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Robert Boyle
Robert Boyle (1627–1691) was a prominent Anglo-Irish scientist, natural philosopher, and writer, often regarded as one of the founders of modern chemistry. He is best known for "Boyle's Law," which describes the inverse relationship between the pressure and volume of a gas. Boyle's most famous work, "The Sceptical Chymist" (1661), challenged the classical four-element theory of matter and laid the foundation for modern chemistry. In addition to his scientific pursuits, Boyle was deeply religious and wrote extensively on theology and the intersection of science and faith.
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Robert Boyle
CHAP. I. 1have seen you so passionately addicted, Pyrophilus to the delightful Art of Limning and Painting, that I cannot but think my self obliged to acquaint you with some of those things that have occurred to mee concerning the changes of Colours. And I may expect that I shall as well serve the Virtuosi in general, as gratifie you in particular, by furnishing a person, who, I hope, will both improve...
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Robert Boyle
INTRODUCTORY To the following Treatise. O give the Reader an account, Why the following Treatise is suffer’d to pass abroad so maim’d and imperfect, I must inform him that ’tis now long since, that to gratify an ingenious Gentleman, I set down some of the Reasons that kept me from fully acquiescing either in the Peripatetical, or in the Chymical Doctrine, of the Material Principles of mixt Bodies....
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