
doi: 10.1007/bf00156321
pmid: 11612609
In the modern interpretation of Mendelism, facts are being transformed into factors at a rapid rate. If one factor will not explain the facts, then two are invoked; if two prove insufficient, three will sometimes work out. The superior jugglery sometimes necessary to account for the results may blind us, if taken too naively, to the common-place that the results are often so excellently "explained" because the explanation was invented to explain them.1
History, Modern 1601-, Genetics
History, Modern 1601-, Genetics
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