Reviewer Minelli, writing for journal Heredity, described the book as "thought-provoking" and focusing on "two sides, historical and philosophical, of what he regards as the unbridgeable contrast between the Evolutionary Synthesis and today's evolutionary developmental biology, or Evo-Devo."
According to Minelli, these debates are oversimplified, preventing ideal coverage and demonstrating Amundson's advocacy for evolutionary developmental biology's focus on organism development and criticism that the modern synthesis minimizes it in favor of structural heredity and population genetics, but the book remains a useful reference overview, including on the history of those developments.
[5] In a review for University of Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews, assistant professor of philosophy Alan C Love wrote that "The Changing Role of the Embryo in Evolutionary Thought is a revisionist history of evolutionary theorizing through the lens of embryological considerations", "to expose common mischaracterizations of historical episodes in the biological sciences that result from particular theoretical commitments" and "demonstrate how these mischaracterizations arise out of philosophical positions [... that] lead to a conceptualization of evolutionary theory that excludes any role for development", that it considers "questions that have been largely ignored in philosophy of biology".
Amundson uses a philosophical strategy including principles like "inductivist caution" and "cautious realism" in his analysis of the history of biology.
He cites a quote suggesting that it may be because the criticism Amundson was looking for was lacking in primary sources.