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Trofim Lysenko

Trofim Denisovich Lysenko (Russian: Трофи́м Дени́сович Лысе́нко, Ukrainian: Трохи́м Дени́сович Лисе́нко, Ukrainian pronunciation: [troˈxɪm deˈnɪsowɪtʃ lɪˈsɛnko]; 29 September [O.S. 17 September] 1898 – 20 November 1976) was a Soviet agronomist and pseudo-scientist.[1] He was a strong proponent of Lamarckism, and rejected Mendelian genetics in favour of his own idiosyncratic, pseudoscientific ideas later termed Lysenkoism.[2][3][4]

Trofim Lysenko
Трофим Лысенко
Lysenko in 1938
Born
Trofim Denisovich Lysenko

(1898-09-29)29 September 1898
Died20 November 1976(1976-11-20) (aged 78)
CitizenshipSoviet Union
Alma materKiev Agricultural Institute
Known for
Scientific career
Fields
InstitutionsSoviet Academy of Sciences
Signature

In 1940, Lysenko became director of the Institute of Genetics within the USSR's Academy of Sciences, and he used his political influence and power to suppress dissenting opinions and discredit, marginalize, and imprison his critics, elevating his anti-Mendelian theories to state-sanctioned doctrine.[5]

Soviet scientists who refused to renounce genetics were dismissed from their posts and left destitute. Hundreds if not thousands of others were imprisoned. Several were sentenced to death as enemies of the state, including the botanist Nikolai Vavilov.[6] Lysenko's ideas and practices contributed to the famines that killed millions of Soviet people;[6] the adoption of his methods from 1958 in the People's Republic of China had similarly calamitous results, culminating in the Great Chinese Famine of 1959 to 1962.[6]

Early life and career edit

The son of Denis and Oksana Lysenko, Trofim Lysenko was born into a peasant family of Ukrainian ethnicity in Karlivka, Poltava Governorate (present-day Poltava Oblast, Ukraine) on 29 September 1898.[7]

As a young man working at the Kyiv Agricultural Institute (now the National University of Life and Environmental Sciences of Ukraine), Lysenko found himself interested in agriculture, where he worked on a few different projects, one involving the effects of temperature variation on the life-cycle of plants. This later led him to consider how he might use this work to convert winter wheat into spring wheat. He named the process "jarovization" in Russian, and later translated it as "vernalization".[8]

The conversion of winter wheat into spring wheat was not a new discovery. Scientific experiments had been done by Nikolai Vavilov.[9] It was Vavilov who initially supported Lysenko and encouraged him in his work. Lysenko had a difficult time trying to grow various crops (such as peas and wheat) through the harsh winters. However, when he announced success, he was praised in the Soviet newspaper Pravda for his claims to have discovered a method to fertilize fields without using fertilizers or minerals, and to have shown that a winter crop of peas could be grown in Azerbaijan, "turning the barren fields of the Transcaucasus green in winter, so that cattle will not perish from poor feeding, and the peasant Turk will live through the winter without trembling for tomorrow."[10]

 
Lysenko speaking at the Kremlin in 1935. Behind him are Stanislav Kosior, Anastas Mikoyan, Andrei Andreyev and Joseph Stalin

Lysenko worked with different wheat crops to try to convert them to grow in different seasons. Another area Lysenko found himself interested in was the effect of heat on plant growth. He believed that every plant needed a determinate amount of heat throughout its lifetime. He attempted to correlate the time and the amount of heat required by a particular plant to go through various phases of development. To get his data he looked at the amount of growth, how many days went by, and the temperature on those days, instead of measuring any actual heat. In trying to determine the effects, he was making mistakes in statistical analysis of data. He was confronted by Maksimov, who was an expert on thermal plant development. Lysenko did not take well to this or any criticism. After this encounter, Lysenko boldly claimed that mathematics had no place in biology.[10]

His experimental research in improved crop yields earned him the support of the Soviet leader Joseph Stalin, especially following the famine and loss of productivity resulting from crop failures and forced collectivization in several regions of the Soviet Union in the early 1930s.

Vernalization edit

In 1927, at the age of 29, working at an agricultural experiment station in Azerbaijan, Lysenko embarked on the research that would lead to his 1928 paper on vernalization, which drew wide attention because of its potential practical implications for Soviet agriculture. Severe cold and lack of winter snow had destroyed many early winter-wheat seedlings. By treating wheat seeds with moisture as well as cold, Lysenko induced them to bear a crop when planted in spring. Lysenko coined the term "Jarovization" (яровизация) to describe this chilling process, which he used to make the seeds of winter cereals behave like spring cereals. (Because spring cereals are called Jarovoe in Russian – from jarovój, an archaic adjective meaning spring, especially in relation to crops). However, this method had already been known by farmers since the 1800s, and had recently been discussed in detail by Gustav Gassner in 1918. Lysenko himself translated Jarovization as "vernalization" (from the Latin vernum meaning Spring).[11] Lysenko's claims for increased yields were based on plantings over a few hectares, and he believed that the vernalized transformation could be inherited, that the offspring of a vernalized plant would themselves possess the capabilities of the generation that preceded it – that it too would be able to withstand harsh winters or imperfect weather conditions.[12]

Lysenko's theories edit

 
Lysenko proposed an influence of the body on inheritance similar to Darwin's pangenesis theory, that every part of the body emits tiny gemmules which migrate to the gonads and are transferred to offspring. Gemmules were thought to develop into their associated body parts as offspring matures. The theory implied that changes to the body during an organism's life would be inherited, as proposed in Lamarckism.[13]

Lysenko rejected Mendelian genetic inheritance theory in favour of his own logic. He believed Gregor Mendel's theory to be too reactionary or idealist. Lysenko's ideas were a mixture of his own, those of Russian agronomist Ivan Michurin, and of other Soviet scientists.[14] Through this mixture of ideas, Lysenko founded the "Michurinist" school of thought.[14] The core ideas are that body cells (the soma) determine the quality of an organism's offspring; every part of the body contributes to the germ cells, in the manner of Darwin's theory of pangenesis, though Lysenko denied any such connection.[15]

These ideas were not directly derived from established biological theories such as Mendelian genetics, Lamarckism or Darwinism. He shaped his genetic concepts to support the simple practical purpose of breeding and improving crops. His ideas were also shaped to disprove other claims made by his fellow geneticists. His ideas and genetic claims later began to be termed "Lysenkoism". He claimed that his ideas were not associated with Lamarckism, but there are similarities between the two ideas, such as a belief in the inheritance of acquired characteristics.[15] Some of Lysenko's ideas can also seem to be vitalistic. He claimed that plants are self-sacrificing—they do not die due to a lack of sunlight or moisture but so that healthy ones may live and when they die they deposit themselves over the growing roots to help the new generation survive.[citation needed]

 
One of several unsubstantiated Lysenkoist claims: vegetative hybridisation. The mechanism would imply an unobserved Lamarckian effect of scion on stock when a fruit tree is grafted.[15]

Lysenko believed that in one generation of a hybridized crop, the desired individual could be selected, mated again and continue to produce the same desired product, not worrying about separation/segregation in future breeds. For that to work, he had to assume that after a lifetime of developing (acquiring) the best set of traits to survive, those were passed down to the next generation.[10] That assumption disregarded the potential for variation or mutation.

