- Sewall Wright
Sewall Green Wright (
December 21 ,1889 –March 3 ,1988 ) was an Americangeneticist known for his influential work onevolutionary theory and also for his work on path analysis. WithR. A. Fisher andJ.B.S. Haldane , he was a founder of theoretical population genetics. He is the discoverer of theinbreeding coefficient and of methods of computing it in pedigrees. He extended this work to populations, computing the amount of inbreeding of members of populations as a result of randomgenetic drift , and he and Fisher pioneered methods for computing the distribution ofgene frequencies among populations as a result of the interaction ofnatural selection ,mutation , migration and genetic drift. The work of Fisher, Wright, and Haldane on theoretical population genetics was a major step in the development of themodern evolutionary synthesis of genetics with evolution. Wright also made major contributions to mammalian genetics and biochemical genetics.Biography
Sewall Wright was born in Melrose,
Massachusetts to Philip Green Wright and Elizabeth Quincy Sewall Wright. The family moved three years later after Philip accepted a teaching job atLombard College , aUniversalist college in Galesburg, Illinois.He was the oldest of three gifted brothers – the others being the
aeronautical engineer Theodore Paul Wright and thepolitical scientist Quincy Wright . From an early age Wright had a love and talent formathematics andbiology . Wright attendedGalesburg High School and graduated in 1906. He then enrolled inLombard College where his father taught, to studymathematics . He was influenced greatly by Professor Wilhelmine Entemann Key, one of the first women to receive a Ph.D. inbiology . Wright received his Ph.D. fromHarvard University , where he worked with the pioneering mammalian geneticistWilliam Ernest Castle investigating the inheritance of coat colors inmammals . He worked for theU.S. Department of Agriculture until 1925, when he joined the Department of Zoology at theUniversity of Chicago . He remained there until his retirement in 1955, when he moved to theUniversity of Wisconsin-Madison . He received many honors in his long career, including the National Medal of Science, theBalzan Prize , and theDarwin Medal of theRoyal Society . He was a member of theNational Academy of Science and aForeign Member of the Royal Society .Wright married Louise Lane Williams (1895-1975) in 1921. They had three children: Richard, Robert, and Elizabeth.
cientific achievements and credits
His papers on
inbreeding ,mating system s, andgenetic drift make him a principal founder of theoretical population genetics, along withR. A. Fisher andJ. B. S. Haldane . Their theoretical work is the origin of themodern evolutionary synthesis or neodarwinian synthesis. Wright was the inventor/discoverer of theinbreeding coefficient andF-statistics , standard tools in population genetics. He was the chief developer of the mathematical theoryofgenetic drift , which is sometimes known as the Sewall Wright effect, cumulative stochastic changes in gene frequencies that arise from random births, deaths, and Mendelian segregations in reproduction. Wright was convinced that the interaction ofgenetic drift and the other evolutionary forces was important in the process of adaptation. He described the relationship between genotype or phenotype and fitness asfitness surface s or fitness landscapes. Onthese landscapes mean population fitness was the height, plotted against horizontal axes representing the allele frequencies or the average phenotypes of the population.Natural selection would lead to a population climbing the nearest peak, whilegenetic drift would cause random wandering.Wright's explanation for
stasis was that organisms come to occupyadaptive peak s. In order to evolve to another, higher peak, the species would first have to pass through a valley of maladaptive intermediate stages. This could happen bygenetic drift if the population is small enough. If a species was divided into small populations, some could find higher peaks. If there was somegene flow between the populations, these adaptations could spread to the rest of the species. This was Wright'sshifting balance theory of evolution. There has been much skepticism among evolutionary biologists as to whether these rather delicate conditions hold often in natural populations. Wright had a long standing and bitter debate about this withR. A. Fisher , who felt that most populations in nature were too large for these effects of genetic drift to be important.Wright strongly influenced
