von Mohl had observed with accuracy a number of important
facts, but that Nägeli added largely to them, and, which is the
main point, elaborated them into a comprehensive theory embracing all kinds of cell-formation. How important the correct
distinction of the protoplasm from the rest of the cell-contents
was for the perfecting of the theory of cells is seen from Nägeli's
declaration, that he retracts his former view which rested on
the authority of Schleiden, because it sprang from a time when
he was ignorant of the significance of the mucilage-layer (the
protoplasm), though it is true that he indicates at the same
time other points and new considerations which definitively set
aside Schleiden's theory. After investigating the different
modes of free cell-formation and finding the processes there
quite different from Schleiden's account of them, he proceeded
to search for free cell-formation where Schleiden had affirmed
that it invariably occurs, namely in growing vegetative organs
in the higher plants. But this investigation led him to the
conclusion that all vegetative cell-formation is true cell-division,
and that even the reproductive cell-formation in some Algae
and Fungi is effected by division; the reproductive cells of
most plants are the result of free cell-formation, but it should
be observed that the term free cell-formation is here used not
exactly in the modern sense, inasmuch as Nägeli included in it
the formation of four-fold grains (tetrads) in spores and pollen.
If the distinction between cell-division and free cell-formation
had often been suggested by former observers, Nägeli was the
first who distinctly defined it, though not exactly as it is now
defined. ' In cell-division the contents of the mother-cell
separate into two or more portions; a perfect membrane forms
round each of these portions, which at the moment of its
appearance rests partly on the wall of the mother-cell and
partly on the adjacent walls of the sister-cells. In free cell-
formation a smaller or larger part of the contents of a cell, or
even the whole of them becomes isolated. On its surface is
formed a perfect membrane, which is everywhere free on its
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Theory of Cell-formation
[BOOK II.