Lamarckism - Dictionary Definition and Overview

Lamarckism :  (noun)

1: a theory of organic evolution claiming that acquired characteristics are transmitted to offspring [syn: Lamarckism]

Based on WordNet 2.0

Lamarckism : \La"marck"ism\, n. [Based on Lamarck, a distinguished French naturalist.] (Biol.) The theory that structural variations, characteristic of species and genera, are produced in animals and plants by the direct influence of physical environments, and esp., in the case of animals, by effort, or by use or disuse of certain organs.

Based on Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary

Lamarckism :  Lamarckism: The theory of acquired characteristics put forth by Jean-Baptiste P.A. Lamarck (1744-1829), a French botanist, zoologist and biological philosopher.

According to Lamarck, evolution occurs because organisms can inherit traits acquired by their ancestors. Giraffes can only survive by eating leaves high up on trees so they stretch their necks to reach the leaves and this stretching of the neck is passed on to later generations.

The basic tenet of Lamarckism has been rejected. Darwinism (the theory of the origin of species and the development of higher organisms from lower forms through natural selection, the survival of the fittest, and the evolution of humans from an ancestor common to himself and the apes) has prevailed, together with the principles of transmission genetics.

Lysenkoism was a 20th-century Soviet version of Lamarckism.



Based on Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary (1913)
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