John dalton atomic theory
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Includes bibliographical references (pages 325-335)Īccess-restricted-item true Addeddate 19:03:06 Boxid IA1778310 Camera Sony Alpha-A6300 (Control) Col_number COL-609 Collection_set printdisabled External-identifier A chair and a medal A doctorate and a pension A statue and an audience The last decade The honours of a king The Manchester scene Two journeys Dalton, Gay-Lussac and Berthollet Dalton and Berzelius Again, the British view Some laurels earned The visit to France - THE LAST DECADES. A new mastery A widening reputation - THE ATOMIC THEORY - The theory forms The physical atom The atomic predilection The revolutionary chemistry of the eighteenth century The beginning of a vital decade: from elastic fluids to ultimate particles Dalton the lecturer The theory is put forward "A new system of chemical philosophy" - A REPUTATION MADE. Manchester at the turn of the century Dalton at New College - DALTON THE PHYSICIST: AIR AND WATER. Eaglesfield Quaker schools and "dissenting academies" The lad Dalton Kendal years - THE EMERGING PHILOSOPHER. She describes how this self-educated schoolmaster conducted imaginative investigations in meteorology, chemistry, and natural history, and evolved a notion of matter that has given our own age a character both terrifying and exciting."-Jacketĭalton's ancestry - Early years - The emerging philosopher - Dalton the physicist: air and water - The atomic theory - A reputation made - The last decadesĭalton's ancestry - EARLY YEARS. The author places the methodical existence of this provincial genius against the hectic and innovative scene that was nineteenth-century England. Dalton lived and taught in Manchester from 1793 to his death in 1844, and his life paralleled that of the emerging Industrial Revolution. I have no doubt that he was one of the most original philosophers of his times, and one of the most ingenious.' Thus did the great scientist, Sir Humphrey Davy, describe the man often called 'the father of the atomic theory.' The details of that theory have long since been refined, but the revolution that Dalton effected in physical science is as significant as that instigated by Darwin's ideas on evolution. he followed with ardour analogies and inductions. A tolerable mathematician, he gained his livelihood, I believe, by teaching mathematics to young people. A Quaker by profession and practice, he had none of the manners or ways of the world.