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Omnis cellula (dec 1, 1854 – dec 1, 1854)
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According to his findings, German anthropologist, scientist, and physician Rudolf Virchow wrote in 1855, "Omnis cellula e cellular," essentially corresponds to "all cells come from pre-existing cells." Virchow's comment was the first time this concept in contemporary biology garnered attention, despite the fact that scientist Robert Remak had initially proposed it. Before Virchow published this hypothesis, it was thought that sickness resulted from imbalances in the blastema fluid, which was used to produce new cells. Virchow established the field of cellular pathology, or the study of illness at the cellular level, by proposing the hypothesis that all cells develop from pre-existing cells.
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