So you admit evos still use the idea of recapitulation and the biogenetic law?
No, I'm saying those terms mean something other than what they used to mean, something other than what Haeckel used them to mean, and they definitely mean something other than what you're trying to claim them to mean.
And you're quote-butchering Richardson in an attempt to do so.
Far from agreeing with you that Haeckel's ideas were part and parcel of evolutionary theory, Richardson's 2002 paper admits they were tossed out and are not accepted among other evolutionary scientists. Richardson is arguing that Haeckel's views shouldn't be discarded entirely, as they have been up till now, because some of what he said was, in Richardson's view, really not as incompatible with the Synthetic Theory as everyone thought up till now, and therefore his ideas can add some new insight into our views of evolution. Which is...well, as I said above, pretty much the
opposite of what you're claiming is Haeckel's role in evolutionary theory
Richardson, in any case, holds a minority opinion on Haeckel's more generalized use of his recapitulation theory. Richardson himself acknowledges that Gould, Lehman, de Beer, Miyazaki, and Mikevich did not think Haeckel was so ambivalent about what he was really saying with his Law of Correspondence, since he was very specific about identifying correspondences in the embryonic structures to structures in the adult organism. The view of Gould and the others is supported by the fact that Haeckel was actually very explicit about the entire adult form of certain ancestor organisms being recapitulated, as even Richardson admits Haeckel did, though he tries to say the implications are more limited (Richardson uses the word "exceptional" to describe the specific times Haeckel uses that direct whole-form comparison).
Richardson even admits that, regarding Haeckel's Law of Terminal Addition, "The idea that new adult stages are added terminally, then telescoped or pushed-back into the embryonic stages of descendants, is assumed to be part of the Haeckelian package (Gould, 1977: pp. 74± 75; de Beer, 1951: p. 5; Lehman, 1987: p. 206; Richardson, 1999: p. 605; Miyazaki and Mickevich, 1982: p. 394) and can reasonably be inferred from his alphabetical analogy and some of his writings."
This stands in contrast to von Baer's idea that embryonic structures show similarities only to other embryonic structures, an idea expanded on and confirmed by science since then, without any need to rely on Haeckel at all, making his views actually
irrelevant to phylogenetics in its currrent form. That's why no one in science really cares any more whether Haeckel was right or wrong in any of his specific theories in any context outside the historical. Richardson could be totally right and Gould totally wrong, or Gould could be totally right and Richardson totally wrong, and it wouldn't matter one whit to the current Synthetic Model.
And I told you all this
two weeks ago, randman.