From embryology to evo-devo : a history of developmental evolution
Dibner Institute studies in the history of science and technology
Dibner Institute studies in the history of science and technology.
1. Introduction / Does history recapitulate itself? : epistemological reflections on the origins of evolutionary developmental biology / Ontogeny and phylogeny in early twentieth-century biology -- Living with the biogenetic law : a reappraisal / William Bateson's physicalist ideas / To evo-devo through cells, embryos, and morphogenesis / century of evo-devo : the dialectics of analysis and synthesis in twentieth-century life science
cell as the basis for heredity, development, and evolution : Richard Goldschmidt's program of physiological genetics / Roots and problems of evolutionary developmental biology -- relations between comparative embryology, morphology, and systematics : an American perspective / Morphological and paleontological perspectives for a history of evo-devo / Echoes of Haeckel? : reentrenching development in evolution
Fate maps, gene expression maps, and the evidentiary structure of evolutionary developmental biology / Tracking organic processes : representations and research styles in classical embryology and genetics / juncture of evolutionary and developmental biology / Reflections -- Tapping many sources : the adventitious roots of evo-devo in the nineteenth century / Six memos for ev-devo / current state and the future of developmental evolution / About the authors -- Index.
Laubichler, Manfred Dietrich.
Maienschein, Jane.
Manfred D. Laubichler Jane Maienschein -- Manfred D. Laubichler -- Frederick B. Churchill -- Stuart A. Newman -- Jane Maienschein -- Garland E. Allen --
Marsha L. Richmond -- John P. Wourms -- Alan C. Love -- William C. Wimsatt --
Scott F. Gilbert -- James Griesemer -- Elihu M. Gerson -- Brian K. Hall -- Gerd B. Müller -- Günter P. Wagner --
edited by Manfred D. Laubichler and Jane Maienschein.