peoples are subject to the same Darwinian laws of natural selection as plants and
animals." The term, Social Darwinism, originated from the theory of evolution first argued
by Charles Darwin. He suggested the evolution of species by natural selection, which
explains the term "survival of the fittest". In 1859, a man named Herbert Spencer
published a book, On the Origin of Species, which advocated the ideology of Social
Darwinism. One of the key viewpoints which Social Darwinism justified was the supposed
racial superiority of Anglo-Saxons over people from other races. Social Darwinism also
discouraged social intervention and reform, stating that whether or