Lysenko did not believe in genes and only spoke about them to say that they did not exist. He instead believed that any body, once alive, obtained heredity. That meant that the entirety of the body was able to pass on the hereditary information of that organism, and was not entirely dependent on a special element such as DNA or genes.[10] That puzzled biologists at that time because it went against established notions of heredity and inheritance. It also contradicted the Mendelian principles that most biologists had been using to base their ideas on.[16] Most scientists believed that Lysenko's ideas were not credible, because they did not truly explain the mechanisms of inheritance. Biologists now consider that his beliefs are pseudo-scientific, with little relationship to genetics.[10]

Lysenko argued that there is not only competition, but also mutual assistance among individuals within a species, and that mutual assistance also exists between different species.

According to Lysenko,

The organism and the conditions required for its life are an inseparable unity. Different living bodies require different environmental conditions for their development. By studying these requirements we come to know the qualitative features of the nature of organisms, the qualitative features of heredity. Heredity is the property of a living body to require definite conditions for its life and development and to respond in a definite way to various conditions.[17]

Another of Lysenko's theories was that obtaining more milk from cows did not depend on their genetics but on how they were treated. The better they were handled and taken care of, the more milk would be obtained; Lysenko and his followers were well known for taking very good care of their livestock.[18] Lysenko claimed that the cuckoo was born when young birds such as warblers were fed hairy caterpillars by the parent (rather than host) birds; this claim failed to recognise that the cuckoos he described were brood parasites.[19] Lysenkoites believed that fertilization was not random, but that there was specific selection of the best mate. For reasons like these, Lysenkoism can be viewed as pseudo-scientific.

After World War II ended, Lysenko took an interest in the works of Olga Lepeshinskaya, an older feldsher and biologist, who claimed to be able to create cells from egg yolk and non-cellular matter. Lepeshinskaya recognized common ground between her ideas and Lysenko's. By combining both of their ideas it was possible to proclaim that cells could grow from non-cellular material and that the predicted ratios of Mendelian genetics and meiosis were incorrect, thus undermining the basis of modern cytology, as well as genetics.[10]

Consequences of Lysenkoism edit

Lysenko forced farmers to plant seeds very close together since, according to his "law of the life of species", plants from the same "class" never compete with one another.[6] Lysenko played an active role in the famines that killed millions of Soviet people and his practices prolonged and exacerbated the food shortages.[6] The People's Republic of China under Mao Zedong adopted his methods starting in 1958, with calamitous results, culminating in the Great Chinese Famine of 1959 to 1962, in which some 15–55 million people died.[note 1][6]

Outside the Soviet Union, scientists spoke critically: British biologist S. C. Harland lamented that Lysenko was "completely ignorant of the elementary principles of genetics and plant physiology" (Bertram Wolfe, 2017). Criticism from foreigners did not sit well with Lysenko, who loathed Western "bourgeois" scientists and denounced them as tools of imperialist oppressors. He especially detested the American-born practice of studying fruit flies, the workhorse of modern genetics. He called such geneticists "fly lovers and people haters".[28]

During the 1930s and '40s, the V.I. Lenin Academy of Agricultural Sciences (VASKhNIL) served as a floor for debate between Lysenkoists and geneticists. On August 7, 1948, at the end of a week-long session organized by Lysenko and approved by Stalin,[29] the VASKhNIL announced that from that point on Lysenkoism would be taught as "the only correct theory." Soviet scientists were forced to denounce any work that contradicted Lysenko.[30] Several geneticists who refused to denounce the theory were executed (including Izrail Agol, Solomon Levit, Grigorii Levitskii, Georgii Karpechenko and Georgii Nadson) or sent to labor camps. One prominent critic of Lysenko, the famous Soviet geneticist and president of the Agriculture Academy, Nikolai Vavilov, was arrested in 1940 and died in prison in 1943.[31] Before the 1930s, the Soviet Union had arguably the best genetics community. According to The Atlantic writer Sam Kean, "Lysenko gutted it, and by some accounts, set Russian biology and agronomy back a half-century".[6] Lysenko's work was eventually recognized as fraudulent by some, "but not before he had wrecked the lives of many and destroyed the reputation of Russian biology" according to scientist Peter Gluckman.[32]

Politics edit

During the early and mid twentieth century the Soviet Union went through war and revolution. Political oppression caused tension within the state but also promoted the flourishing of science: this was possible due to the flow of resources and demand for results. Lysenko aimed to manipulate various plants such as wheat and peas to increase their production, quality, and quantity, while he impressed political officials with his success in motivating peasants to return to farming.[33]

The Soviet Union's collectivist reforms forced the confiscation of agricultural landholdings from peasant farmers and heavily damaged the country's overall food production, and the dispossessed peasant farmers posed new problems for the regime. Many had abandoned the farms altogether; many more waged resistance to collectivization by poor work quality and pilfering. The dislocated and disenchanted peasant farmers were a major political concern to the USSR's leadership.[34] Lysenko became prominent during this period by advocating radical but unproven agricultural methods, and also promising that the new methods provided wider opportunities for year-round work in agriculture. He proved himself very useful to the Soviet leadership by reengaging peasants to return to work, helping to secure from them a personal stake in the overall success of the Soviet revolutionary experiment.[33]

 
Timeline of Genetics and Science in the Soviet Union

Lysenko's success at encouraging farmers to return to working their lands impressed Stalin, who also approved of Lysenko's peasant background, as Stalin claimed to stand with the proletariat. By the late 1920s, the USSR's leaders had given their support to Lysenko. This support was a consequence, in part, of policies put in place by the Communist Party to rapidly promote members of the proletariat into leadership positions in agriculture, science and industry. Party officials were looking for promising candidates with backgrounds similar to Lysenko's: born of a peasant family, without formal academic training or affiliations to the academic community.[35] Due to close partnership between Stalin and Lysenko, Lysenko acquired an influence over genetics in the Soviet Union during the early and mid twentieth century. Lysenko eventually became the director of Genetics for the Academy of Sciences in 1940, which gave him even more control over genetics.[5] He remained in the position for more than two decades, throughout the reigns of Stalin and Nikita Khruschchev, until he was relieved of his duties in 1965.

