On Germinal Selection as a Source of Definite Variation
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The essay proposes that selection among germinal elements within organisms directs hereditary variation, serving as a necessary complement to external natural selection. Drawing on a mechanistic model of heredity, it develops the concepts of determinants and constituent units (biophores) to explain how internal differential activity can bias variation in adaptive directions without invoking teleology. The author defends theoretical modeling by analogy to physical constructs, addresses criticisms of his heredity theory, and argues that germinal-level processes make definite, condition-responsive variation conceivable. The text includes a lecture-form exposition and an appendix that expands technical points and responds to objections.
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