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feeblemindedness การใช้

ประโยคมือถือ
  • By all accounts Vivian was of average intelligence, far above feeblemindedness.
  • The term " blessed " connotes both feeblemindedness and innocence in the eyes of God.
  • Feeblemindedness, alcoholism, and paralysis were few among other traits that were included as physical traits to be judged when looking at family lineage.
  • People who supported the 1924 Immigration Act often used eugenics as justification for restriction of certain races or ethnicities of people in order to prevent the spread of feeblemindedness in American society.
  • At the ranch they encounter the old man, his younger son ( who they learn is called " The Vegetable " due to his feeblemindedness ) and his elder son, Kirk.
  • They believed that blindness, as a hygienic trait, would be an easier target for eugenics legislation than such " defective " traits as " feeblemindedness " or a family history of poverty.
  • Sadler argued that alcoholism and " feeblemindedness, insanity, and delinquency " were hereditary traits and that those who possessed them were breeding at a much faster rate than " superior human beings ".
  • To hide the act, on January 23, 1924, Carrie s foster parents committed the girl to the Virginia State Colony for Epileptics and Feebleminded on the grounds of feeblemindedness, incorrigible behavior and promiscuity.
  • "Foster Kennedy, while professor of neurology at Cornell University in New York, argued that all children with proven mental retardation ( " feeblemindedness " ) over the age of five should be put to death ."
  • The Law for the Prevention of Offspring with Hereditary Diseases not only affected deaf individuals, but also those with other disabilities including mental deficiency, schizophrenia, hereditary epilepsy, blindness, physical deformities, congenital feeblemindedness, and even severe alcoholism.
  • Estabrook's data suggested that the family had actually shown fewer problems over time, but he pronounced that the Jukes family were " unredeemed " and suffering from just as much " feeblemindedness, indolence, licentiousness and dishonesty " as they had been in the past.
  • The only local critic who might conceivably have objected, H . L . Mencken, the city's grand curmudgeon journalist, is long dead and gone, along with his chance to coin some fresh umbrage : " purple booboisie, " perhaps, at the joining of two of his least favorite things, the callowness of the bourgeoisie ( " The average man simply spends his leisure as a dog spends it . " ) and the shallowness of sports fandom ( " a kind of feeblemindedness " ).
  • R鰄l wrote : " It is now generally recognised that people cannot be classified as " either " hetero-" or " homosexual . . . Instead there were various intermediate stages between these extremes into which Philipp Eulenburg and some of his friends surely fitted . . . Such fine distinctions perished, however in an intellectual climate in which, following the teachings of the Heidelberg psychiatry professor, Emil Kraepelin,'contrary sexual proclivities'were classified along with'idiocy','cretinism', and'congenital feeblemindedness'as a form of'lunacy'".