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Understanding social Darwinism

by Judy Joyce

Created on: January 27, 2009

While many attribute the notion of Social Darwinism as a development of Charles Darwin's theory of evolution, they would be wrong. Instead, it is important to take note of the work of Herbert Spencer - pre-Darwin - who coined the term "survival of the fittest". Later Darwin used Spencer's term to explain biological phenomenon he saw with species groups. (Modern History Sourcebook, Herbert Spencer, 1857 ).

For Herbert Spencer, some writer's contend, Darwinian findings merely enhanced the argument he'd been waging with John Stuart Mill and further validated Spencer's ideas about "adaptation" and "survival of the fittest" woven into social thought that followed. Translated this means that the fit have the right to survive built into their very nature. Enter the theory of what came to be known as "Social Darwinism".

Twentieth Century Spencer

The idea of "social Darwinism" originated from debates surrounding the system of class stratification In England. It has often been used as a general term for any evolutionary argument about the biological basis of human differences. "Drawing on social Darwinism, supporters of the 20th-century eugenics movement sought to "improve" human genetic stock, much as farmers do in agriculture." ("In the Name of Darwin", an Essay by Daniel Kavles).
A Question of Ethics

The impetus to draw conclusions relying on Herbert Spencer's Social Darwinian ethic, called Utilitarianism, can be used in a very practical way to justify many choices we make in life. Utilitarianism generally ascribes to the notion of doing what makes you happy. Sort of as if biologically programed to excuse oneself if others get creamed in the process.

Right Wing

In 1903, G.E. Moore's Principia Ethica noted about Spencer that his principal reasoning was flawed by a naturalist fallacy. According to Moore, Spencer equates survivability, a natural property, with goodness (a non-natural property. Richard Hofstadter's Social Darwinism in American Thought (1955, 41 and 46) argues that due to Spencer's unfortunate vogue in late nineteenth-century America Andrew Carnegie and William Graham Sumner's visions of unbridled and unrepentant capitalism were inspired.

"For Hofstadter, Spencer was an ""ultra-conservative"" for whom the poor were so much unfit detritus. His social philosophy ""walked hand in hand"" with reaction, making it little more than a ""biological apology for laissez-faire." (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.

Left Wing

However, Spencer himself wrote often and much about

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