xgeomax wrote:"Ghosts in your genes. The human genome carries more than just genes, it remembers the environment and experiences from before you were born - the ghosts of your ancestors. Evolutionary geneticist JV Chamary explores the epigenome"
Epigenetics has provided a means of modifying inheritance in response to environmental pressures. It has been demonstrated across three generations, at least, and also it has been indicated that it can be subject to reinforcement. How far reaching can it be? It's a new field, and we don't know yet.
Epigenetics does not involve changes to the genome (as far as we know) but alterations in how the genes are expressed. This process has been branded by some as neo-Lamarkism.
I've followed this subject with great interest as I have thought for a long time that the most useful thing that a Mendelian/Darwinian system could evolve, would be some form of Lamarkian inheritance, allowing species to respond more quickly to environmental pressures than chance mutation would allow.
The human genome project didn't provide as many answers as it was hoped. Epigenetics is the new frontier in that respect.
Knowledge comes, but wisdom lingers.