Article ID: CBB928770929

Francis Galton’s Regression Towards Mediocrity and the Stability of Types (2021)

unapi

A prevalent narrative locates the discovery of the statistical phenomenon of regression to the mean in the work of Francis Galton. It is claimed that after 1885, Galton came to explain the fact that offspring deviated less from the mean value of the population than their parents did as a population-level statistical phenomenon and not as the result of the processes of inheritance. Arguing against this claim, we show that Galton did not explain regression towards mediocrity statistically, and did not give up on his ideas regarding an inheritance process that caused offspring to revert to the mean. While the common narrative focuses almost exclusively on Galton’s statistics, our arguments emphasize the anthropological and biological questions that Galton addressed. Galton used regression towards mediocrity to support the claim that some biological types were more stable than others and hence were resistant to evolutionary change. This view had implications concerning both natural selection and eugenics. The statistical explanation attributed to Galton appeared later, during the biometrician-mutationist debate in the early 1900s. It was in the context of this debate and specifically by the biometricians, that the development of the statistical explanation was originally attributed to Galton.

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Authors & Contributors
Radick, Gregory
Jablonka, Eva
Markus Scholz
Bruce Richard Erick Peirson
Tamborini, Marco
Pereira Martins, Lilian Al-Chueyr
Journals
Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part C: Studies in History and Philosophy of Biological and Biomedical Sciences
Philosophy of Science
Nuncius: Annali di Storia della Scienza
Journal of the History of Biology
International Statistical Review
History and Philosophy of the Life Sciences
Publishers
University of California, Santa Barbara
Open University (United Kingdom)
Arizona State University
The Mathematical Association
Reaktion Books
Palgrave Macmillan
Concepts
Biology
Evolution
Inheritance
Genetics
Statistics
Anthropology
People
Galton, Francis
Darwin, Charles Robert
Darwin, George Howard
Bateson, William
Neumayr, Melchior (1845-1890)
Jacobs, Joseph
Time Periods
19th century
20th century, early
20th century, late
21st century
Places
Great Britain
Americas
United States
Germany
Vienna (Austria)
Institutions
Johns Hopkins University (Baltimore, Md.)
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