After Stalin edit

In 1955, an attempt was made to disempower Lysenko, with a letter signed by more than three hundred scientists, the so-called "Letter of three hundred", which was sent to Nikita Khrushchev. It led to Lysenko resigning temporarily but he returned to power through the efforts of Khrushchev.[36] Though Lysenko remained at his post in the Institute of Genetics until 1965, his influence on Soviet agricultural practice had declined after the death of Stalin in 1953.[37] Lysenko retained his position, with the support of the new leader Nikita Khrushchev. However, mainstream scientists re-emerged and found new willingness within Soviet government leadership to tolerate criticism of Lysenko, the first opportunity since the late 1920s. In 1962, three of the most prominent Soviet physicists, Yakov Zeldovich, Vitaly Ginzburg, and Pyotr Kapitsa, presented a case against Lysenko, proclaiming his work as pseudoscience. They also denounced Lysenko's application of political power to silence opposition and eliminate his opponents within the scientific community. These denunciations occurred during a period of structural upheaval in Soviet government, during which the major institutions were purged of the strictly ideological and political machinations which had controlled the work of the Soviet Union's scientific community for several decades under Stalin.

In 1964, physicist Andrei Sakharov spoke out against Lysenko in the General Assembly of the Academy of Sciences of the USSR:

He is responsible for the shameful backwardness of Soviet biology and of genetics in particular, for the dissemination of pseudo-scientific views, for adventurism, for the degradation of learning, and for the defamation, firing, arrest, even death, of many genuine scientists.[38]

The Soviet press was soon filled with anti-Lysenkoite articles and appeals for the restoration of scientific methods to all fields of biology and agricultural science. In 1965,[39][40] Lysenko was removed from his post as director of the Institute of Genetics at the Academy of Sciences and restricted to an experimental farm in Moscow's Lenin Hills (the Institute itself was soon dissolved). After Khrushchev's dismissal in 1964, the president of the Academy of Sciences declared that Lysenko's immunity to criticism had officially ended. An expert commission was sent to investigate records kept at Lysenko's experimental farm. His secretive methods and ideas were revealed. A few months later, a devastating critique of Lysenko was made public.[41] Consequently, Lysenko was immediately disgraced in the Soviet Union.[42]

After Lysenko's monopoly on biology and agronomy had ended, it took many years for these sciences to recover in Russia. Lysenko died in Moscow in 1976, and was ultimately interred in the Kuntsevo Cemetery,[43] although the Soviet government refused to announce Lysenko's death for two days after the event[44] and gave his passing only a small note in Izvestia.[45]

Honours and awards edit

Works edit

  • Heredity and Its Variability (1945)
  • The Science of Biology Today (1948)
  • Agrobiology: Essays on Problems of Genetics, Plant Breeding and Seed Growing (1954)

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ According to various sources.[20][21][22][23][24][25][26][27]

