"But just as the erosive power of a river changes the future options 
for the course of the river, so evolution itself changes future 
evolutionary possibilities. This can happen in simple ways, as 
termites construct their own environment by building termite mounds. 
These mounds may last for dozens or hundreds of years and provide a 
sort of ecological inheritance for generations of termites. 

The first cyanobacteria turned carbon dioxide into oxygen and set off 
a revolution that completely changed the chemistry of the oceans and 
atmosphere. Most species modify their environment and this often 
changes how selection affects them: they construct, at least in part, 
their own environment. As evolutionary biologists we have little 
understanding of what these processes mean for evolution. 

Does all this add up to a new modern synthesis? There is certainly no 
consensus among evolutionary biologists, but development, ecology, 
genetics and paleontology all provide new perspectives on how 
evolution operates, and how we should study it. None of these 
concerns provide a scintilla of hope for creationists, as scientific 
investigations are already providing new insights into these issues. 
The foundations for a paradigm shift may be in place, but it may be 
some time before we see whether a truly novel perspective develops or 
these tensions are accommodated within an expanded modern synthesis. 

more at link http://www.nytimes.com/2007/06/26/science/26essay.html

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