EUGENICS AND SOCIALIST THOUGHT IN THE PROGRESSIVE ERA: THE CASE OF JAMES MEDBERY MACKAYE
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Published:2018-06-18
Issue:3
Volume:40
Page:377-388
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ISSN:1053-8372
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Container-title:Journal of the History of Economic Thought
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language:en
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Short-container-title:J Hist Econ Thought
Author:
Fiorito Luca,Foresti Tiziana
Abstract
The aim of this essay is to assess James Medbery MacKaye’s contribution to socialist thought during the Progressive Era. Largely forgotten today, MacKaye proposed a special version of socialism, which he called “Pantocracy,” based on a peculiar blend of utilitarian and eugenic assumptions. Specifically, MacKaye held that biological fitness mapped to the capacity for happiness—biologically superior individuals possess a greater capacity for happiness—and saw the eugenic breeding of “a being or race of beings capable in the first place of happiness” as a possibility open by the advent of Pantocracy. Incidentally, this essay provides further evidence that the influence of eugenic and racialist beliefs upon the American Progressive Era political economy was so deep-rooted and pervasive that it did cut across traditional ideological boundaries.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
History and Philosophy of Science,General Economics, Econometrics and Finance,General Arts and Humanities
Reference35 articles.
1. “Review of The Economy of Happiness by James MacKaye.”;Small;American Journal of Sociology,1907
2. “Misuse of Biological Hierarchies: The American Eugenics Movement 1900–1940.”;Allen;History and Philosophy of the Life Sciences,1983
3. The economy of happiness.
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