References edit

  1. ^ An ill-educated agronomist with huge ambitions, Lysenko failed to become a real scientist, but greatly succeeded in exposing of the “bourgeois enemies of the people.” From such a “scion” who was “grafted” to the Stalinist totalitarian regime “stock”, impressive results could have been expected—and were indeed achieved. Reznik, Semyon; Fet, Victor (September 2019). "The destructive role of Trofim Lysenko in Russian Science". European Journal of Human Genetics. 27 (9): 1324–1325. doi:10.1038/s41431-019-0422-5. PMC 6777473. PMID 31089207.
  2. ^ Sterling, Bruce (June 2004). "Suicide by pseudoscience". Wired. Vol. 12, no. 6.
  3. ^ Gordin, Michael D. (2012). "How Lysenkoism became pseudoscience: Dobzhansky to Velikovsky". Journal of the History of Biology. 45 (3): 443–468. doi:10.1007/s10739-011-9287-3. PMID 21698424. S2CID 7541203.
  4. ^ Caspari EW, Marshak RE. The Rise and Fall of Lysenko. Science. 1965 Jul 16;149(3681):275-8. doi: 10.1126/science.149.3681.275. PMID: 17838094
  5. ^ a b Graham, Loren (1993). Science in Russia and the Soviet Union. Press Syndicate of the University of Cambridge. pp. 101–132. ISBN 0-521-24566-4.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g "The Soviet Era's Deadliest Scientist Is Regaining Popularity in Russia". The Atlantic. 19 December 2017.
  7. ^ "Герои страны".
  8. ^ Graham, Lo-ren R. (2006). Moscow Stories. Bloomington, Indiana: Indiana University Press. pp. 120–25, 290. ISBN 978-0-25-30007-43.
  9. ^ Li, X.; Liu, Y. (2010). "The conversion of spring wheat into winter wheat and vice versa: False claim or Lamarckian inheritance?". Journal of Biosciences. 35 (2): 321–325. doi:10.1007/s12038-010-0035-1. PMID 20689187. S2CID 10527354.
  10. ^ a b c d e f Joravsky 1986
  11. ^ Chouard, P. (1960). "Vernalization and its relations to dormancy". Annual Review of Plant Physiology. 11 (1): 191–238. doi:10.1146/annurev.pp.11.060160.001203.
  12. ^ Amasino, R. (2004). "Vernalization, competence, and the epigenetic memory of winter". The Plant Cell. 16 (10): 2553–2559. doi:10.1105/tpc.104.161070. PMC 520954. PMID 15466409.
  13. ^ Holterhoff, Kate (2014). "The History and Reception of Charles Darwin's Hypothesis of Pangenesis". Journal of the History of Biology. 47 (4): 661–695. doi:10.1007/s10739-014-9377-0. PMID 24570302. S2CID 207150548.
  14. ^ a b Liu, Yongsheng (2004). "Lysenko's contributions to biology and his tragedies". Theoretical Biology Forum. 97 (3): 483–498. ISSN 0035-6050. PMID 15754596.
  15. ^ a b c Leone, Charles A. (1952). "Genetics: Lysenko versus Mendel". Transactions of the Kansas Academy of Science. 55 (4): 369–380. doi:10.2307/3625986. ISSN 0022-8443. JSTOR 3625986.
  16. ^ Graham, Loren (1998). What Have We Learned About Science and Technology from the Russian Experience?, Palo Alto: Stanford University Press.
  17. ^ "Soviet Biology". marxists.org.
  18. ^ Graham, Loren (2006). Moscow Stories. Bloomington, Indiana: Indiana University Press. pp. 120–26. ISBN 0-253-34716-5.
  19. ^ Joravsky 1986, p. 398.
  20. ^ Smil, Vaclav (18 December 1999). "China's great famine: 40 years later". BMJ: British Medical Journal. 319 (7225): 1619–1621. doi:10.1136/bmj.319.7225.1619. ISSN 0959-8138. PMC 1127087. PMID 10600969.
  21. ^ Gráda, Cormac Ó (2007). "Making Famine History". Journal of Economic Literature. 45 (1): 5–38. doi:10.1257/jel.45.1.5. hdl:10197/492. ISSN 0022-0515. JSTOR 27646746. S2CID 54763671.
  22. ^ MENG, XIN; QIAN, NANCY; YARED, PIERRE (2015). "The Institutional Causes of China's Great Famine, 1959–1961" (PDF). Review of Economic Studies. 82 (4): 1568–1611. doi:10.1093/restud/rdv016. (PDF) from the original on 5 March 2020. Retrieved 22 April 2020.
  23. ^ Hasell, Joe; Roser, Max (10 October 2013). "Famines". Our World in Data. from the original on 18 April 2020. Retrieved 22 April 2020.
  24. ^ Dikötter, Frank. (PDF). Dartmouth University. Archived from the original (PDF) on 16 July 2020. Retrieved 23 November 2021.
  25. ^ Branigan, Tania (1 January 2013). "China's Great Famine: the true story". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. from the original on 10 January 2016. Retrieved 22 April 2020.
  26. ^ "China's Great Famine: A mission to expose the truth". Al Jazeera. from the original on 21 April 2020. Retrieved 22 April 2020.
  27. ^ Huang, Zheping (10 March 2016). "Charted: China's Great Famine, according to Yang Jisheng, a journalist who lived through it". Quartz. from the original on 25 May 2020. Retrieved 22 April 2020.
  28. ^ Harman, Oren Solomon (2003). "C. D. Darlington and the British and American Reaction to Lysenko and the Soviet Conception of Science". Journal of the History of Biology. 36 (2 (Summer 2003)): 309–352. doi:10.1023/A:1024483131660. JSTOR 4331804. PMID 12945539. S2CID 32789492.
  29. ^ Borinskaya, Svetlana A.; Ermolaev, Andrei I.; Kolchinsky, Eduard I. (2019). "Lysenkoism Against Genetics: The Meeting of the Lenin All-Union Academy of Agricultural Sciences of August 1948, Its Background, Causes, and Aftermath". Genetics. 212 (1): 1–12. doi:10.1534/genetics.118.301413. ISSN 0016-6731. PMC 6499510. PMID 31053614.
  30. ^ Wrinch, Pamela N. (July 1951). "Science and Politics in the U.S.S.R.: The Genetics Debate". World Politics. 3 (4): 486–519. doi:10.2307/2008893. JSTOR 2008893. S2CID 146284128.
  31. ^ Cohen, Barry Mandel (1991). "Nikolai Ivanovich Vavilov: the explorer and plant collector". Economic Botany. 45 (1 (Jan-Mar 1991)): 38–46. doi:10.1007/BF02860048. JSTOR 4255307. S2CID 27563223.
  32. ^ Gluckman, Peter (2009). Principles of Evolutionary Medicine. Oxford University Press. p. 81. ISBN 978-0199236398.
  33. ^ a b Graham, Loren R. (1972). Science and Philosophy in the Soviet Union. Knopf. p. 208.
  34. ^ Fitzpatrick, Sheila (1994). Stalin's Peasants: Resistance and Survival in the Russian Village after Collectivization. Oxford University Press. pp. 4–5.
  35. ^ Krementsov, Nikolai (1997). Stalinist Science. Princeton University Press.
  36. ^ Fujiyoka, Tsuyoshi (2016). "Japanese Lysenkoists after Lysenko's Downfall" (PDF). Historia Scientiarum. 26 (1): 15–24.
  37. ^ "Lysenko, Trofim Denisovich". Encyclopædia Britannica Online. 16 August 2013. Archived from the original on 21 July 2012. Retrieved 26 January 2014.
  38. ^ Norman L., Qing Ni Li, Yuan Jian Li (2003) Biography of Andrei Sakharov, dissent period 21 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine. The Seevak Website Competition
  39. ^ Cohen, B. M. (1965). "The descent of Lysenko". The Journal of Heredity. 56 (5): 229–233. doi:10.1093/oxfordjournals.jhered.a107425.
  40. ^ Cohen, B.M. (1977). . The Journal of Heredity. 68 (1): 57. doi:10.1093/oxfordjournals.jhered.a108776. Archived from the original on 15 April 2011.
  41. ^ Joravsky 1986, p. 184.
  42. ^ "Trofim Denisovich Lysenko Facts". yourdictionary.com. LoveToKnow Corp. Retrieved 20 April 2014.
  43. ^ Krementsov, Nikolai; Dejong-Lambert, William (2017). ""Lysenkoism" Redux: Introduction". The Lysenko Controversy as a Global Phenomenon, Volume 1. Palgrave Studies in the History of Science and Technology. Springer. pp. 1–34. doi:10.1007/978-3-319-39176-2_1. ISBN 9783319391762.
  44. ^ "Russian Biologist Dead at 78"; in "Obituaries"; Beaver County Times, 24 November 1976; p. A4
  45. ^ ‘Soviet Biologist Lysenko Dies in Obscurity’; Pittsburgh Post-Gazette; 24 November 1976, p. 8
  46. ^ Куценко А. С., Смирнов Ю. Д. Ордена Советских республик. Донецк, РИП «Лебедь», 1996.

