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Books > Science & Mathematics > Biology, life sciences > Developmental biology
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Axial Character Seriation in Mammals - An Historical and Morphological Exploration of the Origin, Development, Use, and Current Collapse of the Homology Paradigm (Paperback)
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Axial Character Seriation in Mammals - An Historical and Morphological Exploration of the Origin, Development, Use, and Current Collapse of the Homology Paradigm (Paperback)
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Modern biology is increasingly focused on the role of repetitive
anatomical structures in the embryological construction of
organisms. The discovery of the homeobox (Hox) genes by Edward
Lewis in 1978 ushered in a series of stunning revelations such as
the fundamental commonality of insect segments and mammalian
vertebrae - a wild and ridiculed idea first proposed by Etienne
Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire in 1822 that has now been proven correct.
Axial Character Seriation in Mammals is an unabridged edition of
the 1986 Harvard University PhD Thesis of Aaron G. Filler, MD, PhD
that pioneered our modern reassessment of mammalian vertebrae in
the light of the new homeotic biology. As Dr. Filler points out in
fascinating detail, the leading explanations of similarity among
animals before Darwin were arrayed around the vertebrae of the
spine in works by Sir Richard Owen, Johann Wolfgang Goethe and
Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire. This was the theoretical structure that was
overturned and demolished by Darwin's ideas about similarity due to
common descent. In a stunning reversal, modern homeotic genetics
has shown that repeating structures are indeed critical to
understanding animal similarity. This work is the first study of
the modern era that views vertebrae as a key to unlocking the way
in which Nature has organized repeating biological structures. For
the 150 years since the Great Academy Debate of 1830 appeared to
demolish Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire's ideas, vertebrae have been seen
as no more than some bones in Vertebrate animals that are involved
in support and locomotion. Axial Character Seriation in Mammals,
however, explores the fascinating traces of how the morphogenetic
genes sculpt and organizeserially repeating structures, thus
re-establishing the vertebrae as a legitimate and compelling
subject of modern science.
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