Spontaneous generation is a superseded scientific theory that held that living creatures could arise from nonliving matter and that such processes were commonplace and regular.
| FactSnippet No. 1,098,212 |
Spontaneous generation is a superseded scientific theory that held that living creatures could arise from nonliving matter and that such processes were commonplace and regular.
| FactSnippet No. 1,098,212 |
The doctrine of spontaneous generation was coherently synthesized by Aristotle, who compiled and expanded the work of earlier natural philosophers and the various ancient explanations for the appearance of organisms.
| FactSnippet No. 1,098,213 |
Spontaneous generation means both the supposed processes by which different types of life might repeatedly emerge from specific sources other than seeds, eggs, or parents, and the theoretical principles presented in support of any such phenomena.
| FactSnippet No. 1,098,214 |
Term equivocal Spontaneous generation, sometimes known as heterogenesis or xenogenesis, describes the supposed process by which one form of life arises from a different, unrelated form, such as tapeworms from the bodies of their hosts.
| FactSnippet No. 1,098,215 |
Spontaneous generation proposed that plants and animals, including human beings, arose from a primordial terrestrial slime, a mixture of earth and water, combined with the sun's heat.
| FactSnippet No. 1,098,216 |
Spontaneous generation is described as if it were a fact in literature well into the Renaissance.
| FactSnippet No. 1,098,217 |
Spontaneous generation's studies were rigorously scrutinized by his peers and many of them agreed.
| FactSnippet No. 1,098,218 |
Spontaneous generation's technique involved boiling the broth in a sealed container with the air partially evacuated to prevent explosions.
| FactSnippet No. 1,098,219 |
However, although the idea of spontaneous generation had been in decline for nearly a century, its supporters did not abandon it all at once.
| FactSnippet No. 1,098,220 |
Spontaneous generation boiled a meat broth in a swan neck flask; the bend in the neck of the flask prevented falling particles from reaching the broth, while still allowing the free flow of air.
| FactSnippet No. 1,098,221 |