I was prompted to post this message after having read the editorial in the
25 September 1998 issue of Science (p. 1959). The essay is on-line at
http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/summary/281/5385/1959
but you must sign up for the free registration to access this part of the
journal.
It's called "A Revolution in Evolution" by Jim Bull and Holly Winchman. It
starts out
"Evolutionary biology has emerged from its 19th-century state; the
image of naturalists collecting butterflies and museum curators
dusting fossils has faded. Evolution is now widely perceived and
appreciated as the organizing principle at all levels of life. This
principle so pervades research that the evolutionary underpinning
of many experimental approaches is unstated."
It also contains the honest line:
"Notwithstanding this recent metamorphosis, many mysteries in the field
remain to challenge us. Complex evolutionary phenomena are difficult to
explain from well-understood elemental mechanisms, just as the weather
proves difficult to predict despite advances in basic physics."
TG
_________________
Terry M. Gray, Ph.D., Computer Support Scientist
Chemistry Department, Colorado State University
Fort Collins, Colorado 80523
grayt@lamar.colostate.edu http://www.chm.colostate.edu/~grayt/
phone: 970-491-7003 fax: 970-491-1801