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Angela Rowling

Euthenics, the science of controllable environment(Annotated)

Euthenics, the science of controllable environment(Annotated)

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CONTENTS
PAGE
I. The opportunity for betterment is real and practical, not merely academic 3
II. Individual effort is needed to improve individual conditions. Home and habits of living, eating, etc. Good habits pay in economy of time and force 15
III. Community effort is needed to make better conditions for all, in streets and public places, for water and milk supply, hospitals, markets, housing problems, etc. Restraint for sake of neighbors 39
IV. Interchangeableness of these two forms of progressive effort. First one, then the other ahead 59
V. The child to be "raised" as he should be. Restraint for his good. Teaching good habits the chief duty of the family 73
VI. The child to be educated in the light of sanitary science. Office of the school. Domestic science for girls. Applied science. The duty of the higher education. Research needed 91
VII. Stimulative education for adults. Books, newspapers, lectures, working models, museums, exhibits, moving pictures 117
VIII. Both child and adult to be protected from their own ignorance. Educative value of law and of fines for disobedience. Compulsory sanitation by municipal, state, and federal regulations. Instructive inspection 131
IX. There is responsibility as well as opportunity. The housewife an important factor and an economic force in improving the national health and increasing the national wealth 143
CHAPTER I
The opportunity for betterment is real and practical, not merely academic.
Men ignore Nature's laws in their personal lives. They crave a larger measure of goodness and happiness, and yet in their choice of dwelling places, in their building of houses to live in, in their selection of food and drink, in their clothing of their bodies, in their choice of occupations and amusements, in their methods and habits of work, they disregard natural laws and impose upon themselves conditions that make their ideals of goodness and happiness impossible of attainment.
Prof. George E. Dawson, The Control of Life through Environment.
And is it, I ask, an unworthy ambition for man to set before himself to understand those eternal laws upon which his happiness, his prosperity, his very life depend? Is he to be blamed and anathematized for endeavoring to fulfill the divine injunction: "Fear God and keep His commandments, for that is the whole duty of man"? Before he can keep them, surely he must first ascertain what they are.
Adam Sedgwick. Address, Imperial College of Science and Technology, December 16, 1909. Nature, December 23, 1909, p. 228.
In my judgment, the situation is hopeful. To realize that our problems are chiefly those of environment which we in increasing measure control, to realize that, no matter how bad the environment of this generation, the next is not injured provided that it be given favorable conditions, is surely to have an optimistic view.
Carl Kelsey, Influence of Heredity and Environment upon Race Improvement. Annals of American Academy of Po
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