1800s: Darwin’s Problem - Deepstash
1800s: Darwin’s Problem

1800s: Darwin’s Problem

In the 1800s, Charles Darwin had big ideas about how species evolved when natural selection killed off members with bad traits. But he didn’t have a good grasp on how those traits were passed along from parent to child. What he put forth was similar to Hippocrates’s idea - that body parts emit particles that affect eggs and sperm. He called them gemmules, thinking that better body parts produced better gemmules, and that each parents gemmules would blend in a baby. But his theory of evolution kind of needed inherited traits to be stable, unchanging units.

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