Gregor Mendel, the Father of Genetics and a Tax Resister, Turns 200
Mendel had a history of run-ins with the state.

Two hundred years ago in July, Johann Mendel was born. He would come to be known as Gregor (the religious name he received upon entering the Augustinian Friars at St. Thomas' Abbey in Austria-Hungary) and later as the "father of modern genetics."
Mendel studied math, physics, and eventually botany in school. While conducting experiments with hybridized pea plants in the monastery garden and greenhouse, he discovered the principles of heredity. His process involved carefully tracking various traits, such as pod shape and plant height. From those observations, he developed a theory involving what he called dominant and recessive "factors"—what would come to be known as "genes."
This work paved the way for all future research in the genetic sciences, including the discovery of DNA. But Mendel's contributions would not be recognized in his lifetime.
In 1866, Mendel published the results of his experiments. The paper received little attention. In 1868, Mendel was named abbot (head monk) of his monastery, and his research gave way to administrative obligations. He died in 1884.
Things began to change in 1900. That year, a British biologist named William Bateson unearthed Mendel's paper. He translated it into English and became a proponent of Mendel's ideas. Bateson's own experiments extended Mendel's discoveries, showing, for example, that Mendelian principles applied to animals as well as plants. Bateson also bestowed the name genetics on this area of study. Today, Mendel is widely recognized as "the architect of genetic experimental and statistical analysis," as the Encyclopedia Britannica puts it.
Biographies of Mendel note a history of run-ins with the state. When he first arrived at St. Thomas' Abbey, he was assigned to a teaching job. But the Austro-Hungarian government around that time began requiring an exam for teacher certification. Mendel, who suffered from severe test anxiety, attempted the exam on two occasions, six years apart, and failed it both times.
Two decades later, as abbot, Mendel again found himself at loggerheads with the authorities after a new city law attempted to subject the monastery to heavy taxation. "The very idea made Mendel boil," writes Robin Marantz Henig in The Monk in the Garden: The Lost and Found Genius of Gregor Mendel, the Father of Genetics. "The abbot began a single-handed letter-writing campaign," which became "more detailed, more impassioned, more strident, and more vituperative as the years went on." Henig adds that "the stubborn abbot never wavered in his insistence that a tax on church property was unconstitutional."
The battle lasted until Mendel's death a decade later. He never did agree to pay the tax.
This article originally appeared in print under the headline "The Father of Genetics Turns 200."
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A guy who studied 'phenotypes'? Sounds like a white supremacist by today's metric.
That unenlightened bigot probably thought men and women were different and only women could get pregnant, too.
Freakin' theists and their belief in invisible social constructs man! I tell ya.
What Mendel did with his plants in the garden and laboratory was based in evidence. What he did in Vespers and Communion, not so much.
What Mendel did with his plants in the garden and laboratory was based in evidence.
The science that wouldn’t be uncovered until 10 yrs. after his death? You have a real problem with this whole construct the rest of us call reality don’t you?
What bearing does the length of time have to do with the correctness of Mendel’s conclusions? In the reality most of us try to understand, it doesn’t make a difference.
What Mendel did with his plants in the garden and laboratory was based in evidence.
Actually Mendel famously manipulated some of his data to make it fit his theory. It just so happened that his theory was, in fact, largely accurate, so we politely overlook the fudging.
Ultimately, your claim is not found in evidence:
Did Gregor Mendel Fabricate His Gene Data?
Questions about bias and skewed experiments have circulated for more than 100 years regarding Mendel's famous research on pea genes.
By Mira Lazine Sep 12, 2022 11:00 AM
https://www.discovermagazine.com/the-sciences/did-gregor-mendel-fabricate-his-gene-data
Also, factual claims have practical applications, so the ubiquity of canned peas and pea flour (barring government coercion) should answer any questions on whether Gregor Mendel was correct.
Well well... even our home-baked version of Axis Sally is suddenly eager to move the conversation away from de-personing and coercing fertile females. Conditions in Hitler's homeland back during Reconstruction are suddenly breaking news. Women voters, by coincidence, are again aroused against Theocracy. In Marched Through Georgia, Linseed "Klanbake" Graham Cracker struggles to evade awkward questions, and hark! Do I hear an election approaching?
How dare you! Why revere a seditious white male who challenged the state, and employed white culture privilege with harmful concepts like "data" and "logic"?
At the very least we should instead praise heroes like Trofim Lysenko, who proved how state policies can be supported by science.
Too bad Mendel's Church never followed his example, huh? 🙂
Actually his Church was on board with evolution a long time ago. It was other denominations that insisted on Kansas style head-in-sandism.
Phbbbt. Letting facts get in the way of a good narrative! What are you, some kind of science denier?
Who's the narrative maker and follower here, Mrs. Doth Protest Too Much, Methinks?
The Catholic Church supported Darwin's Theory of Evolution because they didn't want to make an ass of themselves twice like they did with Galileo.
Protestant Pentecostal Evangelical Churches and Islam didn't have that advantage of experience and they went ahead and made asses of themselves over Evolution.
Lysenko was a cracker too. So many great Black biologists and geneticists, but still they are ignored if they don't follow Whitey Progressive Doctrines.
But Lysenko was a devoted Marxist who rejected Mendelian genetics and destroyed the careers of white scientists who disagreed, and even had a few executed, so he gets a pass.
Not to mention Lysenko starved millions of "White" lives with Stalin's implementation of Lysenko's nonsense in Ukraine. Ol' Lysenko is an Honorary Ally of the Wokesters! Maybe the Wokesters will try his methods in Jonestown 2.0! 🙂
Gregor Mendel, the Father of Genetics and a Tax Resister, Turns 200
*Cues Entertainment Tonight Theme.*
You mean he's still around, Steffie? 😉
Two decades later, as abbot, Mendel again found himself at loggerheads with the authorities after a new city law attempted to subject the monastery to heavy taxation.
So, was everyone subject to heavy taxation too, as Monarchic Empires are won't to do? If, so, then wouldn't this constitute special pleading for religion?
Either go Howard Jarvis for the peasants or go home!
Correction:. wont to do. Sometimes five minutes aren't enough. 🙂
But the Austro-Hungarian government around that time began requiring an exam for teacher certification. Mendel, who suffered from severe test anxiety, attempted the exam on two occasions, six years apart, and failed it both times.
But the Austro-Hungarian Federation of Teachers filed a grievance on his behalf, right?
Down with the arch-reactionary Gregor Mendel!
Long live the progressive Trofim Denisovich Lysenko!!
Lysenko's pseudoscience was Stalin's way of telling the Soviet bean-eaters: "I'd say you've had enough!" 🙂
The Campfire--Blazing Saddles
https://youtu.be/VPIP9KXdmO0
Didn't know he lived so recently. I learned about Mendel's work when i was in fourth grade, and for some reason I thought he had lived during the renaissance.
-jcr
At least during the renaissance you could resist taxes. You can't today, they will imprison you or more likely kill you. Good thing Mendel lived back then or we wouldn't be as far in genetics.
Mendel, as head of the taxed monastery, refused to pay.
The result was the govt. did nothing. What could it do? The primary asset taxed was labor, the grounds/buildings were useless without the workers.
And so it is today. What would the govt. do if people stopped paying? They would continue to tax by monetary expansion.
This why a new uncontrollable means of communication is needed. With it we could create a new, free banking system.