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قراءة كتاب Problems of Genetics
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PROBLEMS OF GENETICS
SILLIMAN MEMORIAL LECTURES
PUBLISHED BY YALE UNIVERSITY PRESS
ELECTRICITY AND MATTER. By Joseph John Thomson,
d.sc., ll.d., ph.d., f.r.s., Fellow of Trinity College,
Cambridge, Cavendish Professor of Experimental Physics, Cambridge.
Price $1.25 net; postage 10 cents extra.
THE INTEGRATIVE ACTION OF THE NERVOUS SYSTEM.
By Charles S. Sherrington,
d.sc., m.d., hon. ll.d., tor., f.r.s.,
Holt Professor of Physiology in the University of Liverpool.
Price $3.50 net; postage 25 cents extra.
RADIOACTIVE TRANSFORMATIONS. By Ernest Rutherford,
d.sc., ll.d., f.r.s., Macdonald Professor of Physics, McGill University.
Price $3.50 net; postage 22 cents extra.
EXPERIMENTAL AND THEORETICAL APPLICATIONS OF
THERMODYNAMICS TO CHEMISTRY.
By Dr. Walther Nernst,
Professor and Director of the Institute of Physical Chemistry in the University of Berlin.
Price $1.25 net; postage 10 cents extra.
THE PROBLEMS OF GENETICS. By William Bateson, m.a.,
f.r.s., Director of the John Innes Horticultural Institution,
Merton Park, Surrey, England.
Price $4.00 net; postage 25 cents extra.
STELLAR MOTIONS. With Special Reference to Motions
Determined by Means of the Spectrograph. By William
Wallace Campbell, sc.d., ll.d.,
Director of the Lick Observatory, University of California.
Price $4.00 net; postage 30 cents extra.
THEORIES OF SOLUTIONS. By Svante August Arrhenius,
ph.d., sc.d., m.d., Director of the Physico-Chemical Department
of the Nobel Institute, Stockholm, Sweden.
Price $2.25 net; postage 15 cents extra.
IRRITABILITY. A Physiological Analysis of the General
Effect of Stimuli in Living Substances.
By Max Verworn,
Professor at Bonn Physiological Institute.
Price $3.50 net; postage 20 cents extra.
THE EVOLUTION OF MODERN MEDICINE.
By Sir William Osler, Bart., m.d., ll.d., sc.d.,
Regius Professor of Medicine, Oxford University.
Price $3.00 net; postage 40 cents extra.
PROBLEMS OF GENETICS
BY
William Bateson, m.a., f.r.s.
DIRECTOR OF THE JOHN INNES HORTICULTURAL INSTITUTION, HON. FELLOW OF ST. JOHN'S COLLEGE, CAMBRIDGE, AND FORMERLY PROFESSOR OF BIOLOGY IN THE UNIVERSITY
WITH ILLUSTRATIONS
New Haven: Yale University Press
London: Humphrey Milford
Oxford University Press
MCMXIII
Copyright, 1913
By Yale University
First printed August, 1913, 1000 copies
THE SILLIMAN FOUNDATION
In the year 1883 a legacy of about eighty-five thousand dollars was left to the President and Fellows of Yale College in the city of New Haven, to be held in trust, as a gift from her children, in memory of their beloved and honored mother, Mrs. Hepsa Ely Silliman.
On this foundation Yale College was requested and directed to establish an annual course of lectures designed to illustrate the presence and providence, the wisdom and goodness of God, as manifested in the natural and moral world. These were to be designated as the Mrs. Hepsa Ely Silliman Memorial Lectures. It was the belief of the testator that any orderly presentation of the facts of nature or history contributed to the end of this foundation more effectively than any attempt to emphasize the elements of doctrine or of creed; and he therefore provided that lectures on dogmatic or polemical theology should be excluded from the scope of this foundation, and that the subjects should be selected rather from the domains of natural science and history, giving special prominence to astronomy, chemistry, geology, and anatomy.
It was further directed that each annual course should be made the basis of a volume to form part of a series constituting a memorial to Mrs. Silliman. The memorial fund came into the possession of the Corporation of Yale University in the year 1901; and the present volume constitutes the fifth of the series of memorial lectures.
PREFACE
This book gives the substance of a series of lectures delivered in Yale University, where I had the privilege of holding the office of Silliman Lecturer in 1907.
The delay in publication was brought about by a variety of causes.
Inasmuch as the purpose of the lectures is to discuss some of the wider problems of biology in the light of knowledge acquired by Mendelian methods of analysis, it was essential that a fairly full account of the conclusions established by them should first be undertaken and I therefore postponed the present work till a book on Mendel's Principles had been completed.
On attempting a more general discussion of the bearing of the phenomena on the theory of Evolution, I found myself continually hindered by the consciousness that such treatment is premature, and by doubt whether it were not better that the debate should for the present stand indefinitely adjourned. That species have come into existence by an evolutionary process no one seriously doubts; but few who are familiar with the facts that genetic research has revealed are now inclined to speculate as to the manner by which the process has been accomplished. Our knowledge of the nature and properties of living things is far too meagre to justify any such attempts. Suggestions of course can be made: though, however, these ideas may have a stimulating value in the lecture room, they look weak and thin when set out in print. The work which may one day give them a body has yet to be done.
The development of negations is always an ungrateful task apt to be postponed for the positive business of experiment. Such work is happily now going forward in most of the centers of scientific life. Of many of the subjects here treated we already know more than we did in 1907. The delay in production has made it possible to incorporate these new contributions.
The book makes no pretence at being a treatise and the number of illustrative cases has been kept within a moderate compass. A good many of the examples have been chosen from American natural history, as being appropriate to a book intended primarily for American readers. The facts are largely given on the authority of others, and I wish to express my gratitude for the abundant assistance received from American colleagues, especially from the staffs of the American Museum in New York, and of the Boston Museum of Natural History. In connexion