253 HEREDITY AND ENVIRONMENT 



II. Modifications and Extensions of Men- 

 DEEiAN Principles 



It is a common experience that natural 

 phenomena are foiind to be more complex the 

 more thoroughly they are investigated. Na- 

 ture is always greater than our theories, and 

 with few exceptions hypotheses which were 

 satisfactory at one stage of knowledge have to 

 be extended, modified or abandoned as knowl- 

 edge increases. This observation is well illus- 

 trated in the case of the Mendelian theory. 

 The principles proposed by Mendel were rela- 

 tively simple, but in attempting to apply them 

 to the many phenomena of inheritance now 

 known it has become necessary to modify or 

 extend them in many ways. And yet the gen- 

 eral and fundamental truth of these principles 

 has been established in a surprisingly large 

 number of cases, and they have been extended 

 to forms of inheritance where at first it was 

 supposed that they could not apply. 



1. The Principle of Unit Characters and of 

 Inheritance Factors. — There has been much 



