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periodic table" refer to the history of the periodic table; I mean the table that
Mendeleev first proposed in 1869, which is not the same as the modern periodic table. I was trained as a chemist, and have spent my career as a historian of chemistry. The only times I have seen the phrase "Mendeleev's periodic table" are referring to Mendeleev's own table, not the general concept of periodic tables of the elements. Read the Knowledge article on the history of the periodic table. You will see that there were many chemists who contributed to the early history of the periodic table, not just Mendeleev, even though it is certainly true that Mendeleev was the first to publish a complete periodic table. And there are very many kinds of periodic tables of the elements today, none of which are identical to Mendeleev's own table. And here is another way to look at it. Take the theory of evolution. We should not title a general article on evolution as "Darwin's theory of evolution"; we would only use that title if we were talking about the specific theory of evolution that Darwin himself proposed (which is not the same as our contemporary theory of evolution). To come back to your evidence for "Mendeleev's periodic table": You could, if you wanted to, list all 156 thousand Google entries for this phrase, and that would be evidence for your point of view. But then I would come back (theoretically), and list all 27 million Google entries for "periodic table". Which side of this argument seems stronger to you?
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thing, not "Mendeleev's periodic table," which was my point. You're also absolutely correct that
Mendeleev ordered his table by atomic weight. Today we don't do that, we order elements by atomic number. Atomic number was unknown in Mendeleev's day. So an article with the title "Mendeleev's periodic table" could only be an article describing historically how Mendeleev thought about elements, NOT how we think about elements today. That's not a bad thing; it is history of science (and I love history of science -- I spent a career as a professional historian of science!). Knowledge strives to summarize known knowledge about things, according to our present-day understanding. Therefore "Mendeleev's periodic table" should not be in the headline of the article; it should only appear to rightly celebrate the outstanding chemist who helped to start us on the path to our present-day understanding.
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strange and misguided. By contrast, many journal articles and textbooks of ca. 1865 can be readily read and understood today. Just to give one indication, most chemists ca. 1845 still thought that a molecule of water had only one hydrogen atom in it., and this single "error" had a cascade of implications throughout the science of chemistry. The reason why I called the revolution "quiet" is that neither chemists of that day, nor subsequent historians of science, had drawn much attention to these rather dramatic changes. They seemed to happen under everyone's nose, without being very explicitly noted. There is much more about all this in my book!
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a stand against these types of popular notions (we work hard to keep the "Franz" out of "Joseph Haydn"), but I'd like to (a) double-check before we assert that "night music" is "incorrect" and (b) I'd like to explain if we do end up asserting the falseness of this translation. I'll likely post this issue to the classical music wikiproject to see if they have any knowledge of how to accurately translate this phrase. This sounds like an issue that's been covered in Grove or something like that. If so, we can add a citation and/or footnote like we do with Joseph Haydn. Cheers.
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Trans. Roy. Soc., 103 (1808), 96-102, where he correctly attributed it to Dalton. You can easily access this paper digitally if you have access to HathiTrust. In fact, most chemists who discussed the law early on were more influenced by
Wollaston's treatment of it, than that of its actual discoverer, Dalton.
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Thank you for your response. Although I'm just a lowly engineer, nowhere near as qualified as a trained chemist to discuss these things, I'm interested in expanding the
Knowledge information, which seems a bit light-weight (but the interactive tables are awesome). For example, modern texts make the
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Sure, I'd be glad to. A Google search of "Mendeleev's periodic table" returns 156,000 entries. The phrase "periodic table" gives us about 27 million entries, close to 200,000 times as much as "Mendeleev's periodic table". I would guess that many or even most of the 156,000 entries for "Mendeleev's
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is a heavily trafficked article most readers are going to expect that it will say "a little night music". In fact, as we've seen, if left unwatched and without a detailed explanation it will end up getting reverted by an anon within a few weeks anyways. Now, there have been places where we've taken
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The problem with "Rest" or "Residue" is that it does not correspond to a likely term that was actually used by chemists. "Rest", of course, means remainder or residue in German, but the more usual term used by German chemists was "Radikal" -- also an "R" word, and one that was far more likely to be
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You won't find it in Dalton's book, at least not in a simple statement; it's in his data, as generalized in his atomic theory, but I don't think he ever stated it in a clear and general way. Maybe the best early statement of the law is in
Wollaston's paper "On Super-Acid and Sub-Acid Salts," Phil.
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Hello. Thanks for the note. Sorry if my original edit comment was a bit blunt. I guess what I would like a couple of sentences discussing the term "nachtmusik" and its translation including its literal-translation/etymology. I know that literal translations of german compound words is dangerous,
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I thought of this phrase (which, I subsequently learned, has been used in other ways at other times) to designate a series of related theoretical transformations in the science of chemistry during the 1850s. When modern chemists look at chemical journals and textbooks ca. 1845, they can seem very
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Re your example, I can see that correct formulas were necessary to further progress (such as structures). Modern first-year books mention that
Cannizzaro showed how to establish correct atomic weights in 1858, but I suppose that chemists also took many years to gradually assimilate this idea. I do
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You're right that my Google search of "periodic table " mixes "periodic table" per se, and "Mendeleev's periodic table." But 27 million entries minus 156,000 entries is still about 27 million entries, right? So the term "periodic table" is the term that is virtually always used to denote this
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At some point later "substitution force" was replaced by "rate of reaction". I would like to know how this came about and in particular if the kinetic definition was introduced by G & W or by someone else. I think it might have been Van't Hoff (Berichte, (1877), 10, 669?), but in his book
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Thanks for your help with the Kolbe article and Wöhler, and earlier with the Kekulé article and Kolbe. I am curious about one other question - what is the meaning of the phrase "Quiet
Revolution" in the title of your book about Kolbe? This phrase intrigues me because I am from Québec, where
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Russian chemist and educator
Dmitrii Mendeleev is best known today for his creation of the periodic table of elements. Mendeleev was far from the first chemist to attempt to organize the elements by atomic weight or to recognize that characteristics recurred on some sort of regular basis.
