¶ … due to his work on the scientific method, quantitative methodology and hypothesis clarification, Robert Boyle of the 17th century has been more firmly recognized as the father of modern chemistry. This report provides an overview of Boyle's life and contributions to the scientific field.
A number of individuals in literature and sciences during the 17th century are being rediscovered. Present scholars are recognizing their worth and major contributions to the world of knowledge. One of these leading figures was Robert Boyle whose expertise was in natural philosophy and is regarded as the father of modern chemistry. However, as noted by today's scientists such as Levere (75), Boyle "was not just a chemist, alchemist, or chemist. He published extensively on topics relating to religion and irreligion, and he was one of the most thoughtful commentators on and contributors to the emerging methods of experimental philosophy." His ideas set the course of modern chemistry by developing a style of thorough, repeated, systematic experimentation and accurate measurement. In short, he helped create three "technologies":
a material technology in the form of the air-pump a literary technology "by means of which the phenomena produced by the pump were made known to those who were not direct witnesses" a social technology that established scientific conventions for evaluating knowledge-claims (Shapin and Schaffer 25).
Born in Ireland, Boyle began his formal education at Eton College at the age of eight, where his studious nature was quickly noticed. In 1644, he began a literary career writing ethical and devotional tracts. In 1649, "he began investigating nature via scientific experimentation, a process that enthralled him" (Encyclopedia Brittanica).
Boyle's scientific work is characterized by its reliance on experiment and observation and its reluctance to rely on generalized theories. He promoted a mechanical philosophy, which asked whether mechanism could be combined with the assumption that nature has designs. He saw the universe as a huge machine like a clock where natural phenomena were accountable purely by mechanical motion. His contributions to chemistry were thus based on a mechanical atomism http://search.eb.com/eb/topic?idxStructId=746614& typeId=13
corpuscularian hypothesis. This was a brand of claiming everything...
Our semester plans gives you unlimited, unrestricted access to our entire library of resources —writing tools, guides, example essays, tutorials, class notes, and more.
Get Started Now