and that the activity of the organism is the sum total of the activities, interrelations and interactions of its .... but sufficient literature has been examined and studied .... time, lie would have found his ideas concerning growth ...
www.jstor.org/stable/2457599
there was widespread belief that the new technology would .... that he had examined seemed to be made up of recogniz- ... Schleiden's observations to his own studies of animals. .... ''Some of these elementary parts (cells) which do not differ from others, are capable of being separated from the organism and ...
www.springerlink.com/index/73308201n88g0668.pdf
7. Untersuchungen über Phytogenesis. By Schleiden. 1837. ... that there exists a common principle of development for all the elementary parts of the organism." (Schwann, pp. 193–196.) ... and the process is identically the same, whether it is examined in the vegetating point of a plant, or in the young budding organs of an animal.
aleph0.clarku.edu/huxley/SM1/Cell.html
cell would also inherit its form from earlier cells. But Schleiden and others, .... growing out of the cylological tradition, carefully examined the s.ruclurc oílhe .... the product of evolution, selectionists would have wondered? .... organism - the individual, which is the unit and not the cell'.'1 ...
cbs.asu.edu/people/profiles/pdf/Maienschein_CellTheoryA... cbs.asu.edu/people/profiles/pdf/Maienschein_CellTheoryAndDevo.pdf
He examined this crystal analogy, in fact, at considerable length. That he did so, ... of the conceptual setting in which his ideas would have perforce been ... The addition of a foreign material to an animal organism and the appropriate .... Schleiden is the most violent of the botanists mentioned at the commence- ...
jhmas.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/reprint/XXVI/4/422.pdf
When the Schwann Schleiden cell theory was proposed in 1838, it stated that all ... Biologists only discovered this after finding the larvae of this unnerving, but fascinating organism. Biologists are a busy, nosy breed, but just consider how many hundreds of thousands of species have never been examined for parasites.
www.microscopy-uk.org.uk/mag/artoct08/rh-cells.html
In 1665, Robert Hooke, an English scientist, examined a slice of cork under a microscope.  Hooke noticed that the cork was composed of many small compartments.  Hooke named these compartments "cells" because he thought that they resembled the little rooms, ... Three years later, Matthias Schleiden, a German botanist,
www.setonhome.org/courses/biology/lp/cells.php?section=... www.setonhome.org/courses/biology/lp/cells.php?section=2
Review Sheets for Yeshivah of Flatbush Students ... Schleiden- Botanist-examined plant cells under a microscope ... Homeostasis- The tendency of an organism to maintain a constant internal environment...
www.reviewsheetscentral.com/rs/9/bioregents-sem1.htm
Evolution is the name we have given to the process of inheritable modification that living organism have undergone during their descent from ancestral forms. ... Now it is true that these two, Schleiden and Schwann, although they examined hundreds of different animals and plants, certainly didn’t examine all living...
nrcse.creighton.edu/Schlesinger_Facts&Theories.htm
Cell, the smallest unit of an organism that can function independently. ... Indeed it was not until 1839 that the combined insight of a botanist, Matthias Schleiden, and a zoologist, Theodor Schwann, led them to pronounce that “…all organisms are composed of essentially like parts, namely of cells”.
www.encarta.msn.co.uk/encyclopedia_761568585/Cell.html