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Two geniuses of the last century provided the fundamental principles
on which much of what we do today still depends. Francis Galton's
boundless curiosity, ingenuity and passion for
measurement were combined in seminal insights and contributions which
established the foundations of the scientific study of individual
differences. Karl Pearson's three-volume scientific biography of Galton is an enthralling testimony to Galton's
fascination and skill in bringing a rich variety of intriguing
problems under scientific scrutiny. His Inquiry into the
Efficacy of Prayer reveals Galton to be a true ``child of the
Enlightenment'' to whom nothing was sacred. To him we owe the first
systematic studies of individual differences and family resemblance,
the recognition that the difference between MZ and DZ twins provided a
valuable point of departure for resolving the effects of genes and
culture, the first mathematical model (albeit inadequate) for the
similarity between relatives, and the development of the correlation
coefficient as a measure of association between variables that did not
depend on the units of measurement.
The specificity that Galton's theory of inheritance lacked
was supplied by the classical experiments of Gregor Mendel on
plant hybridization. Mendel's demonstration that the inheritance
of model traits in carefully bred material agreed with a simple
theory of particulate inheritance still remains one of the
stunning examples of how the alliance of quantitative thinking
and painstaking experimentation can predict, in advance of any
observations of chromosome behavior or molecular science, the
necessary properties of the elementary processes underlying such
complex phenomena as heredity and variation.
Next: 3 Genetic, Factor, and
Up: 6 The Context of
Previous: 1 Early History
  Index
Jeff Lessem
2002-03-21