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Lysenkoism

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Lysenkoism



 
 
Lysenkoism was a set of repressive political and social campaigns in science and agriculture
Agriculture

Agriculture refers to the production of food and goods through farming and forestry. Agriculture was the key development that led to the rise of civilization, with the animal husbandry of domestication animals and plants creating food surpluses that enabled the development of more Population density and Social stratification societies....
 by the powerful Stalinist
Joseph Stalin

Joseph Stalin was the General Secretary of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union's Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union from 1922 until his death in 1953....
 director of the Soviet Lenin All-Union Institute of Agricultural Sciences, Trofim Denisovich Lysenko
Trofim Lysenko

Trofim Denisovich Lysenko was an agronomy who was director of Union of Soviet Socialist Republics biology under Joseph Stalin. Lysenko rejected Mendelian inheritance genetics in favor of the Hybrid ization theories of Russian horticulture Ivan Vladimirovich Michurin, and adopted them into a powerful political scientific movement termed Lys...
 and his followers, which began in the late 1920s and formally ended in 1964.






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Lysenko With Stalin
Lysenkoism was a set of repressive political and social campaigns in science and agriculture
Agriculture

Agriculture refers to the production of food and goods through farming and forestry. Agriculture was the key development that led to the rise of civilization, with the animal husbandry of domestication animals and plants creating food surpluses that enabled the development of more Population density and Social stratification societies....
 by the powerful Stalinist
Joseph Stalin

Joseph Stalin was the General Secretary of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union's Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union from 1922 until his death in 1953....
 director of the Soviet Lenin All-Union Institute of Agricultural Sciences, Trofim Denisovich Lysenko
Trofim Lysenko

Trofim Denisovich Lysenko was an agronomy who was director of Union of Soviet Socialist Republics biology under Joseph Stalin. Lysenko rejected Mendelian inheritance genetics in favor of the Hybrid ization theories of Russian horticulture Ivan Vladimirovich Michurin, and adopted them into a powerful political scientific movement termed Lys...
 and his followers, which began in the late 1920s and formally ended in 1964. Lysenkoism, or Lysenko-Michurinism, may also denote the biological inheritance principle which Lysenko subscribed to and which derive from theories of the heritability of acquired characteristics
Inheritance of acquired characters

The inheritance of acquired traits is a hypothesis about a mechanism of heredity by which changes in physiology acquired over the life of an organism may purportedly be transmitted to offspring....
, a body of biological inheritance
Heredity

Heredity is the passing of traits to offspring . This is the process by which an offspring cell or organism acquires or becomes predisposed to the characteristics of its parent cell or organism....
 theory which departs from Mendelism
Mendelian inheritance

Mendelian inheritance is a set of primary tenets relating to the transmission of heredity characteristics from parent organisms to their children; it underlies much of genetics....
 and that Lysenko named "Michurinism"
Ivan Vladimirovich Michurin

Ivan Vladimirovich Michurin , was a Russian practitioner of selection, Honorable Member of the Russian Academy of Sciences, and academician of the VASKhNIL....
.

In agriculture

In 1928, Trofim Lysenko, a previously unknown agronomist, claimed to have developed an agricultural technique, termed vernalization
Vernalization

Vernalization is the acquisition of the competence to flower in the spring by exposure to the prolonged cold of winter. The word vernalization comes from the Latin word vernus, meaning of the spring ....
 (Russian: ?????????? "yarovizatsiya"), which used humidity and low temperatures to make wheat
Wheat

Wheat , is a worldwide cultivated Poaceae from the Levant region of the Middle East. Globally, after maize, wheat is the second most-produced food among the cereal just above rice....
 grow in spring. He promised to triple or quadruple crop yield
Crop yield

In agriculture, crop yield is not only a measure of the yield of cereal per unit area of land under tillage, it is also the seed generation of the plant itself, i.e....
s using his technique. In reality, the technique was neither new (it was known since 1854, and was extensively studied during the previous twenty years), nor did it produce the yields he promised.

When Lysenko began his fieldwork in the Soviet Union of the 1930s, the agriculture of the Soviet Union
Agriculture of the Soviet Union

Agriculture in the Soviet Union was organized into a system of state and collective farms, known as sovkhozes and kolkhozes, respectively. Organized on a large scale and relatively highly mechanized, the Soviet Union was one of the world's leading producers of cereals, although bad harvests necessitated imports and slowed the economy....
 was in a massive crisis due to the forced collectivization movement.

