Francis Galton — новинки
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Fingerprint Francis Galton
ISBN: 9781332012596 Год издания: 2015 Издательство: Книга по Требованию Язык: Английский Excerpt from Fingerprint: Directories
This volume relates to classified collections of cards, or to orderly entries in books, for discovering the names of persons through their fingerprints, - the prints made by those persons on any previous occasion, with their names appended, having been preserved and arranged in one or other of the ways about to be described.
A fingerprint directory may be compared to that portion of the well-known London Post Office Directory, where the name of any householder can be discovered by referring to his address. All the three thousand and more streets, squares, etc. in London are arranged alphabetically, and the houses in each of them are entered in numerical order, the names of the respective householders being appended. So, although there are at least 150,000 householders in London, the name of any one of them can be found with facility from his address.
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Hereditary Genius: An Inquiry into Its Laws And Consequences Francis Galton
ISBN: 9781591023586 Год издания: 2006 Издательство: Prometheus Books Язык: Английский A cousin of Charles Darwin, Francis Galton (1822-1911) was so impressed by Darwin's On the Origin of Species that he decided to investigate in detail the implications of inheritance and evolution for the development of outstanding human abilities. By "hereditary genius" Galton meant, "an ability that was exceptionally high and at the same time inborn," and he argued that in the debate over "nature versus nurture" (an expression that he coined) nature always prevails.In 1869, he published this, his first, book on the topic, presenting a good deal of evidence showing that exceptional ability often ran in families. In separate chapters devoted to outstanding professionals ranging from English judges to "wrestlers of the North Country," Galton pointed out that most of these high achievers had relatives who also displayed notable abilities. Based on this statistical sampling, he concluded that eminence in any field was due to hereditary factors.Many greeted these results with skepticism, but Charles Darwin expressed his admiration for Galton's results and later cited his work in The Descent of Man. Galton went on to use this initial research as the basis for a new field, which he called "eugenics," the aim of which was "the betterment of the human race" through "appropriate marriages or abstention from marriage." Although Galton's ideas gained momentum over several decades, they were eventually discredited after being misappropriated by the Nazis as part of their racist ideology. Today, however, with the discovery of heritable diseases, the use of genetic screening to eliminate undesirable traits, sperm banks, and the possibility of "designer babies" and human cloning, Galton's groundbreaking research has gained renewed currency and will be the subject of debate for years to come.