Some facts which suggest the idea that the desire for alcoholic stimulants is not only transmitted by hereditary descent, but that it is also felt with increasing force from generation to generation, and thus strongly tends to deteriorate the human race
Citation:
Haughton, James 'Some facts which suggest the idea that the desire for alcoholic stimulants is not only transmitted by hereditary descent, but that it is also felt with increasing force from generation to generation, and thus strongly tends to deteriorate the human race'. - Dublin: Dublin Statistical Society,Vol.II, Part XII, 1858, pp203-214Download Item:

Abstract:
My object will be attained if I shall have awakened this new
idea in any of your minds, so that it may lead to a further and
more searching investigation of this important question. For surely
it will be considered by all a matter of no light importance, to
ascertain whether, in indulging our propensity for alcoholic stimulants,
we may not be handing down to our children the seeds of
fierce desire, which will, almost of necessity, hurry them in a
career of vice and crime, and cause them to transmit to their successors,
in accumulating force, those influences which lead to a
rapid deterioration of our race.
Description:
Read 15th February, 1858
Author: Haughton, James
Publisher:
Dublin Statistical SocietyType of material:
Journal articleCollections:
Series/Report no:
Journal of the Dublin Statistical SocietyVol.II, Part XII, 1858
Availability:
Full text availableKeywords:
Alcoholism, Hereditary aspects, IntemperanceISSN:
00814776Licences: