Spring 2003
Inquiry in
the Natural World
Student
Guide, Topic 5: What is matter?
1. Understand early Greek ideas concerning the
make-up of matter
2. Understand how modern chemistry began with
incorrect ideas such as alchemy
3. Understand that the studies of gases were
the beginnings of modern chemistry
4. Be able to discuss combustion using
phlogiston theory and Lavoisier’s oxygen theory.
5. Understand the
importance of Lavoisier’s Law of Conservation of Mass
1. Describe Aristotle’s 4 elements as a
combination of opposed qualities and how these ideas might structure
development of early chemical theory
2. What were the goals of the alchemists and
what significance did their studies have in the development of chemistry?
3. Why was the pneumatic trough (water then
mercury) so significant in the study of gases?
4. How did the study of gases refute
Aristotelian ideas of elements?
Reading for Monday
Selected
sections from J. Hudson, The History of Chemistry. New York: Chapman & Hall, 1994.
http://web.sbu.edu/physics/faculty/dimattio/Clare102/physics.dimattio-sp03.htm
Questions for Discussion on Monday (based on reading and
main lecture)
1. What is phlogiston and how is related to
combustion?
2. What was Lavoisier’s oxygen theory and how
did it differ from phlogiston theory?
3. How did Lavoisier’s careful measurements refute the ideas of transmutation and phlogiston theory?
4. Describe an example of combustion (wood burning, forming a metal oxide, respiration, etc.) using phlogiston theory and Lavoisier’s oxygen approach.
5. How did Lavoisier conclusions concerning the synthesis of water from burning “inflammable air” differ from Cavendish’s phlogistic interpretation?