Interest in Genetics of "Lesser" Animals Betrays our Connection to Them

Genetics has enticed a great many explorers during the past two decades. They have labored with fruit-flies and guinea-pigs, with sweet peas and corn, with thousands of animals and plants in fact, and they have made heredity no longer a mystery but an exact science to be ranked close behind physics and chemistry in definiteness of conception. One is inclined to believe, however, that the unique magnetic attraction of genetics lies in the vision of potential good which it holds for mankind rather than a circumscribed interest in the hereditary mechanisms of the lowly species used as laboratory material. If man had been found to be sharply demarcated from the rest of the occupants of the world, so that his heritage of physical form, of physiological function, and of mental attributes came about in a superior manner setting him apart as lord of creation, interest in the genetics of the humbler organisms—if one admits the truth—would have flagged severely. Biologists would have turned their attention largely to the ways of human heredity, in spite of the fact that the difficulties encountered would have rendered progress slow and uncertain. Since this was not the case, since the laws ruling the inheritance of the denizens of the garden and the inmates of the stable were found to be applicable to prince and potentate as well, one could shut himself up in his laboratory and labor to his heart's content, feeling certain that any truth which it fell to his lot to discover had a real human interest, after all.

Notes:

If we were not related to them, then there would be little scientific interest in exploring them.

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Concepts:
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Genetics (0.779816): dbpedia | freebase | opencyc
Charles Darwin (0.700390): dbpedia | freebase | opencyc | yago
Heredity (0.542977): dbpedia | freebase
Heritability (0.517000): dbpedia | freebase
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 Mankind at the crossroads
Books, Brochures, and Chapters>Book:  East , Edward Murray (1924), Mankind at the crossroads, Ayer Co Pub, Retrieved on 2012-04-26
  • Source Material [books.google.com]
  • Folksonomies: social science