Many agronomists
Agronomy

Agronomy is the science and technology of using plants for food, fuel, feed, and fiber. Agronomy encompasses work in the areas of plant genetics, plant physiology, meteorology, and soil science....
 were educated before the revolution
Russian Revolution of 1917

The Russian Revolution is the series of revolutions in Russia in 1917, which destroyed the Tsarist autocracy and led to the creation of the Soviet Union....
, and even many of those educated afterwards did not agree with the collectivization policies. Furthermore, among biologists of the day, the most popular topic was not agriculture at all, but the new genetics
Genetics

Genetics , a discipline of biology, is the science of heredity and Genetic variation in living organisms. The fact that living things inherit traits from their parents has been used since prehistoric times to improve crop plants and animals through selective breeding....
 that was emerging out of studies of Drosophila melanogaster
Drosophila melanogaster

Drosophila melanogaster is a two-winged insect that belongs to the Diptera, the Order of the Fly. The species is commonly known as the Drosophilidae or vinegar fly, and is one of the most commonly used model organisms in biology, including studies in genetics, physiology and Life history theory....
, commonly known as fruit flies. Drosophilidae
Drosophilidae

Drosophilidae is a diverse, cosmopolitan distribution family of fly, including the genus Drosophila, which includes fruit flies. The best known species is Drosophila melanogaster that is used extensively for studies concerning genetics, development, physiology, ecology, behaviour, etc....
 fruit flies made experimental verification of genetics theories, such as Mendelian ratio
Gregor Mendel

Gregor Johann Mendel was an Augustinians priest and scientist, and is often called the father of genetics for his study of the biological inheritance of certain Trait s in pea plants....
s and heritability
Heritability

In genetics, Heritability is the proportion of phenotype in a population that is attributable to genotype among individuals. Variation among individuals may be due to genetic and/or environmental factors....
, much easier. Only much later would this research have obvious application to the problem of agriculture, and during the 1920s and 1930s it was easy for a radical like Lysenko to castigate these theoretical biologists for spending their time bent over trays of fruit flies while famine raged on around them.

Isaak Izrailevich Prezent, a main Lysenko theorist, presented Lysenko in Soviet mass-media as a genius
Genius

A genius is an individual who successfully applies a previously unknown technique in the production of a work of art, science or calculation, or who masters and personalizes a known technique....
 who had developed a new, revolutionary agricultural technique. In this period, Soviet propaganda
Propaganda

Propaganda is the dissemination of information aimed at influencing the opinions or behaviors of large numbers of people. As opposed to Objectivity providing information, propaganda in its most basic sense presents information in order to influence its audience....
 often focused on inspirational stories of peasant
Peasant

A peasant is an agriculture worker who subsists by working a small plot of ground. The word is derived from 15th century French language pa?sant meaning one from the pays, or rural, ultimately from the Latin pagus, or outlying administrative district ....
s who, through their own canny ability and intelligence, came up with solutions to practical problems. Lysenko's widespread popularity provided him a platform to denounce theoretical genetics and to promote his own agricultural practices. He was, in turn, supported by the Soviet propaganda machine, which overstated his successes and omitted mention of his failures. Instead of making controlled experiments, Lysenko relied upon questionnaires taken of farmers to claim that vernalization increased wheat yields by 15%.

Rise

Lysenko's political success was due in part to his striking differences from most biologists at the time. He was from a peasant family, and an enthusiastic advocate of the Soviet Union and Leninism
Leninism

Leninism refers to various related Political science and economics theories elaborated by the Bolshevik Communism leader Vladimir Lenin. Leninism builds upon and elaborates the ideas of Marxism, and serves as a philosophical basis for the ideology of Soviet communism....
. During a period which saw a series of man-made agricultural disasters, he was also extremely fast in responding to problems, although not with real solutions. Whenever the Party announced plans to plant a new crop or cultivate a new area, Lysenko had immediate practical suggestions on how to proceed. So quickly did he develop his prescriptions — from the cold treatment of grain, to the plucking of leaves from cotton plants, to the cluster planting of trees, to unusual fertilizer mixes — that academic biologists did not have time to demonstrate that one technique was valueless or harmful before a new one was adopted. The Party-controlled newspapers inevitably applauded Lysenko's "practical" efforts and questioned the motives of his critics. Lysenko's "revolution in agriculture" had a powerful propaganda advantage over the academics, who urged the patience and observation required for science. Lysenko was admitted into the hierarchy of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union
Communist Party of the Soviet Union

