Mengele and Nazi Doctors During the Third Reich
Children’s Experiments and the Racial Utopia for Opportunity and Careerism
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ナレーター:
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Jack Stonemason
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著者:
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Joshua Itzkowitz
このコンテンツについて
The experiments conducted during World War II provide some of the most extreme examples in breaches of human rights and ethics the world has so far seen. There is no benefit in considering the Nazi experiments as “other” or irrelevant. The greatest good that can come out of these atrocities is the lessons they have to teach about what plays into and creates a hostile research environment. Before the rise of Hitler and the Nazi party, Germany was at the forefront of both medical research and medical ethics.
The rise of the National Socialist movement led to an ethical decline in physicians’ perception of their professional identity.
This was reinforced by concepts like “lives not worth living”, a term that was repeated often in Nazi propaganda and which played a central role in justifying many atrocities committed under the Nazi regime.
The Nazi era in general, and the behavior of Nazi doctors in particular, serve to show that despite a general historical progression toward greater humanity, egregious regressions and moral backsliding have occurred.
©2021 Joshua Itzkowitz (P)2021 Joshua Itzkowitz