The word 'eugenics' stands as one of the most cautionary examples in the history of scientific terminology — a word whose benign etymological meaning ('well-born') was used to legitimize some of the twentieth century's worst atrocities. It was coined in 1883 by Francis Galton, Charles Darwin's half-cousin, from the Greek adjective 'eugenēs' (well-born, of noble race), combining 'eu-' (good, well) with 'genos' (race, kind), from PIE *ǵenh₁- (to give birth).
Galton defined eugenics as 'the study of agencies under social control that may improve or impair the racial qualities of future generations, both physically and mentally.' He conceived it as a science of human improvement through selective breeding, analogous to the selective breeding that had improved livestock and crops for millennia. The word was deliberately coined to sound positive and scientific — 'well-born' carried associations of nobility and excellence.
The eugenics movement gained enormous institutional support in the early twentieth century, particularly in the United States and Britain. Eugenics societies, eugenics research institutions, and eugenics legislation proliferated. The United States enacted compulsory sterilization laws in over thirty states; between 1907 and 1983, more than 60,000 Americans were forcibly sterilized under these laws. The Supreme Court upheld compulsory sterilization in Buck v. Bell (1927), with Justice
The Nazi regime adopted and radicalized American eugenics programs, implementing forced sterilization of an estimated 400,000 people and ultimately extending eugenic logic to the genocide of the Holocaust. The Nuremberg trials after World War II exposed the full horror of eugenic ideology in practice, and the word 'eugenics' became permanently associated with racial persecution and state violence.
The Greek root 'eu-' (good, well) appears in many English words that retain positive associations: 'euphoria' (good feeling), 'eulogy' (good words), 'euphemism' (good speech — a pleasant word substituting for an unpleasant one), 'euthanasia' (good death). The personal name 'Eugene' (well-born) and its feminine form 'Eugenia' have been popular since antiquity and carry no negative associations. The contrast between the innocence of the etymology and the horror of the history is itself instructive: words do not contain their futures, and 'good birth' can be made to serve evil ends.
Modern genetics has inherited the scientific questions that eugenics raised — about heredity, genetic variation, and the relationship between genes and traits — while overwhelmingly rejecting the coercive social programs that the word names. The emergence of genetic counseling, prenatal testing, and gene editing has reopened ethical debates about human genetic intervention, but these discussions deliberately avoid the word 'eugenics,' which remains too contaminated by its history to be rehabilitated.