This essay is a partial history of the term ‘Social Darwinism’. Using large electronic databases, it is shown that the use of the term in leading Anglophone academic journals was rare up to the 1940s. Citations of the term were generally disapproving of the racist or imperialist ideologies with which it was associated. Neither Herbert Spencer nor William Graham Sumner were described as Social Darwinists in this early literature. Talcott Parsons (1932, 1934, 1937) extended the meaning of the term to describe any extensive use of ideas from biology in the social sciences. Subsequently, Richard Hofstadter (1944) gave the use of the term a huge boost, in the context of a global anti-fascist war.Peer reviewe
The so-called evolutionary social sciences are based on the belief that Darwinism can explain the li...
The 19th century witnessed a conceptual revolution of the 1st magnitude, not only in biology but als...
The paper is an overview of the historiography surrounding the impact of Darwinian thought in latter...
This short paper critiques the idea of any coherent Darwinian ideology. Charles Darwin himself did n...
This short paper critiques the idea of any coherent Darwinian ideology. Charles Darwin himself did n...
From the 1830s, doctrines of creationism were increasingly challenged, initially by geological disco...
The contribution of Alfred Russel Wallace and William Rathbone Greg to the debate on the possibility...
This article compares the open-ended Darwinism of Charles Darwin, George Lewes, George Eliot and Tho...
Evolution lies at the heart of the life sciences, and Charles Darwin is a towering historical figure...
Throughout most of history, people have tried to justify their discrimination against other groups o...
Agreeing that there are often strong connections between fields of science and the ideological convi...
The Progressive Era was marked by many competing political philosophies. One prominent philosophy w...
The so-called evolutionary social sciences are based on the belief that Darwinism can explain the li...
Ce texte est une version de travail qui peut différer de la version finale et ne doit donc pas servi...
Ever since its inception, the theory of evolution has been reified into an “-ism”: Darwinism. While ...
The so-called evolutionary social sciences are based on the belief that Darwinism can explain the li...
The 19th century witnessed a conceptual revolution of the 1st magnitude, not only in biology but als...
The paper is an overview of the historiography surrounding the impact of Darwinian thought in latter...
This short paper critiques the idea of any coherent Darwinian ideology. Charles Darwin himself did n...
This short paper critiques the idea of any coherent Darwinian ideology. Charles Darwin himself did n...
From the 1830s, doctrines of creationism were increasingly challenged, initially by geological disco...
The contribution of Alfred Russel Wallace and William Rathbone Greg to the debate on the possibility...
This article compares the open-ended Darwinism of Charles Darwin, George Lewes, George Eliot and Tho...
Evolution lies at the heart of the life sciences, and Charles Darwin is a towering historical figure...
Throughout most of history, people have tried to justify their discrimination against other groups o...
Agreeing that there are often strong connections between fields of science and the ideological convi...
The Progressive Era was marked by many competing political philosophies. One prominent philosophy w...
The so-called evolutionary social sciences are based on the belief that Darwinism can explain the li...
Ce texte est une version de travail qui peut différer de la version finale et ne doit donc pas servi...
Ever since its inception, the theory of evolution has been reified into an “-ism”: Darwinism. While ...
The so-called evolutionary social sciences are based on the belief that Darwinism can explain the li...
The 19th century witnessed a conceptual revolution of the 1st magnitude, not only in biology but als...
The paper is an overview of the historiography surrounding the impact of Darwinian thought in latter...