Spontaneous generation
Spontaneous generation was once believed to be the mechanism by which organisms could originate directly from non-living matter. The process is also known as abiogenesis, from the Greek roots a-, not, bio-, life, and genesis, origin.Early examples of this theory included the generation of maggots from rotting meat, mice from dirty hay, and lice from sweat. The first of these was debunked by a simple experiment carried out by the Italian scientist Francesco Redi in 1668.