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neo-Darwinism
[ nee-oh-dahr-wi-niz-uhm ]
noun
- the theory of evolution as expounded by later students of Charles Darwin, especially Weismann, holding that natural selection accounts for evolution and denying the inheritance of acquired characters.
- any modern theory of evolution holding that species evolve by natural selection acting on genetic variation.
Neo-Darwinism
/ ˌniːəʊˈdɑːwɪnˌɪzəm /
noun
- the modern version of the Darwinian theory of evolution, which incorporates the principles of genetics to explain how inheritable variations can arise by mutation
Neo-Darwinism
/ nē′ō-där′wə-nĭz′əm /
- Darwinism as modified by the findings of modern genetics, stating that mutations due to random copying errors in DNA cause variation within a population of individual organisms and that natural selection acts upon these variations.
Derived Forms
- ˌNeo-Darˈwinian, adjectivenoun
Other Words From
- neo-Dar·wini·an adjective noun
- neo-Darwin·ist noun
Word History and Origins
Origin of neo-Darwinism1
Example Sentences
The overwhelming majority of biologists and geneticists are neo-Darwinists, and one primary tenet of neo-Darwinism is the idea that the genetic mutations which cause living creatures to evolve occur randomly.
Neo-Darwinism refers to any branch of science which combines Charles Darwin's theory of evolution by natural selection with Gregor Mendel's discipline of genetics.
This might cause some of neo-Darwinism's tenets to be revised.
"This shows empirically for the first time a directional response of mutation to a specific long-term environmental pressure. This sort of result cannot be explained by neo-Darwinism, which is limited to explaining minor, gross-level effects on average mutation rates, not responses of specific mutations to specific environmental pressures. Therefore, the implications are that here there is an empirical finding that neo-Darwinism really cannot explain, which challenges the notion of random mutation on a fundamental level."
"The research tells us many things, including the fact that the origination rate of the HbS mutation cannot be explained from the perspective of neo-Darwinism," Livnat told Salon.
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