<h2><SPAN name="LESSON_VIII" id="LESSON_VIII"></SPAN><span class="lght">LESSON VIII</span><br/> EUGENICS AND CHARACTER</h2>
<p>The rapidly growing interest in Eugenics, and the
scientific consideration of the world-wide decline in the
birth-rate have drawn attention to the study of the
eugenic factors which determine the production of high
ability in offspring. Many distinguished investigators
have conducted long and exhaustive investigations for
the purpose of ascertaining and summarizing all possible
biological data concerning the parentage and birth of the
most notable persons born in European countries, and to
a lesser extent in America.</p>
<p>The investigations are now acquiring a fresh importance,
because, while it is becoming recognized that we are
gaining a control over the conditions of birth, the production
of children has itself gained an importance. The
world is no longer to be bombarded by an exuberant
stream of babies, good, bad, and indifferent in quality,
with mankind to look on calmly at the struggle for existence
among them. Whether we like it or not, the quantity
is steadily diminishing, and the question of quality
is beginning to assume a supreme significance. The question
then is being anxiously asked: "What are the conditions
which assure the finest quality in our children?"</p>
<p>A German scientist, Dr. Vaerting, of Berlin, published
just before the War a treatise on the subject of the most
favorable age in parents for the production of offspring
of ability. He treated the question in an entirely new
spirit, not merely as a matter of academic discussion, but
rather as a practical matter of vital importance to the
welfare of modern society. He starts by asserting that
"our century has been called the century of the child,"<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_104" id="Page_104">{104}</SPAN></span>
and that for the child all manner of rights are now being
claimed. But, he wisely adds, there is seldom considered
the prime right of all the child's rights, i. e., the right
of the child to the best ability and capacity for efficiency that
his parents are able to transmit to him. The good doctor
adds that this right is the root of all children's rights;
and that when the mysteries of procreation have been
so far revealed as to enable this right to be won, we shall,
at the same time renew the spiritual aspect of the nations.</p>
<p>The writer referred to decided that the most easily
ascertainable and measurable factor in the production
of ability, and efficiency in offspring, and a factor of the
greatest significance, is the age of the parents at the
child's birth. He investigated a number of cases of men
of ability and efficiency, along these lines, and made a
careful summary of his results. Some of his results are
somewhat startling, and may possibly require the corroboration
of other investigators before they can be
accepted as authoritative; but they are worthy of being
carefully considered at the present time, pending such
further investigation.</p>
<p>Vaerting found that the fathers who were themselves
not notably intellectual have a decidedly more prolonged
power of procreating distinguished children than is possessed
by distinguished fathers. The former may become
the fathers of eminent children from the period of sexual
maturity up to the age of forty-three or beyond. When,
however, the father is himself of high intellectual distinction,
the records show that he was nearly always under
thirty, and usually under twenty-five years of age at the
time of the birth of his distinguished son, although the
proportion of youthful fathers in the general population
is relatively small. The eleven youngest fathers on
Vaerting's list, from twenty-one to twenty-five years of
age, were with one exception themselves more or less<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_105" id="Page_105">{105}</SPAN></span>
distinguished; while the fifteen oldest, from thirty-nine
to sixty years of age, were all without exception undistinguished.</p>
<p>Among the sons on the latter list are to be found much
greater names (such as Goethe, Bach, Kant, Bismarck,
Wagner, etc.) than are to be found among the sons of
young and more distinguished fathers, for here is only
one name (Frederick the Great) of the same caliber. The
elderly fathers belonged to the large cities, and were
mostly married to wives very much younger than themselves.
Vaerting notes that the most eminent men have
frequently been the sons of fathers who were not engaged
in intellectual avocations at all, but earned their
living as humble craftsmen. He draws the conclusion
from these data that strenuous intellectual energy is much
more unfavorable than hard physical labor to the production
of marked ability in the offspring. Intellectual
workers, therefore, he argues, must have their children
when young, and we must so modify our social ideals and
economic conditions as to render this possible.</p>
<p>Vaerting, however, holds that the mother need not be
equally young; he finds some superiority, indeed, provided
the father is young, in somewhat elderly mothers,
and there were no mothers under twenty-three on the list.
