Problems of Genetics
Cambridge Library Collection - Darwin, Evolution and Genetics Series

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These lectures, published in 1913, illuminate the formation of theories that are central to modern genetics.

Language: English
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A key figure in the field of evolutionary biology, William Bateson (1861?1926) revived Mendelian methods of analysis to develop Darwin's theory of evolution, thereby pioneering the study of genetics. In these lectures, published at Yale in 1913, Bateson systematically chronicles the era's conflicting and developing theories on taxonomy, speciation, variation and hybridisation, and includes his own thoughts on continuous and discontinuous variation and its causes. Drawing on the comparative physiology and anatomy of species that he knew from his wide experience, citing detailed examples from across the taxonomic kingdoms, Bateson brings to life this exciting time in biology. Because the theories central to the modern understanding of genetics, heredity and evolution were formed at this time, this work remains valuable and relevant to students of biology and the history of science.
Preface; 1. Introductory; 2. Meristic phenomena; 3. Segmentation, organic and mechanical; 4. The classification of variation and the nature of substantive variation; 5. The mutation theory; 6. Variation and locality; 7. Local differentiation; 8. Locally differentiated forms; 9. The effects of changed conditions; 10. The effects of changed conditions (cont.); 11. The sterility of hybrids; Appendix; Index.