How Nature contributed to science’s discriminatory legacy

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How Nature contributed to science’s discriminatory legacy
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Editorial: How Nature contributed to science’s discriminatory legacy

was founded in 1869 by astronomer Norman Lockyer and publisher Alexander Macmillan. It was designed to publish contributions from an exclusive club of Victorian, British men who made up the scientific establishment, and explicitly aimed to put control of information about science in their hands. It was targeted at an elite readership of educated men, and soon came to focus only on scientists.’s editors were part of, and nurtured, this clique.

Eugenics became an international movement supported by some prominent scientists and politicians — “a globally resonant set of ideas”, says Saul Dubow, who studies scientific and imperial history at the University of Cambridge, UK. In 1908,published a speech by Galton explaining how communities could start their own local associations for “favouring the families of those who are exceptionally fit for citizenship”.

Scientists have now roundly rejected the ideas espoused by Galton and other eugenicists. But such ideas, many argue, “still cast a shadow on everyday life in the 21st century” and “persons suffering from discrimination live in the wake of the general identity-values promoted by eugenics”, said the r, regrettably, played a part in casting the eugenics shadow.

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