"'Omne vivum ex ovo'" is
Latin for "Every living thing [is] from [an] egg". This is a foundational concept of modern
biology. Up into the
19th century it was commonly believed that under certain conditions life forms could appear spontaneously ("
spontaneous generation"); for example, that
maggots would spontaneously appear in rotten
flesh, or that
algae would spontaneously form in water, or that
eel were generated when horse hairs fell into streams. Only with knowledge of modern
cell biology was it established that all currently living organisms are descendants of one or more very similar parent organisms.
When the concept is taken to the extreme, it would imply that there was never a time without life. However, with a modern understanding, it means that all life can be traced back to the
first cell.
The concept says nothing of the first emergence of life, or the first cell, which may have been made from
self-replicating molecules and a
phospholipid bilayer.
See also
★
Abiogenesis
★
Biogenesis
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Origin of life