11 JUN 2012 by ideonexus

 Sulfur Gains Weight When Burned

About eight days ago I discovered that sulfur in burning, far from losing weight, on the contrary, gains it; it is the same with phosphorus; this increase of weight arises from a prodigious quantity of air that is fixed during combustion and combines with the vapors. This discovery, which I have established by experiments, that I regard as decisive, has led me to think that what is observed in the combustion of sulfur and phosphorus may well take place in the case of all substances that gain ...
Folksonomies: chemistry experimentation
Folksonomies: chemistry experimentation
  1  notes

Quoting Antoine-Laurent Lavoisier.

07 JUN 2012 by ideonexus

 Reason Comes After a Plan

When Galileo caused balls, the weights of which he had himself previously determined, to roll down an inclined plane; when Torricelli made the air carry a weight which he had calculated beforehand to be equal to that of a definite volume of water; or in more recent times, when Stahl changed metal into lime, and lime back into metal, by withdrawing something and then restoring it, a light broke upon all students of nature. They learned that reason has insight only into that which it produces a...
Folksonomies: experimentation
Folksonomies: experimentation
  1  notes

There must be experiments to guide reason, without which reason will make up it's own explanations.

31 JAN 2012 by ideonexus

 We Know Too Much About the Wrong Things

In science, attempts at formulating hierarchies are always doomed to eventual failure. A Newton will always be followed by an Einstein, a Stahl by a Lavoisier; and who can say who will come after us? What the human mind has fabricated must be subject to all the changes—which are not progress—that the human mind must undergo. The 'last words' of the sciences are often replaced, more often forgotten. Science is a relentlessly dialectical process, though it suffers continuously under the nec...
  1  notes

The Library of Alexandria was "both symptom and cause of the ossification of the Greek intellect."