Further reading edit

External links edit

  • Lysenkoism in The Sceptic's Dictionary by Robert Todd Carroll
  • Ronald Fisher (1948). What Sort of Man is Lysenko? Listener, 40: 874–75 – contemporary commentary by a British evolutionary biologist
  • Letter from Lysenko's parents to Stalin, Pravda, 3 January 1936.
  • (A Marxist, though anti-Stalinist, history of Lysenkoism)
  • BBC program (In Our Time) on Lysenko
  • Newspaper clippings about Trofim Lysenko in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW

trofim, lysenko, this, name, that, follows, eastern, slavic, naming, conventions, patronymic, denisovich, family, name, lysenko, trofim, denisovich, lysenko, russian, Трофи, Дени, сович, Лысе, нко, ukrainian, Трохи, Дени, сович, Лисе, нко, ukrainian, pronuncia. In this name that follows Eastern Slavic naming conventions the patronymic is Denisovich and the family name is Lysenko Trofim Denisovich Lysenko Russian Trofi m Deni sovich Lyse nko Ukrainian Trohi m Deni sovich Lise nko Ukrainian pronunciation troˈxɪm deˈnɪsowɪtʃ lɪˈsɛnko 29 September O S 17 September 1898 20 November 1976 was a Soviet agronomist and pseudo scientist 1 He was a strong proponent of Lamarckism and rejected Mendelian genetics in favour of his own idiosyncratic pseudoscientific ideas later termed Lysenkoism 2 3 4 Trofim LysenkoTrofim LysenkoLysenko in 1938BornTrofim Denisovich Lysenko 1898 09 29 29 September 1898Karlivka Poltava Governorate Russian Empire now Karlivka Poltava Oblast Ukraine Died20 November 1976 1976 11 20 aged 78 Moscow Russian SFSR Soviet UnionCitizenshipSoviet UnionAlma materKiev Agricultural InstituteKnown forLysenkoism Rejecting Mendelian inheritance VernalizationScientific careerFieldsBiology AgronomyInstitutionsSoviet Academy of SciencesSignatureIn 1940 Lysenko became director of the Institute of Genetics within the USSR s Academy of Sciences and he used his political influence and power to suppress dissenting opinions and discredit marginalize and imprison his critics elevating his anti Mendelian theories to state sanctioned doctrine 5 Soviet scientists who refused to renounce genetics were dismissed from their posts and left destitute Hundreds if not thousands of others were imprisoned Several were sentenced to death as enemies of the state including the botanist Nikolai Vavilov 6 Lysenko s ideas and practices contributed to the famines that killed millions of Soviet people 6 the adoption of his methods from 1958 in the People s Republic of China had similarly calamitous results culminating in the Great Chinese Famine of 1959 to 1962 6 Contents 1 Early life and career 1 1 Vernalization 2 Lysenko s theories 3 Consequences of Lysenkoism 4 Politics 5 After Stalin 6 Honours and awards 7 Works 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksEarly life and career editThe son of Denis and Oksana Lysenko Trofim Lysenko was born into a peasant family of Ukrainian ethnicity in Karlivka Poltava Governorate present day Poltava Oblast Ukraine on 29 September 1898 7 As a young man working at the Kyiv Agricultural Institute now the National University of Life and Environmental Sciences of Ukraine Lysenko found himself interested in agriculture where he worked on a few different projects one involving the effects of temperature variation on the life cycle of plants This later led him to consider how he might use this work to convert winter wheat into spring wheat He named the process jarovization in Russian and later translated it as vernalization 8 The conversion of winter wheat into spring wheat was not a new discovery Scientific experiments had been done by Nikolai Vavilov 9 It was Vavilov who initially supported Lysenko and encouraged him in his work Lysenko had a difficult time trying to grow various crops such as peas and wheat through the harsh winters However when he announced success he was praised in the Soviet newspaper Pravda for his claims to have discovered a method to fertilize fields without using fertilizers or minerals and to have shown that a winter crop of peas could be grown in Azerbaijan turning the barren fields of the Transcaucasus green in winter so that cattle will not perish from poor feeding and the peasant Turk will live through the winter without trembling for tomorrow 10 nbsp Lysenko speaking at the Kremlin in 1935 Behind him are Stanislav Kosior Anastas Mikoyan Andrei Andreyev and Joseph StalinLysenko worked with different wheat crops to try to convert them to grow in different seasons Another area Lysenko found himself interested in was the effect of heat on plant growth He believed that every plant needed a determinate amount of heat throughout its lifetime He attempted to correlate the time and the amount of heat required by a particular plant to go through various phases of development To get his data he looked at the amount of growth how many days went by and the temperature on those days instead of measuring any actual heat In trying to determine the effects he was making mistakes in statistical analysis of data He was confronted by Maksimov who was an expert on thermal plant development Lysenko did not take well to this or any criticism After this encounter Lysenko boldly claimed that mathematics had no place in biology 10 His experimental research in improved crop yields earned him the support of the Soviet leader Joseph Stalin especially following the famine and loss of productivity resulting from crop failures and forced collectivization in several regions of the Soviet Union in the early 1930s Vernalization edit In 1927 at the age of 29 working at an agricultural experiment station in Azerbaijan Lysenko embarked on the research that would lead to his 1928 paper on vernalization which drew wide attention because of its potential practical implications for Soviet agriculture Severe cold and lack of winter snow had destroyed many early winter wheat seedlings By treating wheat seeds with moisture as well as cold Lysenko induced them to bear a crop when planted in spring Lysenko coined the term Jarovization yarovizaciya to describe this chilling process which he used to make the seeds of winter cereals behave like spring cereals Because spring cereals are called Jarovoe in Russian from jarovoj an archaic adjective meaning spring especially in relation to crops However this method had already been known by farmers since the 1800s and had recently been discussed in detail by Gustav Gassner in 1918 Lysenko himself translated Jarovization as vernalization from the Latin vernum meaning Spring 11 Lysenko s claims for increased yields were based on plantings over a few hectares and he believed that the vernalized transformation could be inherited that the offspring of a vernalized plant would themselves possess the capabilities of the generation that preceded it that it too would be able to withstand harsh winters or imperfect weather conditions 12 Lysenko s theories editMain article Lysenkoism nbsp Lysenko proposed an influence of the body on inheritance similar to Darwin s pangenesis theory that every part of the body emits tiny gemmules which migrate to the gonads and are transferred to offspring Gemmules were thought to develop into their associated body parts as offspring matures The theory implied that changes to the body during an organism s life would be inherited as proposed in Lamarckism 13 Lysenko rejected Mendelian genetic inheritance theory in favour of his own logic He believed Gregor Mendel s theory to be too reactionary