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Robert Boyle - Wikipedia 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
Robert Boyle | Biography, Contributions, Works, Facts . . . Robert Boyle (born January 25, 1627, Lismore Castle, County Waterford, Ireland—died December 31, 1691, London, England) was an Anglo - Irish natural philosopher and theological writer, a preeminent figure of 17th-century intellectual culture
Robert Boyle - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy Boyle was one of the leading intellectual figures of the seventeenth century and an important influence on Locke and Newton (Anstey 2018) He was an experimental philosopher, unwilling to construct abstract theories to which his experimental results had to conform
Robert Boyle - Science History Institute Every general-chemistry student learns of Robert Boyle (1627–1691) as the person who discovered that the volume of a gas decreases with increasing pressure and vice versa—the famous Boyle’s law A leading scientist and intellectual of his day, he was a great proponent of the experimental method
Robert Boyle - World History Encyclopedia Robert Boyle (1627-1691) was an Anglo-Irish chemist, physicist, and experimental philosopher Boyle was a prolific author, made significant experiments with air pumps, and presented the first litmus test
Robert Boyle | Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy With the help of his colleague Robert Hooke (1635-1703), he designed and improved an air pump capable of creating and sustaining a vacuum and used it to perform many famous experiments, investigating things like respiration, disease, combustion, sound, and air pressure
Boyle, Robert - Encyclopedia. com As a natural philosopher, Boyle is best remembered for Boyle's Law, for advocating a corpuscularian matter theory, and for being extremely influential in the development of an empirical and experimental method