It has a 4-day life cycle and propagates as self-fertilizing hermaphrodites or by outcrossing after the spontaneous generation of males. |
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He was one of the strongest opponents of the doctrine of spontaneous generation in the 17th century. |
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Needham became a strong advocate of spontaneous generation, and performed an experiment that he felt supported his belief in biogenesis. |
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The further science progresses, the more unlikely spontaneous generation seems. |
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The intense arguments for and against the concept of spontaneous generation spurred on the developments in the field. |
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The aim is to encourage the spontaneous generation and development of innovators' groups on a voluntary basis. |
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The issue of the Special Creation of Life by a Higher Intelligence versus spontaneous generation from a primordial soup has been the subject of debate for many years. |
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In fact, classic myths, being vehicles for expressing universal patterns of unconscious thought, are filled with examples of spontaneous generation. |
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You can test to see if spontaneous generation occurs or if geese hatch out of barnacles. |
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The origin of living beings is initially through spontaneous generation. |
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To hear him describe it, Vedantam's podcast had an almost spontaneous generation. |
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One basic mechanism appears to result from spontaneous generation of cardiac impulses within the ventricle. |
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Opposed to these trends, British naturalists and philosophers were generally hard opponents of spontaneous generation. |
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He builds up the germ theory and annihilates the spontaneous generation theory. |
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Research on the infinitesmal, on the spontaneous generation. |
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Here he confuted the theory of spontaneous generation, illustrating the reproduction cycle of various insects and showing how they developed from the egg. |
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While both supported the idea of spontaneous generation, Italian abbot and physiologist Lazzaro Spallanzani maintained that life could never spontaneously generate from dead matter. |
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Yet no evidence for spontaneous generation now can be cited. |
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We all understand that when terrorism is involved, somewhat like when organized crime is involved, these are not things that come about through spontaneous generation. |
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In the life sciences, Louis Pasteur disproved spontaneous generation, Gregor Mendel discovered genetics, and Carolus Linnaeus developed the modern classification system. |
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A century previously, Lazzaro Spallanzani had already contested the idea of spontaneous generation and was the first scientist to isolate and observe a microorganism without, however, being able to complete the demonstration. |
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But none of these requirements will spring up by spontaneous generation. |
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Yet the idea of spontaneous generation died hard. |
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This is real ignorance of the present cycle of humanity's evolution, for in this cycle such spontaneous generation of consciousness is impossible. |
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In general, however, most scientists believed that disease-causing germs arose from spontaneous generation, just as creatures such as flies, worms, and other small animals appeared to arise spontaneously from decaying matter. |
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In the science section, see authentic instruments from Louis Pasteur's laboratories, culture media, the famous swan-necked flask invented to disprove the theory of spontaneous generation. |
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Many centuries passed before scientists were able to demonstrate that such spontaneous generation does not occur in nature. |
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Pasteur in 1864 wrote the final obituary to the doctrine of spontaneous generation. |
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Subsequently, he developed an interest in fermentation, a subject around which the emerging germ theory clashed with the theory of spontaneous generation. |
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It deals with various science fiction elements such as spontaneous generation, futurology, the end of the world and doomsday, resurrection, and the afterlife. |
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Although the majority of his publications focused on defending phlogiston theory, he also did some original work on spontaneous generation and dreams. |
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