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15. Janvāris 2013

(bez virsraksta) @ 16:28

For generations, Chinese intellectuals have emphasized close ties between the state (guojia), the nation (minzu), the population (renkou), the Han race (zhongzu), and, more recently, the Chinese gene-pool (jiyinku). Traditional Chinese medicine focused on preventing birth defects, promoting maternal health and "fetal education" (taijiao) during pregnancy, and nourishing the father's semen (yangjing) and mother's blood (pingxue) to produce bright, healthy babies (see Frank Dikötter's book Imperfect Conceptions). Many scientists and reformers of Republican China (1912-1949) were ardent Darwinians and Galtonians. They worried about racial extinction (miezhong) and "the science of deformed fetuses" (jitaixue), and saw eugenics as a way to restore China's rightful place as the world's leading civilization after a century of humiliation by European colonialism.
 

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From:[info]garamgajejs
Date: 15. Janvāris 2013 - 17:30
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Ķīnā populācijas plānošanas politika bija balstīta eigēnikā līdz pat 21.gs sākumam. Tikai 2000 - 2003 notika laulību likuma reformas (kas līdz tam noteica striktus ierobežojumus), kā arī vadošie ģenētiķi izplatīja oficiālu paziņojumu par nozares atteikšanos no 'kalpošanas' eigēnikai, bet koncentrēšanos uz pētniecību slimību prevencijai un ārstēšanai.

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