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12 - Gene–environment complexities: what is interesting to measure and to model?

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 January 2010

Peter Taylor
Affiliation:
Program on Critical and Creative Thinking, Graduate College of Education, University of Massachusetts, Boston
Rama S. Singh
Affiliation:
McMaster University, Ontario
Marcy K. Uyenoyama
Affiliation:
Duke University, North Carolina
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Summary

Preamble – 1974

The year 1974 saw the publication of two influential works by Richard Lewontin. In different ways both addressed the measurement and characterization of genetic variation and asked whether the resulting knowledge is interesting – what can we explain or do with it?

The Genetic Basis of Evolutionary Change (1974a) was firmly positioned within the population genetic tradition of viewing evolution as a change of gene frequencies in a population over time. In this light it was obviously important to characterize the amount of genetic variation and account for its maintenance. Lewontin's book masterfully synthesized research on genetic diversity in laboratory and natural populations in relation to models of selection or its absence. At the same time he drew attention to some troublesome themes for evolutionary biology. It was not variation as such that should count, but variation that resulted in differential fitness among the variants. Yet measurements of the components of fitness – survival and reproduction – were possible only when the phenotypic effect of a single allelic substitution was large, not when the effects of gene substitutions made only small differences. This led Lewontin to remark that: “What we can measure is by definition uninteresting and what we are interested in is by definition unmeasurable” (Lewontin 1974a, p. 23).

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2004

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