The Idiot: His Place in Creation, and His Claims on Society
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About This Book
The essay offers a medical and philanthropic examination of idiocy, defining it as defective brain development that impairs intellectual, moral, and sensitive faculties, and distinguishing congenital, developmental, and accidental forms. It surveys probable causes including heredity, consanguineous marriage, parental intemperance, and excessive educational pressure, argues for the potential for amelioration through institutional care and instruction, and frames the subject as relevant to charity, political economy, theology, and the debate about the relation of mind and matter. Written as a public appeal on behalf of an asylum, it combines clinical description with practical recommendations for social provision.
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