or idealist Lysenko s ideas were a mixture of his own those of Russian agronomist Ivan Michurin and of other Soviet scientists 14 Through this mixture of ideas Lysenko founded the Michurinist school of thought 14 The core ideas are that body cells the soma determine the quality of an organism s offspring every part of the body contributes to the germ cells in the manner of Darwin s theory of pangenesis though Lysenko denied any such connection 15 These ideas were not directly derived from established biological theories such as Mendelian genetics Lamarckism or Darwinism He shaped his genetic concepts to support the simple practical purpose of breeding and improving crops His ideas were also shaped to disprove other claims made by his fellow geneticists His ideas and genetic claims later began to be termed Lysenkoism He claimed that his ideas were not associated with Lamarckism but there are similarities between the two ideas such as a belief in the inheritance of acquired characteristics 15 Some of Lysenko s ideas can also seem to be vitalistic He claimed that plants are self sacrificing they do not die due to a lack of sunlight or moisture but so that healthy ones may live and when they die they deposit themselves over the growing roots to help the new generation survive citation needed nbsp One of several unsubstantiated Lysenkoist claims vegetative hybridisation The mechanism would imply an unobserved Lamarckian effect of scion on stock when a fruit tree is grafted 15 Lysenko believed that in one generation of a hybridized crop the desired individual could be selected mated again and continue to produce the same desired product not worrying about separation segregation in future breeds For that to work he had to assume that after a lifetime of developing acquiring the best set of traits to survive those were passed down to the next generation 10 That assumption disregarded the potential for variation or mutation Lysenko did not believe in genes and only spoke about them to say that they did not exist He instead believed that any body once alive obtained heredity That meant that the entirety of the body was able to pass on the hereditary information of that organism and was not entirely dependent on a special element such as DNA or genes 10 That puzzled biologists at that time because it went against established notions of heredity and inheritance It also contradicted the Mendelian principles that most biologists had been using to base their ideas on 16 Most scientists believed that Lysenko s ideas were not credible because they did not truly explain the mechanisms of inheritance Biologists now consider that his beliefs are pseudo scientific with little relationship to genetics 10 Lysenko argued that there is not only competition but also mutual assistance among individuals within a species and that mutual assistance also exists between different species According to Lysenko The organism and the conditions required for its life are an inseparable unity Different living bodies require different environmental conditions for their development By studying these requirements we come to know the qualitative features of the nature of organisms the qualitative features of heredity Heredity is the property of a living body to require definite conditions for its life and development and to respond in a definite way to various conditions 17 Another of Lysenko s theories was that obtaining more milk from cows did not depend on their genetics but on how they were treated The better they were handled and taken care of the more milk would be obtained Lysenko and his followers were well known for taking very good care of their livestock 18 Lysenko claimed that the cuckoo was born when young birds such as warblers were fed hairy caterpillars by the parent rather than host birds this claim failed to recognise that the cuckoos he described were brood parasites 19 Lysenkoites believed that fertilization was not random but that there was specific selection of the best mate For reasons like these Lysenkoism can be viewed as pseudo scientific After World War II ended Lysenko took an interest in the works of Olga Lepeshinskaya an older feldsher and biologist who claimed to be able to create cells from egg yolk and non cellular matter Lepeshinskaya recognized common ground between her ideas and Lysenko s By combining both of their ideas it was possible to proclaim that cells could grow from non cellular material and that the predicted ratios of Mendelian genetics and meiosis were incorrect thus undermining the basis of modern cytology as well as genetics 10 Consequences of Lysenkoism editLysenko forced farmers to plant seeds very close together since according to his law of the life of species plants from the same class never compete with one another 6 Lysenko played an active role in the famines that killed millions of Soviet people and his practices prolonged and exacerbated the food shortages 6 The People s Republic of China under Mao Zedong adopted his methods starting in 1958 with calamitous results culminating in the Great Chinese Famine of 1959 to 1962 in which some 15 55 million people died note 1 6 Outside the Soviet Union scientists spoke critically British biologist S C Harland lamented that Lysenko was completely ignorant of the elementary principles of genetics and plant physiology Bertram Wolfe 2017 Criticism from foreigners did not sit well with Lysenko who loathed Western bourgeois scientists and denounced them as tools of imperialist oppressors He especially detested the American born practice of studying fruit flies the workhorse of modern genetics He called such geneticists fly lovers and people haters 28 During the 1930s and 40s the V I Lenin Academy of Agricultural Sciences VASKhNIL served as a floor for debate between Lysenkoists and geneticists On August 7 1948 at the end of a week long session organized by Lysenko and approved by Stalin 29 the VASKhNIL announced that from that point on Lysenkoism would be taught as the only correct theory Soviet scientists were forced to denounce any work that contradicted Lysenko 30 Several geneticists who refused to denounce the theory were executed including Izrail Agol Solomon Levit Grigorii Levitskii Georgii Karpechenko and Georgii Nadson or sent to labor camps One prominent critic of Lysenko the famous Soviet geneticist and president of the Agriculture Academy Nikolai Vavilov was arrested in 1940 and died in prison in 1943 31 Before the 1930s the Soviet Union had arguably the best genetics community According to The Atlantic writer Sam Kean Lysenko gutted it and by some accounts set Russian biology and agronomy back a half century 6 Lysenko s work was eventually recognized as fraudulent by some but not before he had wrecked the lives of many and destroyed the reputation of Russian biology according to scientist Peter Gluckman 32 Politics editDuring the early and mid twentieth century the Soviet Union went through war and revolution Political oppression caused tension within the state but also promoted the flourishing of science this was possible due to the flow of resources and demand for results Lysenko aimed to manipulate various plants such as wheat and peas to increase their production quality and quantity while he impressed political officials with his success in motivating peasants to return to farming 33 The Soviet Union s collectivist reforms forced the confiscation of agricultural landholdings from peasant