The Communist Party of the Soviet Union was the ruling political party in the Soviet Union and one of the largest Communist Party in the world....
, and was put in charge of agricultural affairs. He used his position to denounce biologist
Biologist

A biologist is a scientist devoted to and producing results in biology through the study of life.Typically biologists study organisms and their relationship to their environment....
s as "fly-lovers and people haters," and to decry the "wreckers
Wrecking (Soviet crime)

Wrecking , was a crime specified in the criminal code of the Soviet Union in the Joseph Stalin era.It is often translated as "sabotage"; however "wrecking" and "diversionist acts" and "counter-revolutionary sabotage" were distinct sub-articles of Article 58 , and the meaning of "wrecking" is closer to "undermining"....
" in biology, whom he claimed were trying to purposely disable the Soviet economy and cause it to fail. He furthermore denied the distinction between theoretical and applied biology.

Following the disastrous collectivization efforts of the late 1920s, one of USSR's greatest agricultural problems during the 1930s was that many peasants were thoroughly unhappy with the collectivization. Lysenko's 'new' methods were seen as a way to make peasants feel positively involved in an 'agricultural revolution'. The party officials believed that peasants planting grain — for whatever reason — was a step in the right direction and a step away from the days when peasants would destroy grain to keep it from the Soviet government. Academic geneticist
Geneticist

A geneticist is a scientist who studies genetics, the science of heredity and genetic variation of organisms. A geneticist can be employed as a researcher or lecturer....
s could not hope to provide such simple and immediately tangible results, and so were seen as politically less useful than the charlatan
Charlatan

A charlatan is a person practicing quackery or some similar confidence trick in order to obtain money, fame or other advantages via some form of false_pretenses or deception....
ism of Lysenko.

Lysenko did not apply actual science. He was a proponent of the ideas of Ivan Vladimirovich Michurin
Ivan Vladimirovich Michurin

Ivan Vladimirovich Michurin , was a Russian practitioner of selection, Honorable Member of the Russian Academy of Sciences, and academician of the VASKhNIL....
, and practiced a form of Lamarckism
Lamarckism

Lamarckism is the once widely accepted idea that an organism can pass on characteristics that it acquired during its lifetime to its offspring ....
, insisting on the change in species among plants through hybridization and grafting
Grafting

Grafting is a method of asexual plant propagation widely used in agriculture and horticulture where the tissues of one plant are encouraged to fuse with those of another....
, as well as a variety of other non-genetic techniques. With this came, most importantly, the implication that acquired characteristics of an organism -- for example, the state of being leafless as a result of having been plucked -- could be inherited by that organism's descendants.

It is often suggested that Lysenko's success came solely from the desire in the USSR to assert that heredity had only a limited role in human development; that future generations, living under socialism
Socialism

Socialism refers to a broad set of economic theories of social organization advocating public or state ownership and administration of the means of production and distribution of goods, and a society characterized by equality for all individuals, with a fair or Egalitarianism method of compensation....
, would be purged of their 'bourgeois' or 'fascist' instincts. But Lysenko himself never purported that his views could be applied to human biology
Human biology

Human biology is an interdisciplinary academic field of biology, biological anthropology, nutrition and medicine which focuses on humans; it is closely related to primate biology, and a number of other fields....
; they were relegated strictly to agriculture. He indeed attacked certain reductionist
Reductionism

Reductionism can either mean an approach to understanding the nature of complex things by reducing them to the interactions of their parts, or to simpler or more fundamental things or a philosophical position that a complex system is nothing but the sum of its parts, and that an account of it can be reduced to accounts of individual consti...
 views of heredity, like eugenics
Eugenics

Eugenics is a scientific field involving the controlled breeding of humans in order to achieve desirable traits in future generations. Eugenics was at its height in first half of the 20th century and was largely abandoned with the end of World War II....
, but only as bourgeois influences on science. Many scholarly works on Lysenkoism agree that it was not based on human genetics. Stalin, however, wanted to believe that Lysenkoism did apply to human genetics.

