| Lothar Meyer - 1888 - 644 pages
...and the proportions in which they unite absorbed for some time the powers of the most gifted men. All phenomena which could not be attributed to fixed atomic proportions were set aside as not truly chemical, and were often neglected. Thus chemists forsook the bridge by which Berthollet... | |
| Sir Norman Lockyer - 1889 - 776 pages
...Meyer says, the influence on chemistry of the rejection of Berthollet's views was remarkable: — "All phenomena which could not be attributed to fixed atomic proportions were set aside as not truly chemical, and were neglected. Thus chemists forsook the bridge by which Berthollet had... | |
| Royal Institution of Great Britain - 1889 - 692 pages
...Meyer says, the influence on chemistry of the rejection of Berthollet's views was remarkable : " All phenomena which could not be attributed to fixed atomic proportions were set aside as not truly chemical, and were neglected. Thus chemists forsook tho bridge by which Berthollet had... | |
| Sir William Chandler Roberts-Austen - 1891 - 318 pages
...Meyer says, the influence on chemistry of the rejection of Berthollet's views was remarkable. " All phenomena which could not be attributed to fixed atomic proportions were set aside as not truly chemical, and were neglected. The chemists forsook the bridge by which Be1thollet had... | |
| 1899 - 440 pages
...Prout, the courteous opponent of Berthollet, prevailed, mainly through the powerful aid of Dal ton, who published also in 1803 his first table of atomic...fixed atomic proportions were set aside and usually negleâed. Evidently the ailion of one-tenth per cent of carbon on iron could not be explained by the... | |
| Sir William Chandler Roberts-Austen - 1914 - 454 pages
...action, of what for the moment I may be permitted to classify as the action of traces upon masses, was in a fair way to be elucidated for the following...eminent chemists arose, who did not insist that matter is minutely granular, but in all cases of change of state made calculations on the basis of work done,... | |
| Sir William Chandler Roberts-Austen - 1914 - 472 pages
...Meyer says, the influence on chemistry of the rejection of Berthollet's views was remarkable : " All phenomena which could not be attributed to fixed atomic proportions were set aside as not truly chemical, and were neglected. Thus chemists forsook the bridge by which Berthollet had... | |
| Sir William Chandler Roberts-Austen - 1914 - 468 pages
...Meyer says. the influence on chemistry of the rejection of Berthollet's views was remarkable : " All phenomena which could not be attributed to fixed atomic proportions were set aside as not truly chemical, and were neglected. Thus chemists forsook the bridge by which Berthollet had... | |
| Sir Norman Lockyer - 1899 - 686 pages
...action, of what for the moment I may be permitted to classify as the action of traces upon masses, was in a fair way to be elucidated for the following...eminent chemists arose, who did not insist that matter is minutely granular, but in all cases of change of state made calculations on the basis of work done,... | |
| Sir Norman Lockyer - 1899 - 682 pages
...action, of what for the moment I may be permitted to classify as the action of traces upon masses, was in a fair way to be elucidated for the following...eminent chemists arose, who did not insist that matter is minutely granular, but in all cases of change of state made calculations on the basis of work done,... | |
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