenicist sees as the real problem, that situation is the echo from hell of Eugenicist ideology. Because Eugenics thought is still alive and well in the 21st century, it is so important today that reasonable people read this book and understand the ideas that Chesterton presents.

rachachisaur's review against another edition

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slow-paced

2.0

I wasn’t aware someone could be so thoroughly racist, ableist, classist, and misogynistic while arguing against eugenics, but this dead British dude has managed to do so. 

Look, his writing is actually pretty entertaining, and it’s clear that he thinks he’s giving the task undertaken a fair shake, but he cannot escape the cage of bias and historical error in which his brain operates. 

ingamaloy's review against another edition

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informative reflective

3.0

Informativ bok om eugenikk skrevet i tiden hvor eugenikk holdt på å utvikle seg. Hadde noen gode stikk til folk som støttet eugenikk og var generelt en spennende, men ekkel bok.

bowsonthetoes's review against another edition

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challenging reflective slow-paced

4.0