The Growth of Scientific IdeasOliver and Boyd, 1950 - Всего страниц: 495 |
Результаты поиска по книге
Результаты 1 – 3 из 25
Стр. 188
... Lavoisier was even then bringing about . The French chemist Würtz opens his well - known History of Chemical Theory with the words " Chemistry is a French science . It was created by Lavoisier , of immortal memory . " In the light of ...
... Lavoisier was even then bringing about . The French chemist Würtz opens his well - known History of Chemical Theory with the words " Chemistry is a French science . It was created by Lavoisier , of immortal memory . " In the light of ...
Стр. 189
... Lavoisier attended in the enforced leisure too well known to every young lawyer , may not have been typical , but it ... Lavoisier did not create chemistry , Rouelle did create Lavoisier ; for the latter abandoned the practice of law and ...
... Lavoisier attended in the enforced leisure too well known to every young lawyer , may not have been typical , but it ... Lavoisier did not create chemistry , Rouelle did create Lavoisier ; for the latter abandoned the practice of law and ...
Стр. 195
... Lavoisier in providing both adequate general ideas and ( with the help of his friends Berthollet , Fourcroy and de Morveau ) the technical language in which to express them . To a science like chemistry a precise nomenclature is as ...
... Lavoisier in providing both adequate general ideas and ( with the help of his friends Berthollet , Fourcroy and de Morveau ) the technical language in which to express them . To a science like chemistry a precise nomenclature is as ...
Другие издания - Просмотреть все
Часто встречающиеся слова и выражения
acid action actual animals appear Archimedes Aristotelian Aristotle assumption atoms biology blastomere blood body Boyle called cause celestial sphere cells century chemical chemistry colour concept contemporaries Dalton Descartes discovered discovery earth effect electric elements equal evidence existence experiments fact fluid force Galileo geometrical gravitation Greek heat Herophilos Hipparchos history of science Huygens hypothesis idea importance Joule knowledge known Lamarck later Lavoisier Leibniz light lines living magnetic mass material mathematical matter Maxwell means mechanical metals method modern molecules moon motion move namely nature Newton observed Opticks organism Origin of Species original oxygen particles phenomena philosophy phlogiston physical physiology plants possible principle problem produced proportional Ptolemaic system Pythagoras quantity rays realised recognised refraction regarded result Sceptical Chymist scientific showed SOURCES FOR CHAPTER species stars substance Thales theory things thought tion velocity Vesalius wave whole words