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degenerati

Degenerati is a term used in Latin and in several European languages, notably Italian, to refer to individuals perceived as morally or biologically degenerate. The word comes from degeneratus, meaning degenerated. In historical texts it functioned as a label rather than a precise diagnosis and was applied across a range of conditions or characteristics that were deemed undesirable by prevailing norms.

From the 19th into the early 20th century, concepts of degeneration influenced medicine, law, and public policy.

In modern discourse, the term is criticized as insulting and scientifically unfounded. Contemporary language favors precise

Because it carries pejorative connotations, degenerati terminology is typically treated as a relic of past prejudices

The
label
degenerati
was
used
for
groups
considered
socially
deviant
or
inferior
on
the
basis
of
mental
or
physical
conditions,
behavior,
or
birth
characteristics.
In
some
contexts
it
intersected
with
eugenics
and
racial
hygiene
ideologies,
where
degenerate
groups
were
subjected
to
coercive
measures,
segregation,
or
sterilization
in
certain
regimes.
clinical
diagnoses
and
a
commitment
to
human
rights
and
dignity.
The
word
survives
mainly
in
historical
sources,
translations
of
older
works,
or
discussions
about
the
history
of
medicine
and
ideology
rather
than
as
a
neutral
descriptor.
rather
than
a
valid
classificatory
category
in
current
professional
or
academic
usage.