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986:, so I'm listing here just the first page of a Google search so you can see that it's indeed widely know As "Mendeleev's Periodic Table". If you'd like to continue this discussion before reverting, I'd be pleased to help. In fact, this is the required WP procedure when reverting:
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Dmitri Ivanovich Mendeleev tried to co-relate the atomic masses of the elements with their physical and chemical properties. Mendeleev's Periodic Law states that the physical and the chemical properties of the elements are a periodic function of their atomic masses.
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Alan, thanks so much for the letter you wrote that appears in the latest HSS Newsletter. I've been surprised at (and pleased with) how consistently positive the reactions have been to my article in the previous edition. You might be interested in the new
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Hello. I think mentioning the reason of why multiple writers would compose under someone else's name is important. Paul Kraus mentioned that it was for propaganda. By attributing multiple people works to one man, they are trying to impress the reader.
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1011:- We all know that there are 118 elements present in our periodic table. Out of these 118 elements, 94 elements are natural elements and 24 elements are synthetic elements. Back in the year 1800, only 30 elements were known. Dmitrii
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sorts elements based on the Atomic Mass. Other Periodic Tables order elements by other means such as Atomic Number, but the reader is left not knowing why one - or the other - is preferred. To properly explain, one should know why
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but they can be useful. Plus, I'm a bit skeptical that "night music" is as "incorrect" as you say. Following this up, I couldn't find any online german-english dictionaries that supported this hard definition. Also,
1183:. Your Google Search mixes the two together (and possibly others), and doesn't help the student looking for a proper explanation. The "Periodic Table" term in itself obscures the essence of the issue, which is that
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changed it -- WITHOUT a source, and that's the only edit that user has made outside what appears to be a deleted vanity article (if one goes by the talk page of that user). THAT is what I reverted.
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Like many scientists working at the end of the 19th-century the Russian chemist Dmitri Mendeleev (1834-1907) was looking for ways to organise the known elements. Mendeleev published his first...
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I'm looking for an early description of Dalton's law of multiple proportions. Preferably an original by Dalton himself. I can't find any in A New System of Chemical Philosophy.
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I found you on V8rik's discussion page and hope you can help with some historical stuff, even if it's not organic. It concerns the development of the law of mass action. In the
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Thanks for your reply. I also have assumed that it comes from radical (I don't buy the "rest" theory), but so far I haven't been able to find any solid sources on that. --
1134:. Should we perhaps count the number of citations? Please abide by WP procedures in joining this discussion to establish the correct way to identify Mendeleev's work.
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in with the more prosaic successors? It seems to that this would be a useful addition, perhaps simplifying the complex discussion that we've been having here?
29:"The substitution force, other conditions being equal, is directly proportional to the product of the masses provided each is raised to a particular exponent"
113:, or something else? I figured that, as an expert in 19th-century organic chemistry and structural theory, you are probably the best person to ask. :-) --
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His attacks on the French and on Kekule Baeyer and the rest of the structural chemists is quite amusing, but shows a certain lack of social behaviour.--
1056:. Each group from I to VII are divided into two subgroups A and B. In each period elements are placed based on increasing atomic masses. Videos 3:51
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has two movements labeled "Nachtmusik" and the translation I've always seen for those is "night music" and not "serenade".
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1099:Merits and Demerits of
259:Symphony No. 7 (Mahler)
247:23:56, 2 May 2008 (UTC)
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265:Eine Kleine Nachtmusik
1489:Arbitration Committee
1472:Hello! Voting in the
1401:Arbitration Committee
1384:Hello! Voting in the
1311:Arbitration Committee
1295:Hello! Voting in the
1181:Modern Periodic Table
920:Arbitration Committee
904:Hello! Voting in the
832:Arbitration Committee
816:Hello! Voting in the
754:Arbitration Committee
681:Arbitration Committee
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508:ArbCom Elections 2016
466:Arbitration Committee
429:Please note that per
393:World Digital Library
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23:original paper (1864)
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297:♫ Melodia Chaconne ♫
105:. Does it come from
43:equilibrium constant
470:arbitration process
397:Library of Congress
395:, a project of the
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1124:- Lou Serico ...
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510:: Voting now open!
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431:WP:CIRCULAR
199:, benzene C
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252:Nachtmusik
99:side chain
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47:Petergans
1179:and the
239:ragesoss
1568:Ajrocke
1524:NoACEMM
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1225:Ajrocke
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955:NoACEMM
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439:DonIago
389:Ajrocke
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233:of the
209:Dirac66
177:Ajrocke
161:Dirac66
139:Ajrocke
107:radical
1553:Kurzon
464:. The
401:UNESCO
347:Dy yol
333:Dy yol
222:howdy!
326:Geber
84:Stone
55:Kolbe
1572:talk
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125:Itub
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111:rest
1048:In
458:Hi,
387:Hi
74:doi
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