Chemistry, asked by rinkisarkard, 2 months ago

the first scientist who made a clear distinction between alchemy and chemistry who was that​

Answers

Answered by devvardhsnsingh
1

Answer:

Robert Boyle

Irish philosopher

Explanation:

Robert Boyle FRS was an Anglo-Irish natural philosopher, chemist, physicist, and inventor. Boyle is largely regarded today as the first modern chemist, and therefore one of the founders of modern chemistry, and one of the pioneers of modern experimental scientific method. Wikipedia

Born: 25 January 1627, Lismore, Ireland

Died: 31 December 1691, London, United Kingdom

Full name: Robert William Boyle

Known for: Boyle's law, Corpuscularianism

Nationality: English, Irish

Answered by wiswasree004
0

Explanation:

Robert Boyle

Boyle's great merit as a scientific investigator is that he carried out the principles which Francis Bacon espoused in the Novum Organum. Yet he would not avow himself a follower of Bacon, or indeed of any other teacher.[13]

On several occasions he mentions that to keep his judgment as unprepossessed as might be with any of the modern theories of philosophy, until he was "provided of experiments" to help him judge of them. He refrained from any study of the atomical and the Cartesian systems, and even of the Novum Organum itself, though he admits to "transiently consulting" them about a few particulars. Nothing was more alien to his mental temperament than the spinning of hypotheses. He regarded the acquisition of knowledge as an end in itself, and in consequence he gained a wider outlook on the aims of scientific inquiry than had been enjoyed by his predecessors for many centuries.

Similar questions