https://www.nytimes.com/2021/07/07/science/richard-c-lewontin-dead.html

Richard C. Lewontin, Eminent Geneticist With a Sharp Pen, Dies at 92
He demonstrated that differences in DNA between groups of people were far 
smaller than originally believed. He was also a noted opponent of aspects of 
sociobiology.

By Natalie Angier 
July 7, 2021

Richard C. Lewontin, a respected Harvard geneticist, did not shrink from 
denouncing what he considered to be shallow thinking about how genetics shape 
human nature.Museum of Comparative Zoology, Harvard
Richard C. Lewontin, widely considered one of the most brilliant geneticists of 
the modern era and a prolific, elegant and often caustic writer who condemned 
the facile use of genetics and evolutionary biology to “explain” human nature, 
died on Sunday at his home in Cambridge, Mass. He was 92.

His son, Timothy, said that the cause was unknown, but that Dr. Lewontin had 
not been eating for some time.

Dr. Lewontin was a pioneer in the study of genetic variation among humans and 
other animals. Applying insights from mathematics and molecular biology, he 
radically advanced scientists’ understanding of the mechanisms of evolutionary 
change and overturned longstanding assumptions about differences among 
individuals, races and species.

A gleeful gadfly, he tirelessly attacked shibboleths about the primacy of DNA 
over nurture, culture and history in shaping complex behaviors.

Dr. Lewontin spent the bulk of his career at Harvard University. Many of his 
students and colleagues regarded him with an awe that tipped toward reverence, 
describing him as equally gifted at abstruse quantitative research, popular 
writing and public speaking; a Renaissance scholar who spoke fluent French, 
wrote treatises in Italian, worked with Buckminster Fuller on his geodesic 
domes and played chamber music on the clarinet with his pianist wife, Mary 
Jane. He was also a volunteer firefighter and a self-described Marxist who 
chopped his own wood.

Not everyone was enamored of Dr. Lewontin. He famously clashed with another 
eminence and literary light at Harvard: Edward O. Wilson, a founder of 
sociobiology, the field that seeks to trace the roots of behavior in evolution. 
Dr. Lewontin considered Dr. Wilson a naïve genetic determinist and once derided 
him as a “corpse in the elevator.”

Because the two men worked in the same building, elevators were in fact a 
problem. “If you happened to be in an elevator with Wilson and Lewontin 
together, it was a most uncomfortable ride,” said Jerry Coyne, an evolutionary 
biologist now at the University of Chicago who studied under Dr. Lewontin. 
“Here were these two Harvard professors who wouldn’t even look at each other.”

In fact, Dr. Lewontin seemed to relish a good intellectual skirmish from all 
comers. Describing his experience studying under the great evolutionary 
biologist Theodosius Dobzhansky, Dr. Lewontin once said: “He and I spent three 
years of my Ph.D. fighting with each other. He liked it, and I liked it.”

Dr. Lewontin’s barbs, however, struck some as excessively harsh, especially 
from his highly visible perch as a regular and stylistically irresistible 
contributor to The New York Review of Books and other elite publications.

“Dick was a complicated man,” the primatologist Sarah Blaffer Hrdy wrote in an 
email, “generous to his students, grossly unfair in his criticisms of Ed Wilson 
and the then-fledgling field of sociobiology.” Could this have had less to do 
with scientific specifics, Dr. Hrdy wondered, than with “plain old male-male 
competition?” To which Dr. Lewontin might well have pulled out his volunteer 
fireman’s hat: When it comes to the persistence of biological determinism, he 
wrote in 1994, no sooner has one fire been extinguished “by the cool stream of 
critical reason than another springs up down the street.”


Dr. Lewontin’s early work posited that instead of genetic mutations being rare 
and harmful, they could coexist along with other forms of the same 
gene.Genetics Society of America
Dr. Lewontin first won scientific fame in the mid-1960s for research he 
conducted with John Hubby at the University of Chicago that revealed far 
greater genetic diversity among members of the same species than anybody had 
suspected.

That work upended existing notions that most genetic mutations are rare, 
harmful and soon swept from the breeding pool. The two men’s findings showed 
that, to the contrary, many different forms, or alleles, of the same genes can 
coexist indefinitely in wild populations of organisms, be they fruit flies, 
zebra finches, earthworms or zebras. The quest to understand the reasons for 
all this allelic variety, and to understand precisely how it is maintained over 
time, remain lively and often contentious fields of research today.

Dr. Lewontin’s scientific renown expanded further in 1972, when he published a 
groundbreaking analysis of genetic variability in humans. His report showed 
that while individual people might differ genetically from one another, the 
same was less true for human groups or human races.

Using what would now count as relatively crude genetic markers like blood 
groups, but pulling from a significant global database, Dr. Lewontin and his 
co-workers determined that the great bulk of human genetic variability, roughly 
85 percent, could be found within a population of, say, Asians or Africans, 
while just 15 percent of the diversity might distinguish Asians from Africans 
from Caucasians.

“People had expected to find lots of genetic differences between groups,” 
Andrew Berry, a lecturer at Harvard who studied under Dr. Lewontin, said. “They 
thought that Asians and Africans had been isolated from each other for such a 
long time they must have acquired all sorts of bespoke mutations.”

Dr. Lewontin found something very different: a distinct lack of differences. On 
a basic genetic level, Asians and Africans, as well as other racial and ethnic 
groups, are remarkably alike.

“The message is, despite the superficial differences we see among groups — the 
shape of the nose, the color of hair or skin, humans are stunningly similar,” 
Dr. Berry said. “This meshes beautifully with subsequent work that showed 
humans are a young species that only recently radiated out of Africa.”

Subsequent in-depth studies of DNA sequences have generally confirmed the 
remarkable large-scale genetic homogeneity of humanity that the Lewontin study 
revealed half a century ago.