Lysenkoism's success was also not wholly ideological — it did not follow just from Marxist or Leninist philosophies that supposedly rejected certain ideas about human determinism on ideological grounds. Historians such as Loren Graham (of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Massachusetts Institute of Technology

The Massachusetts Institute of Technology is a private university research university located in Cambridge, Massachusetts, Massachusetts, United States....
), David Joravsky (formerly at Northwestern University
Northwestern University

Northwestern University is a non-sectarian private university research university located in Evanston, Illinois and downtown Chicago, Illinois, United States....
) have argued that the success was more due to Soviet political maneuvers at the time than to an attempt to replace the basic tenet
Tenet

Tenet may refer to:* Tenet , a Canadian heavy metal band* Tenet Healthcare, a hospital holding company* Tenet people, an ethnic group in Sudan...
s of science. Nevertheless, there is no doubt that rival views were rejected because they were seen as 'bourgeois' or 'fascist', and analogous 'non-bourgeois' theories also flourished in other fields in the Soviet academy at this time (see Japhetic theory
Japhetic theory (linguistics)

Japhetic theory is a term used to describe a linguistic theory developed by the Soviet linguist Nicholas Marr . In linguistics it is considered to be the equivalent of Lysenkoism in biology: a theory that was promoted and supported for ideological rather than scientific reasons, because it was thought to represent "proletarian science" as opp...
; socialist realism
Socialist realism

Socialist realism is a Teleology-oriented style of realism which has as its purpose the furtherance of the goals of socialism and communism. Although related, it should not be confused with social realism, a type of art that realistically depicts subjects of social concern....
). Interestingly, perhaps the only opponents of Lysenkoism during Stalin's lifetime to escape liquidation came from the small community of Soviet nuclear physicists. But as Tony Judt has observed, "Stalin left his nuclear physicists alone... [He] may well have been mad but he was not stupid."

Repercussions

From 1934 to 1940, under Lysenko's admonitions and with Stalin's approval, many geneticists were executed (including Isaak Agol, Solomon Levit, Grigorii Levitskii, Georgii Karpechenko
Georgii Karpechenko

Georgii Dmitrievich Karpechenko was a Russian and Soviet Union biologist.Worked on cytology and invented several Hybrid . Among his contributions is his seminal work on allopolyploidy, culminating in his creation of a Raphanobrassica, the first instance of a new species obtained through experimental crossbreeding.....
 and Georgii Nadson) or sent to labor camp
Labor camp

A labor camp is a simplified detention facility where inmates are forced to engage in penal labor. Labor camps have many common aspects with slavery and with prisons....
s. The famous Soviet geneticist Nikolai Vavilov
Nikolai Vavilov

Nikolai Ivanovich Vavilov was a prominent Russian and Soviet Union botanist and geneticist best known for having identified the Vavilov_Center of cultivated plants....
 was arrested in 1940 and died in prison in 1943. Genetics was stigma
Stigma

Stigma may refer to:In biology:* Stigma , a small spot, mark, scar, or minute hole* In a flower , the stigma is the terminal portion of the gynoecium that has no epidermis and is meant to receive pollen....
tized as a 'bourgeois science' or 'fascist science' (because fascists — particularly the Nazis
Nazism

Nazism, officially National Socialism , refers to the ideology and practices of the National Socialist German Workers? Party under Adolf Hitler, and the policies adopted by the dictatorial government of Nazi Germany from 1933 to 1945....
 in Germany — embraced genetics and attempted to use it to justify their theories on eugenics
Eugenics

Eugenics is a scientific field involving the controlled breeding of humans in order to achieve desirable traits in future generations. Eugenics was at its height in first half of the 20th century and was largely abandoned with the end of World War II....
 and the master race
Master race

The 'master race' was a concept in Nazism ideology, which holds that the Germanic peoples represent an ideal and "pure Race ". It derives from 19th century racial theory, which posited a hierarchy of races placing Jews at the bottom of the hierarchy while Northern Europeans at the top....
, which culminated in Action T4
Action T4

Action T4 was a program, also called Euthanasia Program, in Nazi Germany spanning October 1939 until August 1941, during which physicians killed 70,273 people specified in Adolf Hitler secret memo of September 1, 1939 as suffering patients "judged incurably sick, by critical medical examination," but described in a denunciation of th...
). Some Soviet geneticists, however, survived and continued to work in genetics, dangerous as it was.

