Biohealthmatics.com The 24th annual conference TEPR 2008 will open its doors on May 19, 2008 at the Fort Lauderdale Convention Center to more than 500 speakers, close to 5,000 attendees, and approximately 200 exhibitors.
advertisement
Biohealthmatics Centers
Home
Jobs Search
Career Center
Networking Center
Company Profiles
Knowledge Center
Industry News
Web Directory
Industry Books
Featured Articles

Biohealthmatics.com....linking professionals
advertisement

Join Us

Link To Us





A Life of Sir Francis Galton: From African Exploration to the Birth of Eugenics

by Nicholas Wright Gillham

Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
Publication Date: Thursday, November 01, 2001
Number of Pages: 432
ISBN: 0195143655


Book Summary:
Few scientists have made lasting contributions to as many fields as Francis Galton. He was an important African explorer, travel writer, and geographer. He was the meteorologist who discovered the anticyclone, a pioneer in using fingerprints to identify individuals, the inventor of regression
and correlation analysis in statistics, and the founder of the eugenics movement. Now, Nicholas Gillham paints an engaging portrait of this Victorian polymath.
The book traces Galton's ancestry (he was the grandson of Erasmus Darwin and the cousin of Charles Darwin), upbringing, training as a medical apprentice, and experience as a Cambridge undergraduate. It recounts in colorful detail Galton's adventures as leader of his own expedition in Namibia.
Darwin was always a strong influence on his cousin and a turning point in Galton's life was the publication of the Origin of Species. Thereafter, Galton devoted most of his life to human heredity, using then novel methods such as pedigree analysis and twin studies to argue that talent and character
were inherited and that humans could be selectively bred to enhance these qualities. To this end, he founded the eugenics movement which rapidly gained momentum early in the last century. After Galton's death, however, eugenics took a more sinister path, as in the United States, where by 1913
sixteen states had involuntary sterilization laws, and in Germany, where the goal of racial purity was pushed to its horrific limit in the "final solution." Galton himself, Gillham writes, would have been appalled by the extremes to which eugenics was carried.
Here then is a vibrant biography of a remarkable scientist as well as a superb portrait of science in the Victorian era.


advertisement

Book Reviews

Post a book review for this title

No reviews for this title. Be the first to post a review.

 

More Genomics BooksMore Genomics Books ...

 
 

 

 

 

   
Copyright © 2007 Biohealthmatics.com. All Rights Reserved. Contact Us - About Us - Privacy Policy - Terms & Conditions - Resources
Can't find what you are looking for? View our Site Map

Last Updated: 24 November 2007.