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" ... and it may be deserving of consideration, whether, in any instance, a deficiency of such matter can be proved, and whether, from this source, any conclusive argument can be drawn in favour of ultimate atoms in general. "
Fuel of the Sun - Page 9
by William Mattieu Williams - 1870 - 222 pages
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The Edinburgh Annual Register, for 1808-26, Volume 16

1824 - 966 pages
...general. For since the law of definite proportions is the same for all kinds of matter, whether solid, fluid, or elastic, if it can be ascertained that any...divisible, we then can scarcely doubt that all other bodies arc similarly constituted ; and we may without hesitation conclude, that those equivalent quantities,...
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The Edinburgh Annual Register, Volume 16

Walter Scott - 1824 - 966 pages
...for all kinds of letter, whether solid, fluid, or elastic, if it can be ascertained that any one budy consists of particles no longer divisible, we then...without hesitation conclude, that those equivalent 'luantities, which we have learned to Aprecíate by proportionate numbers, <io really express the relative...
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The Quarterly Journal, Volume 17

1824 - 452 pages
...whether, from this source, any conclusive argument can be drawn in favour of ultimate atoms of matter in "general. For since the law of definite proportions,...is the same for all kinds of matter, whether solid, fluid, or elastic, if it can be ascertained that any one body consists of particles no longer divisible,...
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Abstracts of the Papers Printed in the Philosophical Transactions ..., Volume 2

Royal Society (Great Britain) - 1833 - 486 pages
...since the chemical law of definite proportions applies to all forms of matter, if it can be proved that any one body consists of particles no longer divisible, we then can scarcely doubt that all others are similarly constituted. In respect to the non-existence of an atmosphere round the moon,...
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Abstracts of the Papers Printed in the Philosophical Transactions ..., Volume 2

Royal Society (Great Britain) - 1833 - 502 pages
...since the chemical law of definite proportions applies to all forms of matter, if it can be proved that any one body consists of particles no longer divisible, we then can scarcely doubt that all others are similarly constituted. In respect to the non-existence of an atmosphere round the moon,...
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The Penny Cyclopaedia of the Society for the Diffussion of Useful ..., Volume 3

Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge (Great Britain) - 1835 - 564 pages
...whether, from this source, any conclusive argument can be drawn in favour of ultimate atoms of matter in general. For, since the law of definite proportions...body consists of particles no longer divisible, we can then scarcely donbt that all other bodies are similarly constituted; end we may without hesitation...
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The Penny Cyclopædia of the Society for the Diffusion of Useful ..., Volume 3

1835 - 566 pages
...whether, from this source, any conclusive argument can be drawn in favour of ultimate atoms of matter in general. For, since the law of definite proportions...or elastic, if it can be ascertained that any one tody consists of particles no longer divisible, we can then scarcely doubt that all other bodies are...
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Penny Cyclopaedia of the Society for the Diffusion of Useful ..., Volumes 3-4

1835 - 1102 pages
...ultimate atoms of matter in general. Fur, since the law of definite proportions discovered by tuemists is the same for all kinds of matter, whether solid,...body consists of particles no longer divisible, we can then scarcely doubt that all other bodies are similarly constituted ; and we may without hesitation...
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The Penny Cyclopædia of the Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge

1835 - 588 pages
...who.ther, from this source, any conclusive argument can be drawn in favour of ultimate atoms of matter in general. For, since the law of definite proportions...the same for all kinds of matter, whether solid, or thud, or elastic, if it can be ascertained that any one body consists of particles no longer divisible,...
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Orr's Circle of the Sciences: Elementary chemistry of the imponderable ...

William Somerville Orr - 1855 - 546 pages
...Extent of the Atmosphere, published in the Phil.jTrans. for 1822, Dr. Wollaston has observed, that "since the law of definite proportions, discovered...is the same for all kinds of matter, whether solid, fluid, or elastic, if it can be ascertained that any one kind of matter consists of particles no longer...
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