About This Book
The essay examines how recent social and economic transformations have reshaped national health and heredity, arguing that industrialization, urban crowding, and war disrupt natural selection and can degrade future generations. It links sedentary, unhealthy living, poor housing and sanitation, and inadequate water supplies to rising disease and weakened constitutions, and warns that medical and social interventions, while lifesaving, also alter selective pressures. Advocating practical remedies, the author urges teaching basic hygiene and public-health principles at all educational levels and calls for wider sanitary reform and social responsibility to arrest decline and improve collective well-being.
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