@book{oai:ir.soken.ac.jp:00005429, author = {IIDA, Kaori}, month = {Feb}, note = {Through the career of Kihara Hitoshi, a prominent plant geneticist in Japan, I will show that genetics in Japan developed by maintaining a close connection with agriculture throughout the first half of the twentieth century. To exploit the socioeconomic context that valued applied science, Kihara gradually made the practical aspect of his projects more explicit and consequently created projects that were both basic and applied science. These projects not only allowed his group to expand successfully during wartime but also influenced the group’s scientific approach. To gain full understanding of an organism, investigators took a multidisciplinary approach beyond genetics, an approach similar to what the Russian geneticist Nikolai Vavilov described in advocating “breeding as a science.” Genetics, being placed within “breeding as a science,” was also affected, and Kihara began advocating physiological genetics, along the lines advanced by German geneticist Richard Goldschmidt. The story of Kihara’s career reveals how the national emphasis on agriculture had a significant impact on the disciplinary growth of genetics in Japan as well as on Japanese biologists’ approach to organisms and genes.}, publisher = {Springer International Publishing}, title = {Genetics and “Breeding as a Science” : Kihara Hitoshi and the Development of Genetics in Japan in the First Half of the Twentieth Century [accepted version/"ver2"]}, volume = {40}, year = {2015} }