farmers and heavily damaged the country s overall food production and the dispossessed peasant farmers posed new problems for the regime Many had abandoned the farms altogether many more waged resistance to collectivization by poor work quality and pilfering The dislocated and disenchanted peasant farmers were a major political concern to the USSR s leadership 34 Lysenko became prominent during this period by advocating radical but unproven agricultural methods and also promising that the new methods provided wider opportunities for year round work in agriculture He proved himself very useful to the Soviet leadership by reengaging peasants to return to work helping to secure from them a personal stake in the overall success of the Soviet revolutionary experiment 33 nbsp Timeline of Genetics and Science in the Soviet UnionLysenko s success at encouraging farmers to return to working their lands impressed Stalin who also approved of Lysenko s peasant background as Stalin claimed to stand with the proletariat By the late 1920s the USSR s leaders had given their support to Lysenko This support was a consequence in part of policies put in place by the Communist Party to rapidly promote members of the proletariat into leadership positions in agriculture science and industry Party officials were looking for promising candidates with backgrounds similar to Lysenko s born of a peasant family without formal academic training or affiliations to the academic community 35 Due to close partnership between Stalin and Lysenko Lysenko acquired an influence over genetics in the Soviet Union during the early and mid twentieth century Lysenko eventually became the director of Genetics for the Academy of Sciences in 1940 which gave him even more control over genetics 5 He remained in the position for more than two decades throughout the reigns of Stalin and Nikita Khruschchev until he was relieved of his duties in 1965 After Stalin editIn 1955 an attempt was made to disempower Lysenko with a letter signed by more than three hundred scientists the so called Letter of three hundred which was sent to Nikita Khrushchev It led to Lysenko resigning temporarily but he returned to power through the efforts of Khrushchev 36 Though Lysenko remained at his post in the Institute of Genetics until 1965 his influence on Soviet agricultural practice had declined after the death of Stalin in 1953 37 Lysenko retained his position with the support of the new leader Nikita Khrushchev However mainstream scientists re emerged and found new willingness within Soviet government leadership to tolerate criticism of Lysenko the first opportunity since the late 1920s In 1962 three of the most prominent Soviet physicists Yakov Zeldovich Vitaly Ginzburg and Pyotr Kapitsa presented a case against Lysenko proclaiming his work as pseudoscience They also denounced Lysenko s application of political power to silence opposition and eliminate his opponents within the scientific community These denunciations occurred during a period of structural upheaval in Soviet government during which the major institutions were purged of the strictly ideological and political machinations which had controlled the work of the Soviet Union s scientific community for several decades under Stalin In 1964 physicist Andrei Sakharov spoke out against Lysenko in the General Assembly of the Academy of Sciences of the USSR He is responsible for the shameful backwardness of Soviet biology and of genetics in particular for the dissemination of pseudo scientific views for adventurism for the degradation of learning and for the defamation firing arrest even death of many genuine scientists 38 The Soviet press was soon filled with anti Lysenkoite articles and appeals for the restoration of scientific methods to all fields of biology and agricultural science In 1965 39 40 Lysenko was removed from his post as director of the Institute of Genetics at the Academy of Sciences and restricted to an experimental farm in Moscow s Lenin Hills the Institute itself was soon dissolved After Khrushchev s dismissal in 1964 the president of the Academy of Sciences declared that Lysenko s immunity to criticism had officially ended An expert commission was sent to investigate records kept at Lysenko s experimental farm His secretive methods and ideas were revealed A few months later a devastating critique of Lysenko was made public 41 Consequently Lysenko was immediately disgraced in the Soviet Union 42 After Lysenko s monopoly on biology and agronomy had ended it took many years for these sciences to recover in Russia Lysenko died in Moscow in 1976 and was ultimately interred in the Kuntsevo Cemetery 43 although the Soviet government refused to announce Lysenko s death for two days after the event 44 and gave his passing only a small note in Izvestia 45 Honours and awards editHero of Socialist Labor 1945 46 Order of Lenin eight times 1935 1945 1945 1948 1949 1953 1958 1961 Medal For Labour Valour 1959 Jubilee Medal In Commemoration of the 100th Anniversary of the Birth of Vladimir Ilyich Lenin 1969 Medal For Valiant Labour in the Great Patriotic War 1941 1945 1945 Medal In Commemoration of the 800th Anniversary of Moscow 1947 Stalin Prize three times 1941 1943 1949 Order of the Red Banner of Labor of the Ukrainian SSR 1931 Gold Medal named after I I Mechnikov ru 1950 Works editHeredity and Its Variability 1945 The Science of Biology Today 1948 Agrobiology Essays on Problems of Genetics Plant Breeding and Seed Growing 1954 See also editJean Baptiste Lamarck VASKhNILNotes edit According to various sources 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 References edit An ill educated agronomist with huge ambitions Lysenko failed to become a real scientist but greatly succeeded in exposing of the bourgeois enemies of the people From such a scion who was grafted to the Stalinist totalitarian regime stock impressive results could have been expected and were indeed achieved Reznik Semyon Fet Victor September 2019 The destructive role of Trofim Lysenko in Russian Science European Journal of Human Genetics 27 9 1324 1325 doi 10 1038 s41431 019 0422 5 PMC 6777473 PMID 31089207 Sterling Bruce June 2004 Suicide by pseudoscience Wired Vol 12 no 6 Gordin Michael D 2012 How Lysenkoism became pseudoscience Dobzhansky to Velikovsky Journal of the History of Biology 45 3 443 468 doi 10 1007 s10739 011 9287 3 PMID 21698424 S2CID 7541203 Caspari EW Marshak RE The Rise and Fall of Lysenko Science 1965 Jul 16 149 3681 275 8 doi 10 1126 science 149 3681 275 PMID 17838094 a b Graham Loren 1993 Science in Russia and the Soviet Union Press Syndicate of the University of Cambridge pp 101 132 ISBN 0 521 24566 4 a b c d e f g The Soviet Era s Deadliest Scientist Is Regaining Popularity in Russia The Atlantic 19 December 2017 Geroi strany Graham Lo ren R 2006 Moscow Stories Bloomington Indiana Indiana University Press pp 120 25 290 ISBN 978 0 25 30007 43 Li X Liu Y 2010 The conversion of spring wheat into winter wheat and vice versa False claim or Lamarckian inheritance Journal of Biosciences 35 2 321 325 doi 10 1007 s12038 010 0035 1 PMID 20689187 S2CID 10527354 a b c d e f Joravsky 1986 Chouard P 1960 Vernalization and its relations to dormancy Annual Review of Plant Physiology 11 1 191 238 doi 10 1146 annurev pp 11 060160 001203 Amasino R 2004 Vernalization competence and the epigenetic memory of winter The Plant Cell 16 10 2553 2559 doi 10 1105 tpc 104 161070 PMC 520954 PMID 