The Missing Organism and the Cost of Evolutionary Abstraction
In the early twentieth century, evolutionary biology faced a crisis of reconciliation. Charles Darwin proposed natural selection as the mechanism of evolution, but lacked a coherent theory of inheritance. Gregor Mendel provided the rules of inheritance, yet early geneticists viewed Mendelian mutation as a sudden process contradicting Darwinian gradualism. The resolution of this tension, forged in the nineteen forties, became known as the Modern Synthesis. This grand unification brought together genetics, paleontology, and systematics, creating a cohesive framework that remains the foundation of evolutionary theory. However, the triumph of the Modern Synthesis came with a profound structural bias. Its architects achieved consensus by elevating one specific discipline above all others: the highly quantitative, mathematically rigorous field of population genetics. The mathematical focus of the Modern Synthesis was on population genetics. By abstracting organisms into mathematical models o...