Jay Lush , who was the most influential figure in introducingquantitative genetics into animal andplant breeding . Wright's statistical method of path analysis, which he invented in 1921 and which was one of the first methods using agraphical model , is still widely used in social science. He was a hugely influential reviewer of manuscripts, as one of the most frequent reviewers for Genetics. Such was hisreputation that he was often credited with reviews that he did not write.He did major work on the genetics of
guinea pigs , and many of his students became influential in the development of mammalian genetics. He appreciated as early as 1917 that genes acted by controllingenzyme s.Wright and philosophy
Wright was one of the few geneticists of his time to venture into
philosophy . He found a union of concept inCharles Hartshorne , who became a lifelong friend and philosophical collaborator. Wright believed that the birth of the consciousness was not due to a mysterious property of increasing complexity, but rather an inherent property, therefore implying these properties were in the most elementary particles.Legacy
Wright and Fisher were the key figures in the
neodarwinian synthesis that brought genetics and evolution together. Their work was essential to the contributions of Dobzhansky, Mayr, Simpson,Julian Huxley , and Stebbins. The neodarwinian synthesis was the most important development in evolutionary biology after Darwin. Wright also had a major effect on the development of mammalian genetics and biochemical genetics.Trivia
Since Wright developed the methods used for assessing the degree of inbreeding and its effects, it is notable that his own parents were first cousins. As a child he helped his father and brother print and publish an early book of poems by his father's student
Carl Sandburg .References
* Crow, James F. (1988) [http://www.genetics.org/cgi/reprint/119/1/1.pdf "Sewall Wright (1889-1988)"] "Genetics" 119 (1): 1-4.
* Crow, James F. and W. F. Dove. (1987) [http://www.genetics.org/cgi/reprint/115/1/1.pdf "Sewall Wright and physiological genetics"] "Genetics" 115 (1): 1-2.
* Ghiselin, Michael T. (1997) [http://books.google.com/books?ie=UTF-8&hl=en&vid=ISBN0791434672 "Metaphysics and the Origin of Species"] . NY: SUNY Press.
* Hill, William G. (1996) [http://www.genetics.org/cgi/reprint/143/4/1499.pdf "Sewall Wright's 'Systems of Mating'"] "Genetics" 143 (4): 1499-506.
*cite book | author=Provine, William | date=1986 | title=Sewall Wright and Evolutionary Biology | publisher= University of Chicago Press |id=ISBN 0-226-68473-3
*Wright, Sewall (1932) [http://www.blackwellpublishing.com/ridley/classictexts/wright.asp "The roles of mutation, inbreeding, crossbreeding and selection in evolution"] "Proc. 6th Int. Cong. Genet." 1: 356–366.
*cite book | author=Wright, Sewall | date=1986 |title=Evolution: Selected papers | publisher=University of Chicago Press|id=ISBN 0-226-91053-9Bibliography
Books by Wright
*cite book | author=Wright, Sewall | date=1984| title= Evolution and the Genetics of Populations: Genetics and Biometric Foundations v. 1 (Genetic & Biometric Foundations); New Edition | publisher=University of Chicago Press | id=ISBN 0-226-91038-5
*cite book | author=Wright, Sewall | date=1984| title= Evolution and the Genetics of Populations: Genetics and Biometric Foundations v. 2 (Theory of Gene Frequencies); New Edition | publisher=University of Chicago Press | id=ISBN 0-226-91039-3
*cite book | author=Wright, Sewall | date=1984| title= Evolution and the Genetics of Populations: Genetics and Biometric Foundations v. 3 (Experimental Results and Evolutionary Deductions); New Edition | publisher=University of Chicago Press | id=ISBN 0-226-91040-7
*cite book | author=Wright, Sewall | date=1984| title= Evolution and the Genetics of Populations: Genetics and Biometric Foundations v. 4 (Variability within and Among Natural Populations); New Edition | publisher=University of Chicago Press | id=ISBN 0-226-91041-5
External links
* [http://www.harvardsquarelibrary.org/unitarians/wright-sewall.html Sewall Wright: Darwin's Successor—Evolutionary Theorist] by Edric Lescouflair and James F. Crow
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