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LysenkoismenUK
Ly·sen·ko·ism L0310200 (lĭ-sĕng′kō-ĭz′əm)n. A biological doctrine championed by Trofim Lysenko that maintained that environmentally induced traits could be inherited and that rejected the principles of genetics and natural selection.Lysenkoism (lɪˈsɛŋkəʊˌɪzəm) n (Genetics) a form of Neo-Lamarckism advocated by Lysenko, emphasizing the importance of the inheritance of acquired characteristicsLy•sen•ko•ism (lɪˈsɛŋ koʊˌɪz əm) n. a genetic doctrine formulated by Lysenko and asserting that acquired characteristics are inheritable. Lysenkoismthe theories of the 20th-century Russian geneticist Trofim Lysenko, who argued that somatic and environmental factors have a greater influence on heredity than orthodox genetics has found demonstrable; now generally discredited.See also: BiologyLysenkoismenUK
Lysenkoism[lī′seŋ·kō‚iz·əm] (biology) A pseudoscientific theory that flourished in the Soviet Union from the early 1930s to the mid-1960s; advocated by T. D. Lysenko, who called it agrobiology, it was claimed to be a revolutionary fusion of agronomy and biological science, and it opposed traditional biology and the gene concept but supported the inheritance of acquired characteristics. LysenkoismenUK
Lysenkoism (lĭ-sĕng′kō-ĭz′əm)n. A biological doctrine championed by Trofim Lysenko that maintained that environmentally induced traits could be inherited and that rejected the principles of genetics and natural selection.A pseudoscientific doctrine based on Lamarckism, espoused by Russian geneticist TD Lysenko, which formed the basis of Soviet genetics from 1932 to 1965ThesaurusSeeTrofim Denisovich Lysenko |