Kenny Michael G
Department of Sociology and Anthropology, Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, British Columbia, V5A 1S6, Canada.
Isis. 2004 Sep;95(3):394-419. doi: 10.1086/428959.
In 1974 a British biologist, John Randal Baker (1900-1984), published a large and controversial book simply entitled Race that reiterated persistent eugenicist themes concerning the relation between race, intelligence, and progress. The history of Baker's book is a case study in the politics of scientific publishing, and his ideas influenced scholars associated with later works such as The Bell Curve. Baker, a student of Julian Huxley, was a longtime participant in the British eugenics movement and opponent of what he took to be a facile belief in human equality. In 1942, together with Michael Polanyi, he founded the Society for Freedom in Science to oppose those who advocated the central planning of scientific research. Baker's eugenics, political activities, and views on race express an elitist individualism, associated with the conservative wing of the eugenics movement, that this paper explores in the context of his career as a whole.
1974年,英国生物学家约翰·兰德尔·贝克(1900 - 1984)出版了一本篇幅宏大且颇具争议的书,书名为《种族》,该书重申了优生主义者长期以来关于种族、智力和进步之间关系的主题。贝克这本书的历史是科学出版政治方面的一个案例研究,他的观点影响了与后来的作品(如《钟形曲线》)相关的学者。贝克是朱利安·赫胥黎的学生,长期参与英国优生运动,反对他所认为的对人类平等的肤浅信仰。1942年,他与迈克尔·波兰尼共同创立了科学自由协会,以反对那些主张对科学研究进行中央规划的人。贝克的优生学、政治活动以及对种族的观点表达了一种精英主义个人主义,这种个人主义与优生运动的保守派相关,本文将在他的整个职业生涯背景下对其进行探讨。