
This paper argues that the historiography of genetics ∼1900, the formation period of modern science, is too narrow. It lacks attention to plant breeding. Perhaps this omission also narrows the present understanding of fundamental ideas like the genotype/phenotype distinction and the gene concept? There is a mythical story still told in textbooks and at anniversaries: As modern genetics started with the rediscovery of Mendel's laws in 1900, a fateful controversy over continuous or discontinuous variation of heredity between biometricians and Mendelians. Discontinuity appeared as a threat to the Darwinian theory of evolution by natural selection. Only by the 1920s was the problem solved by a theory of population genetics founded on the chromosome theory of heredity.1 However, in plant breeding ∼1900 ideas of heredity and evolution were closely intertwined, and the combination of discontinuous heredity with continuous Darwinian evolution was an obvious option.
Plant Breeding, Genetics, Population, Heredity, Phenotype, PERSPECTIVES, Genetics, History, 19th Century, History, 20th Century, Plants, Selection, Genetic, Biological Evolution
Plant Breeding, Genetics, Population, Heredity, Phenotype, PERSPECTIVES, Genetics, History, 19th Century, History, 20th Century, Plants, Selection, Genetic, Biological Evolution
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