ABSTRACT

When it comes to critics of eugenics from within the biological sciences, few are as renowned and respected as the British medical geneticist Lionel Sharpless Penrose (1898–1972). It was not simply that he was severe and incisive in his criticism – this was a characteristic he shared with the left -wing biologists J. B. S. Haldane and Lancelot Hogben. Penrose is considered unique in terms of the depth and consistency of his censure. While others may have tempered their criticisms by declaring a determination to distinguish a true eugenics from false, to place it on a sure scientific footing, Penrose identifies the very idea of eugenics to be fatally flawed. He is celebrated for his critique; Deborah Thom and Mary Jennings see Penrose serving as ‘almost the Galileo of genetics, establishing “true science” in the face of the religiosity of the eugenicists’. 1 In more measured terms, Diane Paul sees his position to be ‘a major exception’ among mid-century biologists. 2