The surest, the simplest, the kindest, and most humane means for preventing reproduction among those whom we deem unworthy of this high privilege, is a gentle, painless death... The Yale Review - Stran 228uredili: - 1901Celotni ogled - O knjigi
| 1900 - 848 strani
...state, for maintenance, reformation, or punishment. The surest, the simplest, the kindest, and the most humane means for preventing reproduction among those whom we deem unworthy of this high pri\ilege, is a gentle, painless death; and this should be administered not as a punishment, but as... | |
| Granville Stanley Hall, Edward Bradford Titchener, Karl M. Dallenbach, Madison Bentley, Edwin Garrigues Boring, Margaret Floy Washburn - 1901 - 660 strani
...doing this, to use his language, " by the surest, the simplest, the kindest, and most humane meaus of preventing reproduction among those whom we deem unworthy of this high privilege " by " a gentle and painless death." " This should be administered, not as a punishment, but as an... | |
| W. Duncan McKim - 1900 - 308 strani
...the very vicious who fall into the hands of the State, for maintenance, reformation, or punishment. The surest, the simplest, the kindest, and most humane...punishment, but as an expression of enlightened pity for the victims—too defective by nature to find true happiness in life—and as a duty toward the community... | |
| American Correctional Association - 1900 - 422 strani
...the very vicious who fall into the hands of the state for maintenance, reformation, or punishment. The surest, the simplest, the kindest and most humane means for preventing reproduction amongst those whom we deem unworthy of this high privilege is a gentle, painless death" (p. 188). "In... | |
| National Prison Association of the United States. Congress - 1900 - 420 strani
...the very vicious who fall into the hands of the state for maintenance, reformation, or punishment. The surest, the simplest, the kindest and most humane means for preventing reproduction amongst those whom we deem unworthy of this high privilege is a gentle, painless death" (p. 188). "... | |
| 1906 - 702 strani
..."the surest, the simplest, the kindest, the most humane means for preventing reproduction among those we deem unworthy of this high privilege is a gentle, painless death, administered not as a punishment, but as an expression of enlightened pity for the victims and as a... | |
| William H. Schneider - 2002 - 408 strani
...early 1900s, when an author such as W. Duncan McKim wrote, "The surest, the kindest and most human means for preventing reproduction among those whom...this high privilege is a gentle, painless death." For examples of the pervasive concept of eugenic "burden" in the 1920s and 1930s in the United States,... | |
| Rickie Solinger - 1998 - 432 strani
...eugenicist, for example, justified his extreme approach of putting the socially inadequate to death as "'the surest, the simplest, the kindest, and most...reproduction among those whom we deem unworthy of the high privilege.' " 82 Dr. Albert Priddy, the superintendent of the Virginia State Epileptic Colony,... | |
| Donald J. Childs - 2001 - 284 strani
...Woolf was familiar with an even more negative eugenics. W. Duncan McKim, for instance, proposed that [t]he surest, the simplest, the kindest, and most...toward the community and toward our own offspring. 1 7 In fact, the emphatic word "certainly" in Woolf's assertion about imbeciles - "They should certainly... | |
| Dan Stone - 2002 - 216 strani
...being mooted. In the early years of eugenics, it was not uncommon for its advocates to recommend that 'The surest, the simplest, the kindest, and most humane...an expression of enlightened pity for the victims . . .'40 In the literature cited here, the term 'lethal chamber' serves less a fantastic than a rhetorical... | |
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