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4ě 10, 2026
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"We should not allow our judgment of the ethical character of Nazi medical practice to hinge entirely on whether we consider it to have been based on âgenuine scienceâ. One cannot (or at least should not) radically divide the practice of science from its product science is, among other things, a social activity, and the politics of those who practice it is part of that science. Furthermore, we miss something if we assume at the outset a fundamental hostility between science and a form of political practice such as National Socialism. This was not how scientists themselves viewed the matter[..]"
"American eugenicists rejected the entire concept of birth control because it was associated, in their view, with an âantibaby strikeâ on the part of emancipated women. Curiously, at the same time that racial hygienists warned of a declining population, conservative apologists for the Pan-German League argued that overseas colonies were needed to relieve the âovercrowdingâ caused by Germanyâs rapidly growing population. Similar contradictions would persist in the Nazi period. Nazi Interior Minister Wilhelm Frick in 1933 thus found it possible to warn of ârace suicideâ (caused by the declining birthrate) in one breath and then to call for the need to acquire âLebenstraumâ for Germanyâs growth, in the next. Such pronouncements make one suspect that population concerns were (then as now) more the product of political interests than of incontrovertible facts."
"Hereditary theory remained a point of political contention throughout the period of Nazi rule (and indeed, for some time after). In 1939 the Moscow Anthropological Museum sponsored an exhibit on âRace and Race Theoryâ attacking the Nazi ideal of Nordic supremacy as part of an âeffort by the German ruling class to justify its domination over subjugated classes as ânaturalâ.â Nazi physicians reporting on the exhibit claimed that by virtue of their support for the inheritance of acquired characteristics, Soviet biologists had abandoned the goal of âpure scienceâ; Nazi physicians also suggested that the Soviets hoped, with the help of the Lamarckian doctrine, to âdisprove the existence of racial boundariesâ and thereby âfacilitate the assimilation of Jews into the country.â By this time, however, Russia was not the only country issuing official proclamations on the nature of heredity. In 1937 the Nazi party published its official âHandbook for the Hitler Youthâ, issued as required reading for the 7 million members of this organization. The âHandbookâ presented a chapter titled âRace Formation: heredity and Environment,â including discussions of Mendelâs laws of inheritance, Darwinâs theory of the origin of species by natural selection, and the Lamarckian principle of the inheritance of acquired characteristics."
"One of the leading research efforts of Germanyâs racial hygiene institutes was twin studies (for example, studies of identical twins raised apart) designed to determine the relative importance of heredity an environment. Suggestions that the study of twins might be used for this purpose date back at least as far as Francis Galtonâs 1875 âHistory of Twins as a Criterion of the Relative Powers of Nature and Nurture.â In the Third Reich, twin studies were lavisihly funded as part of an effort to prove that heredity was the key to many human talents and imperfections. Twin studies purportedly demonstrated the heritability of everything from epilepsy, criminality, memory, and hernias to tuberculosis, cancer, schizophrenia, and divorce. In 1933 Otmar Freiherr von Verschuer published a book purporting to provide exact ratios of the relative influence of heredity and environment in a wide range of bodily traits; he derived his data from the study of several thousand identical and nonidentical twins. (see Figure 8). Verschuerâs studies were followed by hundreds of others. By 1936 Otto Recheâs Institute for the Study of Race and Volk had examined 12,50 pairs of twins, recording forty-two separate physical or physiognomic traits for each pair. Eugen Fischer called twin studies âtheâ single most important research tool in the field of racial hygiene; Verschuer called twin research the âsovereign method for genetic research in humansâ Racial hygienists were able to convince Nazi authorities that twin studies warranted substantial government support: in 1939 Interior Minister Wilhelm Frick ordered the registration of all twins, triplets, or quadruplets born in the Reich, for the express purpose of research to isolate the effects of nature and nurture in the formation of the human racial constitution."
"The Nazis found biology and medicine a suitable language in which to articulate their goals; scientists found the Nazis willing to support many of their endeavors. Furthermore, racial hygiene was not âimposed onâ the German medical community; physicians eagerly embraced the racial ideal and the racial state. This in fact was perceived by observers at the time. In 1933 Fritz Lenz noted: Whatever resistance the idea of racial hygiene may have encountered in previous times among German doctors, this resistance exists no longer. The German core [Kern] within the medical community has recognized the demands of German racial hygiene as its own; the medical profession has become the leading force in making these demands. Lenz than cited the words of Gerhard Wagner, leader of the German medical profession: Knowledge of racial hygiene and genetics has become, by a purely scientific path, the knowledge of an extraordinary number of German doctors. It has influenced to a substantial degree the basic world view of the State, and indeed may even be said to embody the very foundations of the present state [âStaatsraisonâ]."
"Why did physicians join the Nazi party in such numbers? Professional opportunism certainly played a role: many reasoned that by driving out the Jews, jobs could be created for non-Jewish physicians-an important motive, given the overcrowding and financial stress suffered by the profession in the years before the rise of the Nazis (see Chapter 6). The traditionally conservative character of the medical profession was another factor. Prior to 1933, many German physicians identified with the Deutschnationale Volkspartei, a conservative and nationalistic party that eventually threw its support to Hitler. Most physicians shared a strong sense of national pride: in the spring of 1933, for example, the âDeutsches Arzteblattâ noted that most German physicians had taken part in World War I and that 1,000 had died âon the field of honor.â In the years preceding the triumph of the Nazis, physicians were faced with a series of economic shocks that moved many to realign their politics. Impoverishment after the war and economic collapse during the final years of the Weimar Republic polarized the profession politically. At the same time, physicians warned of a âcrisis in medicine,â a crisis variously construed as the bureaucratization specialization, or scientization of medicine-problems blamed on the socialists, the Jews, or the numerous quacks that eternally plague the profession. Physicians expressed a desire to win back âthe confidence of the people.â"
"The single most important classes of journals that, generally speaking did ânotâ survive the Nazi seizure of power were those publishing in the field of social hygiene (âSozialhygieneâ). These were journals concerned primarily with broader social or public health aspects of medicine, often from a socialist or communist point of view. The journal âSoziale Medizinâ, for example, folded in the first year of Nazi rule, as did âDer Sozialistische Arztâ, the official journal of the Association of Socialist Physicians."
"The Nazi medical community also published special journals designed either to popularize the new racial ideal or to keep Nazi physicians abreast of social and racial policy. âZiel und Wegâ was the primary journal responsible for articulating Nazi philosophy in the sphere of medicine. In 1931 it began publishing in editions of 3,000 copies; by 1934 this number had grown to 16,000; and by 1939 the journal was publishing 40,000 copies twice a month. The Office of Racial Policy (Rassenpolitisches Amt) published the popular health magazine âNeues Volkâ (New people), issued as the successor to the pre-Nazi journal âDas Horrohrâ, in editions that ran as high as 360,000 copies (in 1939); the office also published an in-house journal called the âInformationsdienstâ (Information service) to keep its members informed on issues of racial policy. Circulation of the âInformationsdienstâ was deliberately limited to 5,000 copies in order to be able to include confidential information; readers were asked not to repeat information published in the journal unless they withheld the source. Published from 1934 to 1944 the âInformationsdienstâ today serves as one of the most revealing sources of information on Nazi racial policy."
"Socialist physicians wanted to legalize abortion; Nazi physicians saw abortion as a feminist plot designed to sap the strength of the nation."