
pmid: 21447330
The rise of evolutionary developmental biology was not the progressive isolation and characterization of developmental genes and gene networks. Many obstacles had to be overcome: the idea that all genes were more or less involved in development; the evidence that developmental processes in insects had nothing in common with those of vertebrates. Different lines of research converged toward the creation of evolutionary developmental biology, giving this field of research its present heterogeneity. This does not prevent all those working in the field from sharing the conviction that a precise characterization of evolutionary variations is required to fully understand the evolutionary process. Some evolutionary developmental biologists directly challenge the Modern Synthesis. I propose some ways to reconcile these apparently opposed visions of evolution. The turbulence seen in evolutionary developmental biology reflects the present entry of history into biology.
History, Insecta, Actualism, Cell Biology, History, 20th Century, Biological Evolution, Developmental gene, Epistemological obstacle, Animals, Humans, Gene Regulatory Networks, Regulatory gene, Molecular Biology, Developmental Biology
History, Insecta, Actualism, Cell Biology, History, 20th Century, Biological Evolution, Developmental gene, Epistemological obstacle, Animals, Humans, Gene Regulatory Networks, Regulatory gene, Molecular Biology, Developmental Biology
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