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Bateson and was
Although the name Chordata is often attributed to William Bateson ( 1885 ), it was already in common use in by 1880.
Ernst Mayr remarks that the theory was hotly contested by some famous geneticists: William Bateson, Wilhelm Johannsen, Richard Goldschmidt and T. H.
Its most vigorous promoter in Europe was William Bateson, who coined the terms " genetics " and " allele " to describe many of its tenets.
Her third and longest-lasting marriage ( 1936 – 1950 ) was to the British Anthropologist Gregory Bateson with whom she had a daughter, Mary Catherine Bateson, who would also become an anthropologist.
She readily acknowledged that Gregory Bateson was the husband she loved the most.
In her memoir about her parents, With a Daughter's Eye, Mary Catherine Bateson implies that the relationship between Benedict and Mead was partly sexual.
Satir was an early leader and Bateson was a guest teacher.
Turner and Bateson suggest that the status of the cat was roughly equivalent to that of the cow in modern India.
The relevance of Mendelism to evolution was unclear and hotly debated, especially by Bateson, who opposed the biometric ideas of his former teacher Weldon.
He knew well and was in conversation with John von Neumann, Norbert Wiener, Humberto Maturana, Francisco Varela, Gordon Pask, Gregory Bateson, Lawrence J. Fogel and Margaret Mead, among many others.
It stars Paul Copley, Timothy Bateson and Victoria Carling and was first heard in 1991.
She had studied ethnographic footage by Gregory Bateson in Bali in 1947, and was interested in including it in her next film.
Genetic linkage was first discovered by the British geneticists William Bateson and Reginald Punnett shortly after Mendel's laws were rediscovered.
Gregory Bateson was the first to draw such analogies in his project of an Ecology of Mind ( Bateson 1973 ), which was based on general principles of complex dynamic life processes, e. g. the concept of feedback loops, which he saw as operating both between the mind and the world and within the mind itself.
Michael was criticized for citing the research of Sir Patrick Bateson as " incontrovertible proof " of the need for a total ban.
Sir Patrick said, " Only somebody who was scientifically illiterate could argue that evidence from a new area of research was ' incontrovertible '" but Michael claimed that Bateson had misunderstood the way his work had been cited.
Mary Catherine Bateson is a fellow of the International Leadership Forum and was president of the Institute for Intercultural Studies in New York until 2010.
His grant was to study industrial melanism in general, and in particular the peppered moth Biston betularia which had been studied by William Bateson during the 1890s.
It was created on 18 November 1885 for the Conservative Member of Parliament Sir Thomas Bateson, 2nd Baronet.

Bateson and first
The film has been adapted for radio, including a version produced on BBC Radio 4 featuring Robert Powell and Timothy Bateson ( first broadcast in 1990 ), and another for BBC7 featuring Michael Kitchen as Mazzini and Harry Enfield as the D ' Ascoyne family.
* The first three chapters of “ Angels Fear: Toward an Epistemology of the Sacred ” by MCB and Gregory Bateson.
William Bateson was the first director from 1910 to 1926 ; Sir A. Daniel Hall was director, from 1926 to 1939 ; C. D. Darlington was director from 1939 to 1953 ; K. S. Dodds was director from 1953 to 1967 ; Roy Markham was director from 1967 to 1980 ; Harold Woolhouse was director from 1980 to 1988 ; Richard B. Flavell was director from 1988 to 1999.
Bateson first used the term " genetics " publicly at the Third International Conference on Plant Hybridization in London in 1906.
Double bind theory was first described by Gregory Bateson and his colleagues in the 1950s.
The term double bind was first used by the anthropologist Gregory Bateson and his colleagues ( including Don D. Jackson, Jay Haley and John H. Weakland ) in the mid-1950s in their discussions on complexity of communication in relation to schizophrenia.
The Double Bind Theory was first articulated in relationship to schizophrenia, but Bateson and his colleagues hypothesized that schizophrenic thinking was not necessarily an inborn mental disorder but a learned confusion in thinking.
In 1910 Punnett became professor of biology at Cambridge, and then the first Arthur Balfour Professor of Genetics when Bateson left in 1912.
The anthropologists Gregory Bateson and Margaret Mead contrasted first and second-order cybernetics with this diagram in an interview in 1973.

Bateson and word
William Bateson, a proponent of Mendel's work, coined the word genetics in 1905.
) Bateson popularized the usage of the word genetics to describe the study of inheritance in his inaugural address to the Third International Conference on Plant Hybridization in London, England, in 1906.

Bateson and genetics
In the early 1900s, after the rediscovery of Mendel's work, the gaps in understanding between genetics and evolutionary Darwinism led to vigorous debate among biometricians, such as Walter Weldon and Karl Pearson, and Mendelians, such as Charles Davenport, William Bateson and Wilhelm Johannsen.
* 1905 — William Bateson coined the term " genetics " to describe the study of biological inheritance.
* William Bateson coins the term " genetics " in a letter to Adam Sedgwick.
From 1913 to 1914 he travelled in Europe and studied plant immunity, in collaboration with the British biologist William Bateson, who helped establish the science of genetics.
Between 1900 and 1910 Bateson directed a rather informal " school " of genetics at Cambridge.
William Bateson became a proponent of Mendelian genetics, and had Mendel's work translated into English.
It was with Bateson that Reginald Punnett helped established the new science of genetics at Cambridge.
It was founded in 1910 by the British geneticists William Bateson and Reginald Punnett and is one of the oldest genetics journals.
There may have been some professional jealousy, as Bateson did receive a letter from Hurst in which he was urged to " read and digest the new Cuénot ", work which explained some results in the field of mouse genetics, results which had been confusing for Bateson.
Though later associated with Mendelian genetics, mutationism began in the 1890s ( prior to the rediscovery of Mendel ’ s laws ) with the studies of Hugo De Vries and William Bateson on naturally occurring discontinuous variations ; their thoughts concerning the role of discontinuity in evolution drew on earlier ideas of William Keith Brooks, Francis Galton, and Thomas Henry Huxley.
This view was expressed in the writings of key founders of genetics, including Thomas Hunt Morgan, Reginald Punnett, Wilhelm Johannsen, Hugo de Vries, William Bateson and others.
: 1905: William Bateson coins the term " genetics " in a letter to Adam Sedgwick and at a meeting in 1906
* William Bateson ( 1861 – 1926 ), British geneticist who coined the term " genetics "

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