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Theoretical Population Genetics in the Evolutionary Synthesis

  • Richard C Lewontin
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The Evolutionary Synthesis
This chapter is in the book The Evolutionary Synthesis

Chapters in this book

  1. Frontmatter i
  2. Contents v
  3. Prologue: Some Thoughts on the History of the Evolutionary Synthesis 1
  4. Introduction 51
  5. Theoretical Population Genetics in the Evolutionary Synthesis 58
  6. Introduction 69
  7. The evolution of Genetic Systems: Contributions of Cytology to Evolutionary Theory 70
  8. Cytology in the T. H. Morgan School 80
  9. Cytogenetics and the Neo-Darwinian Synthesis 86
  10. Introduction 96
  11. Embryology and the Modern Synthesis in Evolutionary Theory 97
  12. The modern Evolutionary Synthesis and the Biogenetic Law 112
  13. The role of Systematics in the Evolutionary Synthesis 123
  14. Introduction 137
  15. Botany and the Synthetic Theory of Evolution 139
  16. Introduction 153
  17. G. G. Simpson, Paleontology, and the Modern Synthesis 153
  18. Introduction 173
  19. Morphology in the Evolutionary Synthesis 174
  20. The Failure of Morphology to Assimilate Darwinism 180
  21. Severtsov and Schmalhausen: Russian Morphology and the Evolutionary Synthesis 193
  22. The Birth of the Genetic Theory of Evolution in the Soviet Union in the 1920s 229
  23. Sergei Chetverikov, the Kol'tsov Institute, and the Evolutionary Synthesis 242
  24. Introduction 279
  25. Historical Development of the Present Synthetic Neo-Darwinism in Germany 284
  26. Evolutionary Theory in Germany: a Comment 303
  27. Introduction 309
  28. Evolutionary Biology in France at the Time of the Evolutionary Synthesis 309
  29. The Arrivai of Neo-Darwinism in France 321
  30. A Second Glance at Evolutionary Biology in France 322
  31. Introduction 329
  32. Some Recollections Pertaining to the Evolutionary Synthesis 334
  33. Lamarckìsm in Britain and the United States 343
  34. A Note on W. L. Tower's Leptinotarsa Work 352
  35. Introduction 354
  36. The Evolutionary Synthesis: Morgan and Natural Selection Revisited 356
  37. Hypotheses That Blur and Grow 383
  38. Introduction 387
  39. The Meaning of the Evolutionary Synthesis 388
  40. 14. Epilogue 399
  41. How I Became a Darwinian 413
  42. Curt Stern 424
  43. J. B. S. Haldane, R. A. Fisher, and William Bateson 430
  44. Morgan and the Theory of Natural Selection 432
  45. Morgan and His School in the 1930s 445
  46. G. G. Simpson 452
  47. Contributors 467
  48. Conference Participants 468
  49. Index 469
  50. Preface ix
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