Dr. Lewontin’s political activism grew in parallel with his scientific renown. 
He protested vigorously against the war in Vietnam, and in 1971 he quit the 
esteemed National Academy of Sciences, charging the organization with 
sponsoring secret military research.

He clashed with Edward Teller, considered the father of the hydrogen bomb, at a 
meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. He called 
Dr. Teller “a flunky of power” and derided his notion that science is somehow 
purer and nobler than other pursuits and should remain above the fray. “Science 
is a social activity just like being a policeman, a factory worker or a 
politician,” Dr. Lewontin said.

He was no fan of the massive federal Human Genome Project, which set out to map 
the entire sequence of human DNA, and he strongly objected to the notion that 
DNA is the “blueprint” for a human being. He considered the perpetual debate 
over race, I.Q. and heritability to be an irritating scam, a recrudescence of 
Nazi-inflected notions of eugenics and master races.

Even to begin to figure out how big a role genes played in intellectual life, 
he said, would require a large number of newborn infants to be raised in 
tightly controlled circumstances by caretakers who had no idea where the babies 
came from. “We should not be surprised that such a study has not been done,” he 
added.

Dr. Lewontin marveled at the perniciousness of sexism, including among his 
supposedly high-minded peers. “When speaking to academic audiences about the 
biological determination of social status, I have repeatedly tried the 
experiment of asking the crowd how many believe that blacks are genetically 
mentally inferior to whites,” he wrote in 1994.

“No one ever raises a hand,” he continued. “When I then ask how many believe 
that men are biologically superior to women in analytic and mathematical 
ability, there will always be a few volunteers. To admit publicly to outright 
biological racism is a strict taboo, but the avowal of biological sexism is 
tolerated as a minor foolishness.”

Dr. Lewontin also criticized the adaptationist view of evolution — the idea 
that everything we see in nature has evolved for a reason, which it behooves 
biologists to divine. He collaborated with a Harvard colleague, Stephen Jay 
Gould, on a famous essay called “The Spandrels of San Marco and the Panglossian 
Paradigm: A Critique of the Adaptationist Program.”

They argued that many seemingly important traits might have arisen 
incidentally, the tag-along result of other features they accompany — just as 
the spandrels, or spaces above arches, on the dome of San Marco were not put 
there to be richly decorated, but because you can’t make a dome without 
spandrels. Dr. Lewontin eventually grew disenchanted with Dr. Gould, however, 
for what he saw as Dr. Gould’s thirst for celebrity.

It was Dr. Lewontin’s break with another old friend, Dr. Wilson, that proved 
the more harrowing and long-lasting. Dr. Lewontin in 1975 attacked Dr. Wilson’s 
700-page blockbuster, “Sociobiology: A New Synthesis,” as the work of a modern, 
industrial Western “ideologue.” Inspired by this and similar critiques, a group 
of demonstrators at a 1978 scientific meeting dumped a bucket of water over Dr. 
Wilson’s head.

The ill will persisted for many years, but friends said the two men had 
recently reconciled with a handshake, calling each other worthy adversaries.

More recently, Dr. Lewontin took on the field of evolutionary psychology. “It’s 
a waste of time,” he said. “It doesn’t count as science to me.” One of the 
chestnuts of the discipline is the notion that men are innately prone to 
straying, and will spread their seed with as many nubile young partners as will 
have them. While recognizing that anecdote isn’t evidence, Dr. Lewontin said, 
he certainly didn’t follow the E.P. male script. He married his high school 
sweetheart, Mary Jane Christianson, at age 18, ate lunch with her every day, 
read poetry with her at night, held hands with her in movie theaters and died 
just three days after she did.

In addition to his son Timothy, Dr. Lewontin is survived by three other sons, 
David, Stephen and James; seven grandchildren; and one great-grandchild.

“I want to make clear my own attitude,” Dr. Lewontin said in 2009. “I think 
most of the interesting questions about human individual and social behavior 
will never be answered. The human species will be extinct before they are.”

Later in his career Dr. Lewontin took on evolutionary psychology, a field he 
called a waste of time. “It doesn’t count as science to me,” he said.Andrew 
Berry
Richard Lewontin was born in New York City on March 29, 1929, the only child of 
Max and Lilian Lewontin. His father was a cloth broker who connected clothing 
mills with manufacturers; his mother was a homemaker. He earned a bachelor’s in 
biology at Harvard in 1951, a master’s degree in mathematical statistics at 
Columbia and a Ph.D. at Columbia in 1954.

Dr. Lewontin held faculty positions at North Carolina State University, the 
University of Rochester and the University of Chicago before moving to Harvard 
in 1973.

He had habits of dress: “Khaki pants, work boots, work shirt — in solidarity 
with workers,” Dr. Coyne said. He had habits of principle, notably of 
authorship: Many senior scientists are listed as authors on research reports 
done entirely by their students, but Dr. Lewontin would have none of it. If you 
didn’t do any of the work, he insisted, you don’t get to take any of the credit.

Scientists from around the world were drawn to him. They would gather in his 
laboratory around an old conference table beneath a mounted moose head and 
argue about population genetics, legitimate evolutionary theory versus 
dime-store Darwinism, economics, politics, history, and the debt that 
university scientists owe to the society that nurtured them.

He was the author of “It Ain’t Necessarily So: The Dream of the Human Genome 
and Other Illusions” (2000) and “The Triple Helix: Gene, Organism, and 
Environment” (2000), among other books, and he loved writing his column for The 
New York Review of Books. He wrote easily and said he never did a second draft.

Yet Dr. Lewontin insisted that his legitimacy as a writer rested on his 
scientific contributions, and that the day he stopped doing science he would 
stop writing, too. In 2014, he kept his word.


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