Heredity and Child Culture Routledge Revivals Series
Auteur : Chapin Henry Dwight
First published in 1923, this book explores the impact on development that heredity and environment has on children. Chaplin argues that too much reliance is placed on education and in fact parents, physicians and teachers should equally be taking into consideration the physical and mental constitution of the child, which could be linked to hereditary and environmental factors. In conjunction with the moral, spiritual and intellectual predispositions that the child may have, Chaplin argues the pros of eugenics (in the perspective of the early 20th century) and equally the importance of euthenics for future prosperity of generations to come.
1. Importance of the Child. 2. Organic Inheritance. 3. Social Inheritance. 4. Selective Breeding. 5. The Beginning of Life. 6. The Developing Period. 7. The Pre-School Age. 8. The School Child. 9. The Mental Culture. 10. Moral Culture. 11. Nerve Culture. 12. The Importance of Proper Nutrition. 13. The Family. 14. The Dependent Child. 15. The Adaption of Children. 16. The Prolongation of Human Life Through Child Culture.
Date de parution : 06-2020
12.3x18.6 cm
Date de parution : 07-2018
12.3x18.6 cm
Thème de Heredity and Child Culture :
Mots-clés :
Young Men; Red Field; moral culture; Spinal Cord; intellectual predispositions; Animal Kingdom; environmental factors; Light Weight; child's mental constitution; Low Wage Class; social heredity; Organic Heredity; Germ Plasm; Federal Children’s Bureau; Semi-solid Substance; Large Families; Germinal Substance; Calls Attention; Spinal Muscles; Social Inheritance; Nervous Instability; Ancestral Inheritance; Breast Feeding; Modern Languages; Superior Racial Stocks; Great Criminologist; Fresh Lime Juice