15466409 Holterhoff Kate 2014 The History and Reception of Charles Darwin s Hypothesis of Pangenesis Journal of the History of Biology 47 4 661 695 doi 10 1007 s10739 014 9377 0 PMID 24570302 S2CID 207150548 a b Liu Yongsheng 2004 Lysenko s contributions to biology and his tragedies Theoretical Biology Forum 97 3 483 498 ISSN 0035 6050 PMID 15754596 a b c Leone Charles A 1952 Genetics Lysenko versus Mendel Transactions of the Kansas Academy of Science 55 4 369 380 doi 10 2307 3625986 ISSN 0022 8443 JSTOR 3625986 Graham Loren 1998 What Have We Learned About Science and Technology from the Russian Experience Palo Alto Stanford University Press Soviet Biology marxists org Graham Loren 2006 Moscow Stories Bloomington Indiana Indiana University Press pp 120 26 ISBN 0 253 34716 5 Joravsky 1986 p 398 Smil Vaclav 18 December 1999 China s great famine 40 years later BMJ British Medical Journal 319 7225 1619 1621 doi 10 1136 bmj 319 7225 1619 ISSN 0959 8138 PMC 1127087 PMID 10600969 Grada Cormac o 2007 Making Famine History Journal of Economic Literature 45 1 5 38 doi 10 1257 jel 45 1 5 hdl 10197 492 ISSN 0022 0515 JSTOR 27646746 S2CID 54763671 MENG XIN QIAN NANCY YARED PIERRE 2015 The Institutional Causes of China s Great Famine 1959 1961 PDF Review of Economic Studies 82 4 1568 1611 doi 10 1093 restud rdv016 Archived PDF from the original on 5 March 2020 Retrieved 22 April 2020 Hasell Joe Roser Max 10 October 2013 Famines Our World in Data Archived from the original on 18 April 2020 Retrieved 22 April 2020 Dikotter Frank Mao s Great Famine Ways of Living Ways of Dying PDF Dartmouth University Archived from the original PDF on 16 July 2020 Retrieved 23 November 2021 Branigan Tania 1 January 2013 China s Great Famine the true story The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Archived from the original on 10 January 2016 Retrieved 22 April 2020 China s Great Famine A mission to expose the truth Al Jazeera Archived from the original on 21 April 2020 Retrieved 22 April 2020 Huang Zheping 10 March 2016 Charted China s Great Famine according to Yang Jisheng a journalist who lived through it Quartz Archived from the original on 25 May 2020 Retrieved 22 April 2020 Harman Oren Solomon 2003 C D Darlington and the British and American Reaction to Lysenko and the Soviet Conception of Science Journal of the History of Biology 36 2 Summer 2003 309 352 doi 10 1023 A 1024483131660 JSTOR 4331804 PMID 12945539 S2CID 32789492 Borinskaya Svetlana A Ermolaev Andrei I Kolchinsky Eduard I 2019 Lysenkoism Against Genetics The Meeting of the Lenin All Union Academy of Agricultural Sciences of August 1948 Its Background Causes and Aftermath Genetics 212 1 1 12 doi 10 1534 genetics 118 301413 ISSN 0016 6731 PMC 6499510 PMID 31053614 Wrinch Pamela N July 1951 Science and Politics in the U S S R The Genetics Debate World Politics 3 4 486 519 doi 10 2307 2008893 JSTOR 2008893 S2CID 146284128 Cohen Barry Mandel 1991 Nikolai Ivanovich Vavilov the explorer and plant collector Economic Botany 45 1 Jan Mar 1991 38 46 doi 10 1007 BF02860048 JSTOR 4255307 S2CID 27563223 Gluckman Peter 2009 Principles of Evolutionary Medicine Oxford University Press p 81 ISBN 978 0199236398 a b Graham Loren R 1972 Science and Philosophy in the Soviet Union Knopf p 208 Fitzpatrick Sheila 1994 Stalin s Peasants Resistance and Survival in the Russian Village after Collectivization Oxford University Press pp 4 5 Krementsov Nikolai 1997 Stalinist Science Princeton University Press Fujiyoka Tsuyoshi 2016 Japanese Lysenkoists after Lysenko s Downfall PDF Historia Scientiarum 26 1 15 24 Lysenko Trofim Denisovich Encyclopaedia Britannica Online 16 August 2013 Archived from the original on 21 July 2012 Retrieved 26 January 2014 Norman L Qing Ni Li Yuan Jian Li 2003 Biography of Andrei Sakharov dissent period Archived 21 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine The Seevak Website Competition Cohen B M 1965 The descent of Lysenko The Journal of Heredity 56 5 229 233 doi 10 1093 oxfordjournals jhered a107425 Cohen B M 1977 The demise of Lysenko The Journal of Heredity 68 1 57 doi 10 1093 oxfordjournals jhered a108776 Archived from the original on 15 April 2011 Joravsky 1986 p 184 Trofim Denisovich Lysenko Facts yourdictionary com LoveToKnow Corp Retrieved 20 April 2014 Krementsov Nikolai Dejong Lambert William 2017 Lysenkoism Redux Introduction The Lysenko Controversy as a Global Phenomenon Volume 1 Palgrave Studies in the History of Science and Technology Springer pp 1 34 doi 10 1007 978 3 319 39176 2 1 ISBN 9783319391762 Russian Biologist Dead at 78 in Obituaries Beaver County Times 24 November 1976 p A4 Soviet Biologist Lysenko Dies in Obscurity Pittsburgh Post Gazette 24 November 1976 p 8 Kucenko A S Smirnov Yu D Ordena Sovetskih respublik Doneck RIP Lebed 1996 Further reading editWang Zhengrong Liu Yongsheng 2017 Lysenko and Russian genetics an alternative view European Journal of Human Genetics 25 10 1097 1098 doi 10 1038 ejhg 2017 117 ISSN 1476 5438 PMC 5602018 PMID 28905876 William deJong Lambert The Cold War Politics of Genetic Research Springer Science Business Media B V 2012 Graham Loren Lysenko s Ghost Epigenetics and Russia Cambridge Harvard University Press 2016 online review Graham Loren Science in Russia and the Soviet Union New York Cambridge University Press 1993 Graham Loren What Have We Learned About Science and Technology from the Russian Experience Palo Alto Stanford University Press 1998 Joravsky David 1986 1970 The Lysenko Affair University of Chicago Press Lecourt Dominique Proletarian Science The Case of Lysenko London NLB Atlantic Highlands N J Humanities Press 1977 A Marxist though anti Stalinist history of Lysenkoism Lysenko Trofim The Science of Biology Today New York International Publishers 1948 Text of an address evoked by the international discussion of the subject of inheritance of acquired characteristics according to an introductory note Delivered before a session of a meeting of the V I Lenin Academy of Agricultural Sciences on 31 July 1948 when Lysenko its president was at the apex of his power For an online version of the text see the Lysenko Report provided in the External Links section below Medvedev Zhores The Rise and Fall of T D Lysenko New York Columbia University Press 1969 Soyfer Valery N Lysenko and the Tragedy of Soviet Science New Brunswick Rutgers University Press 1994 Gardner Martin Fads and Fallacies in the Name of Science 1957 Revised and expanded edition of the work originally published in 1952 under the title In the Name of Science Dover Publications New York See Chapter 12 Lysenkoism Somssich Marc A Short History of Vernalization Zenodo 2020 https doi org 10 5281 zenodo 3660691 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Trofim Lysenko Lysenkoism in The Sceptic s Dictionary by Robert Todd Carroll Ronald Fisher 1948 What Sort of Man is Lysenko Listener 40 874 75 contemporary commentary by a British evolutionary biologist Letter from Lysenko s parents to Stalin Pravda 3 January 1936 Lecourt Dominique Proletarian Science The Case of Lysenko 1977 Atlantic Highlands Humanities Press London this digital edition first published 2003 A Marxist though anti Stalinist history of Lysenkoism BBC program In Our Time on Lysenko Newspaper clippings about Trofim Lysenko in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Trofim Lysenko amp oldid 1186925815, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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