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  1. However, Francesco Stelluti 2,9 (1577–1652) had met Cesi in Rome, and he soon joined the lynxes. After Cesi's death, Stelluti tried to keep the society alive, but the lack of further sponsors ...

    • Neidhard Paweletz
    • 2001
  2. ‘Controlling the Experiment: Rhetoric, Court Patronage and the Experimental Method of Francesco Redi’. Findlen argues that Redi ‘literally could not have existed with it [the court]’ and described Redi as ‘a courtier who deployed the natural and human resources that his environment offered to

  3. Abstract. From 1660 to 1697 Francesco Redi was physician to two Grand Dukes of Tuscany as well as a natural philosopher and poet at the Medici court. Redi produced the first experimental evidence that insects do not spontaneously generate from decaying matter and that the poison of the viper resides in the yellow fluid in fang sheaths.

    • Barbara J Hawgood
    • 2003
  4. On the scientific side, he laid the foundations of helminthology (the study of parasitic worms) and also investigated insect reproduction.As a biologist he is best known for his experiments to test the theory of spontaneous generation.

  5. Mar 1, 2024 · Pasteur's contributions to germ theory and experimental microbiology, including his famous swan-neck flask experiment, played a decisive role in discrediting the notion of spontaneous generation. Moreover, Redi's controlled experiments with meat and flies provided empirical evidence against the spontaneous generation of maggots.

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  7. PAULA GOTTDENKER. The Tuscan physician Francesco Redi (1626-1698) is often having struck the first blow against the doctrine of spontaneous tion, that is the idea that organisms could be generated from antecedents. Some commentators, however, hold that the time-honored belief in this form of generation did not yield under his attack; rather, it ...

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