The rarity of genius among the offspring of distinguished
parents he attributes to the unfortunate tendency to
marry too late; and he finds that the distinguished men
who marry late rarely have any children at all. Speaking
generally, and apart from the production of genius,
he holds that women have children too early, before their
psychic development is completed, while men have children
too late, when they have already "in the years of
their highest psychic generative fitness planted their most
precious seed in the mud of the street."</p>
<p>The eldest child was found to have by far the best<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_106" id="Page_106">{106}</SPAN></span>
chance of turning out distinguished, and in this fact
Vaerting finds further proof of his argument. The third
son has the next best chance, and then the second, the
comparatively bad position of the second being attributed
to the too brief interval which often follows the birth of
the first child. He also notes that of all the professions
the clergy come beyond comparison first as the parents
of distinguished sons (who are, however, rarely of the
highest degree of eminence), lawyers following, while
officers in the army and physicians scarcely figure at all.
Vaerting is inclined to see in this order, especially in the
predominance of the clergy, the favorable influence of an
unexhausted reserve of energy and a habit of chastity on
intellectual procreativeness.</p>
<p>It should be remembered, however, that Vaerting's
cases on his list were all those of Germans, and, therefore,
the influence of the characteristic social customs and
conditions of the German people must be taken into
account in the consideration.</p>
<p>Havelock Ellis in his well known work "Study of
British Genius" dealt on a still larger scale, and with a
somewhat more precise method, with many of the same
questions as illustrated by British cases. After the publication
of Vaerting's work, Ellis re-examined his cases,
and rearranged his data. His results, like those of the
German authority, showed a special tendency for genius
to appear in the eldest child, though there was no indication
of notably early marriage in the parents. He also
found a similar predominance of the clergy among the
fathers, and a similar deficiency of army officers and
physicians.</p>
<p>Ellis found that the most frequent age of the father
was thirty-two years, but that the average age of the
father at the distinguished child's birth was 36.6 years;
and that when the fathers were themselves distinguished<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_107" id="Page_107">{107}</SPAN></span>
their age was not, as Vaerting found in Germany, notably
low at the birth of their distinguished sons, but higher
than the general average, being 37.5 years. He found
fifteen distinguished sons of distinguished British fathers,
but instead of being nearly always under thirty and usually
under twenty-five, as Vaerting found it in Germany,
the British distinguished father has only five times been
under thirty, and among these only twice under twenty-five.
Moreover, precisely the most distinguished of the
sons (Francis Bacon and William Pitt) had the oldest
fathers, and the least distinguished sons the youngest
fathers.</p>
<p>Ellis says of his general conclusions resulting from this
investigation: "I made some attempts to ascertain
whether different kinds of genius tend to be produced
by fathers who were at different periods of life. I refrained
from publishing the results as I doubted whether
the numbers dealt with were sufficiently large to carry
any weight. It may, however, be worth while to record
them, as possibly they are significant. I made four classes
of men of genius: (1) Men of Religion, (2) Poets, (3)
Practical Men, (4) Scientific Men and Sceptics. (It must
not, of course, be supposed that in this last group all the
scientific men were sceptics, or all the sceptics scientific.)
The average age of the fathers at the distinguished son's
birth was, in the first group, 35 years; in the second and
third group, 37 years; and in the last group, 40 years.
(It may be noted, however, that the youngest father of all
the history of British genius, aged sixteen, produced
Napier, who introduced logarithms.)</p>
<p>"It is difficult not to believe that as regards, at all
events, the two most discrepant groups, the first and last,
we come upon a significant indication. It is not unreasonable
to suppose that in the production of men of religion
in whose activity emotion is so potent a factor, the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_108" id="Page_108">{108}</SPAN></span>
youthful age of the father should prove favorable; while
for the production of genius of a more coldly intellectual
and analytic type more elderly fathers are demanded.