In 1948, genetics was officially declared "a bourgeois pseudoscience
Bourgeois pseudoscience

Bourgeois pseudoscience was a term of condemnation in the Soviet Union for certain scientific disciplines that were deemed unacceptable from an ideology perspective ....
"; all geneticists were fired from work (some were also arrested), and all genetic research was discontinued. Nikita Khrushchev
Nikita Khrushchev

Nikita Sergeyevich Khrushchev served as General Secretary of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union from 1953 to 1964, following the death of Joseph Stalin, and Premier of the Soviet Union from 1958 to 1964....
, who claimed to be an expert in agricultural science, also valued Lysenko as a great scientist, and the taboo on genetics continued (but all geneticists were released or rehabilitated posthumously). The ban was only waived in the mid 1960s.

Thus, Lysenkoism caused serious, long-term harm to Soviet biology. It represented a serious failure of the early Soviet leadership to find real solutions to agricultural problems, allowing their system to be hijacked by a charlatan — at the expense of many human lives. Lysenkoism also spread to China
China

China is a Culture of China, an ancient civilization, and, depending on perspective, a national or multinational entity extending over a large area in East Asia....
, where it continued long after it was eventually denounced by the Soviets.

Almost alone among Western scientists, John Desmond Bernal, Professor of Physics
Physics

Physics is the natural science which examines basic concepts such as energy, force, and spacetime and all that derives from these, such as mass, charge, matter and its Motion ....
 at Birkbeck College, University of London
Birkbeck, University of London

Birkbeck, University of London, sometimes referred to by its former name Birkbeck College or by the abbreviation BBK, is a constituent college of the University of London....
 and a Fellow of the Royal Society, made an aggressive public defense of Lysenko and some years later gave an obituary of ‘Stalin as a Scientist.’ However, despite Bernal's endorsement other members of Britain's scientific left retreated from open support of the Soviet Union, and may have been one of the chief reasons for a retreat from Marxism in that country.

"Neo-Lysenkoism"


The word 'Neo-Lysenkoism' has occasionally been invoked as a derogatory term in the debates over race and intelligence
Race and intelligence

Race and intelligence have in some cases been claimed to be correlated. Contemporary debate on this issue focuses on the nature, causes, and rectifications of ethnic group differences in intelligence test scores....
 and sociobiology
Sociobiology

Sociobiology is a Neo-Darwinism synthesis of scientific disciplines that attempts to explain social behavior in all species by considering the evolutionary advantages the behaviors may have....
 against scientists minimising the role of genes in shaping human behavior, such as Leon Kamin
Leon Kamin

Leon J. Kamin is an United States psychologist who chaired Princeton University's Princeton University Department of Psychology in 1968.Kamin's initial notoriety in psychology came from his research and documentation of the "blocking effect" ....
, Richard Lewontin
Richard Lewontin

Richard Charles "Dick" Lewontin is an United States evolutionary biologist, geneticist and social commentator. A leader in developing the mathematical basis of population genetics and evolutionary theory, he pioneered the notion of using techniques from molecular biology such as gel electrophoresis to apply to questions of genetic variation...
, Stephen Jay Gould
Stephen Jay Gould

Stephen Jay Gould was a prominent American Paleontology, Evolution, and History of science. He was also one of the most influential and widely read writers of popular science of his generation....
 and Barry Mehler
Barry Mehler

Barry Alan Mehler is a Jewish-United States professor of humanities at Ferris State University who founded the Institute for the Study of Academic Racism ....
.

See also

  • Japhetic theory (linguistics)
    Japhetic theory (linguistics)

    Japhetic theory is a term used to describe a linguistic theory developed by the Soviet linguist Nicholas Marr . In linguistics it is considered to be the equivalent of Lysenkoism in biology: a theory that was promoted and supported for ideological rather than scientific reasons, because it was thought to represent "proletarian science" as opp...
  • Roy Medvedev
    Roy Medvedev

    Roy Aleksandrovich Medvedev is a Russian historian renowned as the author of the dissident history of Stalinism, Let History Judge, first published in English in 1972....


External links

  • - 'Lysenkoism', The Skeptic's Dictionary