> Our new awareness of epigenetics challenges genetic determinism and throws a new wrench into nature-nurture debates.<p>It does?<p>> Epigenetic studies show that genes alone do not determine form and function,<p>Of course genes alone do not do that - that's the whole <i>point</i> of the nature-nurture debate, and the fact that most things are a mix of nature and nurture. We already knew a long time ago that genes alone do not determine form and function.<p>> but that the cellular environment matters in making people who they are as biological and social beings.<p>That also isn't new. Of course the cellular environment matters in making people (for example, fetal alcohol syndrome is a clear example of that, way before epigenetics).<p>The fascinating thing about epigenetics is something else entirely. It is that there is <i>inheritance of traits</i> via a path that is not DNA. This is incredibly important and interesting, but was not what showed us that genes do not determine everything about organisms, we knew that long before. In other words, we already knew non-genetic factors determined how organisms are formed and behave, but epigenetics showed us that those non-genetic factors can be <i>inherited</i>.