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Book contents
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- Contents
- CHAPTER I GENERAL INTRODUCTION
- CHAPTER II THE TRIPOS, name and thing
- CHAPTER III THE SOPHS' SCHOOLS before 1765
- CHAPTER IV ACTS AND OPPONENCIES after 1772
- CHAPTER V THE SENATE-HOUSE
- CHAPTER VI THE ADMISSION OF QUESTIONISTS. Huddling
- CHAPTER VII THE MATHEMATICKS
- CHAPTER VIII THE TRIVIAL ARTS
- CHAPTER IX HUMANITY
- CHAPTER X MORALS AND CASUISTRY
- CHAPTER XI LAW
- CHAPTER XII MODERN STUDIES
- CHAPTER XIII ORIENTAL STUDIES
- CHAPTER XIV PHYSICK
- CHAPTER XV ANATOMY
- CHAPTER XVI CHEMISTRY
- CHAPTER XVII GEOLOGY AND MINERALOGY
- CHAPTER XVIII BOTANY
- CHAPTER XIX The Degree of M.A.
- CHAPTER XX MUSICK
- CHAPTER XXI ASTRONOMY
- CHAPTER XXII CONCLUSION
- APPENDICES
- INDEX
CHAPTER XVI - CHEMISTRY
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 September 2010
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- Contents
- CHAPTER I GENERAL INTRODUCTION
- CHAPTER II THE TRIPOS, name and thing
- CHAPTER III THE SOPHS' SCHOOLS before 1765
- CHAPTER IV ACTS AND OPPONENCIES after 1772
- CHAPTER V THE SENATE-HOUSE
- CHAPTER VI THE ADMISSION OF QUESTIONISTS. Huddling
- CHAPTER VII THE MATHEMATICKS
- CHAPTER VIII THE TRIVIAL ARTS
- CHAPTER IX HUMANITY
- CHAPTER X MORALS AND CASUISTRY
- CHAPTER XI LAW
- CHAPTER XII MODERN STUDIES
- CHAPTER XIII ORIENTAL STUDIES
- CHAPTER XIV PHYSICK
- CHAPTER XV ANATOMY
- CHAPTER XVI CHEMISTRY
- CHAPTER XVII GEOLOGY AND MINERALOGY
- CHAPTER XVIII BOTANY
- CHAPTER XIX The Degree of M.A.
- CHAPTER XX MUSICK
- CHAPTER XXI ASTRONOMY
- CHAPTER XXII CONCLUSION
- APPENDICES
- INDEX
Summary
“If he haue leasure to be idle (that is to study) he ha's a smatch at Alcumy, and is sicke of the Philosophers stone, a disease vncurable but by an abundant Phlebotomy of the purse.”
J. Earle's Micro-cosmographie. [1628.]James Keill, whom we have mentioned as an anatomist, translated Lemery's. Course of Chemistry in 1698, thereby introducing English chemists to the current theory of the relations of acids and alkalis. But ten years before that time, J. J. Beecher of Mentz had died, and G. E. Stahl was following out his observations, which had already borne fruit in his Zymotechnia Fundamentalis, with an ‘experimentum novum sulphur verum arte producendi’ (1697), which resulted in the enuntiation of the theory of phlogiston, the terminology of which was retained or adapted even by our Cavendish and Priestley in England in the latter hah0 of the succeeding century, when they had passed to more positive observations and discoveries of the composition of water, and oxygen gas.
Long before a chair of Chemistry was endowed at Cambridge, we have Barrow's testimony to the ardour with which the study was pursued.
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- Scholae AcademicaeSome Account of the Studies at the English Universities in the Eighteenth Century, pp. 187 - 195Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009First published in: 1877