Francesco Redi, the son of Gregorio Redi and Cecilia de Ghinci, was born in Arezzo, Italy on February 18, 1626, the oldest person among the nine brothers ("Francesco Redi"). First, he went to the Jesuit school in Florence. After that, in 1647 I graduated from Pisa's philosophy and medicine ("Francesco Ladies Life"). He often moved to Rome, Naples, Bologna, Padua, Venezia. He worked as a mentor in the Rome Colonna family for five years and ended in Florence in 1648. In Florence, he went to Collegio Medico. So he was the chief physician and pharmacist of the pharmacy.
Francesco Redi is an Italian naturalist, a doctor and a poet. In addition to Galileo, he is one of the most important scientists who challenge Aristotle's traditional scientific research. Lady is known for his controlled experiment. A series of experiments denies the concept of general self-generation where organisms may be born of inanimate objects. Redi is known as "father of modern parasitology" and "founder of experimental biology". Redi studied snakes and eliminated popular myths about them. He proved that a snake drinks wine and that the serpent's poison is toxic or that the snake is made from a snake gallbladder. He discovers that if the venom does not enter the bloodstream it finds it is not harmful and using ligation may slow the progression of the patient's venom. His research laid the foundation for toxicology
In 1668, an Italian doctor and poet Francesco Lady (Francesco Redi) made the first serious attack on the idea of spontaneous onset. At that time, it was generally believed that aphids were spontaneously produced in spoiled meat. Reddy believes that ticks are made from egg laying eggs by flies. To verify his hypothesis, he put the meat in various flasks, some opened in the air, some were completely sealed, others were covered with gauze. As he expected, cockroaches only appeared in open flasks, flies could reach eggs and lay eggs