The Synthesis of Silence: Why Population Genetics Forsook Epigenetics
In the early to mid-twentieth century, the formalization of population genetics the Modern Synthesis marked a pivotal moment in biology. By wedding Mendelian inheritance with Darwinian natural selection, scientists like Ronald Fisher, J.B.S. Haldane, and Sewall Wright constructed a mathematically rigorous framework that defined evolution as changes in allele frequencies within a population over time. However, this foundational period was characterized by a distinct and deliberate exclusion of non-genetic inheritance. The systematic dismissal of epigenetic phenomena was not merely a scientific oversight; it was rooted in a profound philosophical commitment to the Darwinian paradigm and an intense, almost reactive rejection of Lamarckian inheritance. To understand why population genetics hardened into a strictly "gene-centric" discipline, one must appreciate the intellectual climate of the era. The rediscovery of Mendel’s laws in 1900 provided the mechanism of inheritance that...