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> Why Consensus Doesn't Count
> Scientocracy Rules
> Information Theory: George Gilder at Bar-Ilan University
> The Design of Life: What the Evidence of Biological Systems Reveals
> Has the U.S. Supreme Court Sanctioned Critique of Darwinism?
> What Do Court Decisions Say About Teaching Evolution?
> Darwinism: The Politically Correct Science
> What's Legal When Teaching Evolution?

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Hitler's Ethic and the Pursuit of Evolutionary Progress in Nazi Policy

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On this episode of ID the Future, Logan Gage interviews historian Richard Weikart on his new book, Hitler’s Ethic: The Nazi Pursuit of Evolutionary Progress, and how Darwinism influenced and inspired much of Nazi ideology.

Weikart’s provocative book, out tomorrow, argues that Hitler's immorality was not the result of ignoring or rejecting ethics, but rather came from embracing a coherent -- albeit pernicious -- ethic of improving the human race through "evolutionary progress." Directly inspired by Darwin's theory of evolution, this ethic underlay or influenced almost every major feature of Nazi policy: eugenics (i.e., measures to improved human heredity, including compulsory sterilization), euthanasia, racism, population expansion, offensive warfare, and racial extermination. By embracing this particular brand of ethics, Hitler perpetrated much greater evil than he would have had he been merely opportunistic or amoral.

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