Abbreviations
Prologue
Part I. Genesis of a Geneticist
1 A Cambridge Childhood (1861-1882
2 From Virginia to the Aral Sea (1883-1889)
3 Galton
4 Variation (1890-1894)
5 Romanes
6 Reorientation and Controversy (1895-1899)
7 What Life May Be
Part II. Mendelism
8 Rediscovery (1900-1901)
9 Mendel's Bulldog (1902-1906)
10 Bateson's Bulldog
11 On Course (1907-1908)
12 Darwin Centenary (1909)
13 Chromosomes
Part III. The Innes Years
14 Passages (1910-1914)
15 Eugenics
16 War (1915-1919)
17 My Respectful Homage (1920-1922)
18 Limits Undetermined (1923-1926)
Part IV. Politics
19 Butler
20 Pilgrimages
21 Kammerer
22 Science and Chauvinism
23 Degrees for Women
Part V. Eclipse
24 Bashing
25 Epilogue
Part VI. Further Rediscovery
26 The Third Base
27 Mendel Basics
28 Romanes, Bateson, and Darwin's "Weak Point"
29 Bateson's Residue: Oligonucleotide Disharmony
Publications of William Bateson
References and Notes
Acknowledgements
Index
Alan Cock (1926–2005) was a son-in-law of a colleague of Tschermak, one of the botanist "rediscoverers" of Mendel. His undergraduate studies in Zoology at Cambridge led to work with Michael Pease (1947-57) at the Agricultural Research Council Poultry Genetics Unit. Since Pease had himself assisted Punnett, who was Bateson's main assistant, then Alan can be seen as Bateson's "scientific great grandson." After doctoral work in Genetics (Edinburgh 1962), he became lecturer in Zoology at the University of Southampton. In the early, pre-history, phase of his career, his work with Morten Simonsen provided a fundamental understanding of the graft-versus-host reaction (Immunology 1958 1, 103-110). In the 1960s he and Stephen Jay Gould were leaders in studies of animal growth and form (allometry; Q. Rev. Biol. 1966 41, 131-190). In the 1970s he repatriated, curated and catalogued the papers of William Bateson, and wrote several important papers on, and initiated a definitive biographyof, Bateson (later coauthored with Forsdyke). He corresponded and/or collaborated with many important mid-late-20th century figures.
Donald Forsdyke was born in London, UK (1938), and has degrees in Medicine (St. Mary's Hospital Medical School) and in Biochemistry (Ph.D, Cambridge University). He has engaged in research and teaching at the Department of Biochemistry, Queen's University, Kingston, Canada, since 1968. His research includes the concept and mechanism of positive selection of lymphocyte repertoires, discovery of the lectin pathway of complement activation, identification of lymphocyte activation genes, bioinformatic analyses of DNA sequences relating to introns and speciation, and biohistory with special reference to evolutionary biology and the roles of George Romanes, William Bateson and Samuel Butler. His interest in history derives from a belief that understanding how science has progressed in the past will aid its progress in the future.