The Organism Reimagined: Epigenetics and the Extended Evolutionary Synthesis
The central role of the organism in evolutionary biology has undergone a significant transformation throughout the twentieth and early twenty-first centuries. From early conceptualizations to the burgeoning Extended Evolutionary Synthesis (EES), the understanding of how organisms contribute to and are shaped by evolution has become increasingly nuanced. A key player in this re-evaluation is epigenetics, a field that profoundly challenges the tenets of the Modern Synthesis and pushes the boundaries of our understanding of heredity and adaptation. Early in the twentieth century, the organism was often viewed as a relatively passive recipient of evolutionary forces, primarily natural selection acting on Mendelian genes. While some early thinkers acknowledged the organism’s developmental plasticity and its potential role in shaping variation, these ideas largely fell by the wayside with the ascendancy of the Modern Synthesis. The Modern Synthesis, forged in the mid-twentie...