NURTURE VERSUS NATURE 



ical weaklings with wonderful brains may have 

 their strains blended with the strains of other 

 individuals of robust physique, with the result of 

 developing progeny showing an ideal blending of 

 physical and mental qualities. 



So in the last analysis it appears that the work 

 of the euthenist is in fullest harmony with that of 

 the eugenist. 



Or, better stated, euthenics is but an aspect of 

 the larger problems of eugenics. The ultimate ob- 

 ject at which they both aim is the development of 

 a race of human beings representing as close an 

 approximation as may be to physical and mental 

 perfection. 



And when we add that such ideal personali- 

 ties command the instinctive admiration of man- 

 kind in general (witness the universally ap- 

 plauded heroes and heroines of stage and story), 

 it requires no further argument to show that in 

 their ultimate influence eugenics, euthenics, and 

 normal love between the sexes are linked in a 

 triumvirate at once harmonious and beneficent. 



THE END 