If that should prove to be so, it would become a source
of happiness to religious parents to have their children
early, while irreligious parents should be advised to delay
parentage.</p>
<p>"It is scarcely necessary to remark that the age of the
mothers is probably quite as influential as that of the
fathers. Concerning the mothers, however, we always
have less precise information. My records, so far as they
go, agree with Vaerting's for German genius, in indicating
that an elderly mother is more likely to produce a
child of genius than a very youthful mother. There were
only fifteen mothers recorded under twenty-five years of
age, while thirteen were over thirty-nine years; the most
important age for mothers was twenty-seven.</p>
<p>"On all these points we certainly need controlling
evidence from other countries. Thus, before we insist
with Vaerting that an elderly mother is a factor in the
production of genius, we may recall that even in Germany
the mothers of Goethe and Nietzsche were both eighteen
at their distinguished son's birth. A rule which permits
of such tremendous exceptions scarcely seems to bear the
strain of emphasis."</p>
<p>The student, however, must always remember that
while the study of genius and exceptionable talent is
highly interesting, and even, as is quite probable, not
without significance for the general laws of heredity, still
we must beware of too hastily drawing conclusions from
it to bear on the practical questions of eugenics. Genius
is rare—and, in a certain sense, abnormal. Laws meant
for application to the general population must be based
on a study of the general population. Vaerting, himself,
realized how inadequate it was to confine our study to
cases of genius.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_109" id="Page_109">{109}</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Another investigator, Marro, an Italian scientist, in his
well-known book on puberty which was published several
years ago, brought forth some interesting data showing
the result of the age of the parents on the moral and
intellectual characters of school-children in Northern
Italy. He found that children with fathers below twenty-six
at their birth showed the maximum of bad conduct
and the minimum of good; they also yielded the greatest
proportion of children of irregular, troublesome, or lazy
character, but not of really perverse children—the latter
being equally distributed among fathers of all ages. The
largest number of cheerful children belonged to the
young fathers, while the children tended to become more
melancholy with ascending age of the fathers. Young
fathers produced the largest number of intelligent, as
well as of troublesome children; but when the very exceptional
intelligent children were considered separately,
they were found to be more usually the offspring of
elderly fathers.</p>
<p>As regarded the mothers, Marro found that the children
of young mothers (under twenty-one) are superior, both
as regards conduct and intelligence, though the more exceptionally
intelligent children tended to belong to more
mature mothers. When the parents were both in the
same age-groups, the immature and the elderly groups
tended to produce more children who were unsatisfactory,
both as regards conduct and intelligence—the intermediate
group yielding the most satisfactory results of
this kind.</p>
<p>Havelock Ellis makes the following plea for further
investigations along these lines, in the interest of the
well-being of the race: "But we have need of inquiries
made on a more wholesale and systematic scale. They
are no longer of a merely speculative character. We no
longer regard children as the 'gifts of God' flung into our<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_110" id="Page_110">{110}</SPAN></span>
helpless hands; we are beginning to realize that the responsibility
is ours to see that they come into the world
under the best conditions, and at the moments when their
parents are best fitted to produce them. Vaerting proposes
that it should be the business of all school authorities
to register the ages of the pupils' parents. This is
scarcely a provision to which even the most susceptible
parent could reasonably object, though there is no cause
to make the declaration compulsory where a 'conscientious'
objection existed, and in any case the declaration
would not be public.</p>
<p>"It would be an advantage—although this might be
more difficult to obtain—to have the date of the children's
marriage, and of the birth of previous children, as well
as some record of the father's standing in his occupation.
But even the ages of the parents alone would teach us
much when correlated with the school position of the
pupil in intelligence and conduct. It is quite true that
there are unavoidable fallacies. We are not, as in the case
of genius, dealing with people whose life-work is complete
and open to the whole world's examination.</p>
<p>"The good and clever child is not necessarily the forerunner
of the first-class man or woman; and many capable
and successful men have been careless in attendance
at lectures, and rebellious to discipline. Moreover, the
prejudice and limitations of the teachers have to be recognized.
Yet when we are dealing with millions most of
these fallacies would be smoothed out. We should be,
once for all, in a position to determine authoritatively
the exact bearing of one of the simplest and most vital
factors of the betterment of the race. We should be in
possession of a new clue to guide us in the creation of the
man in the coming world. Why not begin today?"</p>
<p>Considerable attention on the part of the American
thinking public has been directed toward the investigations
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_111" id="Page_111">{111}</SPAN></span>and researches of Casper L. Redfield. Mr. Redfield
combats the orthodox scientific position that the acquired
qualities are not transmitted to offspring; and he most
positively states that such characteristics are transmitted
to offspring, and are really the causes which have tended
toward the evolution and progress of the race. But he
insists upon this vital point, namely, that the parent must
already have acquired improved quality before he can
transmit improvement to the offspring—and that before
he can have acquired this improved quality, he must
have lived sufficiently long to have experienced the causes
which have developed improvement in himself. Consequently,
he holds that <b>delayed parentage produces great
men</b>.</p>
<p>Mr. Redfield several years ago offered a prize of two
hundred dollars to anyone who could show that a single
one of the great men of history was the product of a succession
of young parents, or was produced by a line of
ancestry represented by more than three generations to a
century. But no one ever claimed the prize money.
