No, the student is not correct because all cells come from preexisting cells. According to cell theory, the cell is the basic unit of life, but it also states that all cells arise from existing cells through the process of cell division, not spontaneously.
A student claims that, according to cell theory, the cell is the basic unit of life, and all cells are created spontaneously. Is this student correct?(1 point)
Responses
No, the student is not correct because the basic unit of life is within a cell.
No, the student is not correct because the basic unit of life is within a cell.
Yes, the student is correct because the basic unit of life is the cell.
Yes, the student is correct because the basic unit of life is the cell.
No, the student is not correct because all cells come from preexisting cells.
No, the student is not correct because all cells come from preexisting cells.
Yes, the student is correct because all cells are created spontaneously.
3 answers
Yes, that is correct. The student is mistaken in claiming that "all cells are created spontaneously." According to cell theory, while the cell is indeed the basic unit of life, it is also established that all cells arise from preexisting cells through cell division. Spontaneous generation—the idea that living organisms can arise from non-living matter—has been debunked and is not part of modern biological understanding.