According to Mr. Redfield's doctrine, race improvement
is and will be accomplished as the result of effort, physical
and mental, upon the part of prospective parents, particularly
if the period of effort is sustained over a considerable
number of years previous to reproduction.</p>
<p>The following quotations from Mr. Redfield's writing
will give a general idea of his lines of thought and his
theories. He says:</p>
<p>"At some time in the past there was a common ancestor
for man and the ape. At that time the mental ability
of the man was the same as that of the ape, because at
that time man and the ape were the same person. From
that common ancestor there have been derived two main
lines of descent, one leading to man and the other to the
ape of today. In the line leading to man, mental ability<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_112" id="Page_112">{112}</SPAN></span>
has increased little by little so that today the mental
ability of the man is far above that of the ape. While
it may not be literally true for each and every generation
between that common ancestor and man of the present
time, still we will commit no error if we divide the total
increase in mental ability by the number of intervening
generations and say that each generation in turn was a
little superior to that which produced it. Now it happens
that mental ability is something which is inherited—is
transmitted from parent to offspring. Take that fact
with the fact that there has been a regular (or irregular)
increase in mental ability in the generations leading to
man, and it will be seen that each generation in succession
transmitted to its offspring more than it inherited
from its parents. <b>But a parent cannot transmit something
which he did not have.</b> Where and how did those generations
get that ability which they transmitted but did not
inherit?"</p>
<p>Mr. Redfield in his writings shows that what is true
of the human race is true of high-bred domesticated animals,
namely, the cow of high milk producing breeds;
the fast running and trotting horses; and the highly developed
hunting dogs. To each case he applies his question:
"Where and how did those generations of animals get
that power which they transmitted but did not inherit?"
In his investigations he claims to have discovered the
secret, namely, that the ancestors, throughout several generations,
had each acquired the power which it transmitted,
which added to the inherited power raised the general
power of the stock. This arose from careful breeding,
and directly from the fact that the average age of the
parent was much higher in the highly-bred stock than in
the "scrub" or ordinary run of stock. In other words,
<b>delayed parentage produced better offspring</b>.</p>
<p>Mr. Redfield proceeds to argue from these facts as follows:
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_113" id="Page_113">{113}</SPAN></span>"At one time man and ape reproduced at the same
average age, whereas now they reproduce at widely different
ages. Going back to the time when man and ape
separated, our ancestors survived by physical and mental
activity in securing food and escaping from enemies. As
time went on man reproduced at later and later average
age until now he reproduces at about thirty years from
birth of parent to birth of offspring. When time between
generations stretched out in the man line more than it
did in the ape line, the man acquired <b>more mental development
before he reproduced</b> than did the ape, and he
did this because he was mentally active more years before
reproducing. The successive generations leading to modern
man transmitted to offspring more than they inherited
from their parents, and the generations which did
this are the same generations which acquired, before
reproducing, the identical thing which they transmitted
in excess of inheriting.</p>
<p>"Coming now to those rare men of whom we have only
a few in a century, how were they produced? It should
be noted that each one had two parents, four grandparents,
and eight great-grandparents. Also that they are certainly
improvements over their great-grandparents. If
they were not such improvements, then there would be
many 'rare' cases in a century. In looking into the pedigrees
of these great men it is found that they were sons
of parents of nearly all ages, but were predominantly sons
of elderly parents. While we sometimes find comparatively
young parents in the pedigree of a great man, we
never find a succession of young parents. Neither do we
find an intellectually great man produced by a pedigree
extending over three generations. The great man is
produced only when the average for three generations is
on the elderly side of what is normal. The average age
of one thousand fathers, grandfathers, and great-grandfathers
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_114" id="Page_114">{114}</SPAN></span>in the pedigrees of eminent men was found to be
over forty years. Great men rise from ordinary stock
only when several generations in succession acquire mental
efforts in excess amounts before reproducing."</p>
<p>It is the opinion of the present writer that the theories
of Mr. Redfield are in the main true, and that in the future
much valuable information will be obtained along
the same lines, which will tend to corroborate his general
conclusions. One's attention needs but to be plainly
directed to the matter, and then he will see that it is
absurd to think of a creature transmitting to his offspring
qualities which neither he or his mate had inherited or
acquired. If there were no transmission of acquired
qualities there would be no improvement—and in fact,
we know that the bulk of inherited qualities were at some
time in the history of the race "acquired." And, reasoning
along the same line, we may see that the young parents
who have not had as yet an opportunity to acquire
mental power cannot expect to transmit it to their offspring—all
that they can do is to transmit the inherited
stock qualities plus the small acquired power which they
have gained in their limited experience. And, finally, it
is seen that offspring produced at a riper age of parenthood,
continued over several generations, tend toward
unusual ability and powers. Consequently, the people or
nation with a higher average age of parenthood may
logically expect to attain greater mental powers than the
peoples lacking that quality. And what is true of a people
or nation is of course true of a particular family.</p>
<p>The subject touched upon in this part of our book is
one of the greatest interest to careful students of Eugenics;
and is one which calls for careful and unprejudiced
consideration from all persons having the interest of the
race at heart.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_115" id="Page_115">{115}</SPAN></span></p>
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