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Principle (chemistry) : ウィキペディア英語版
Principle (chemistry)
In modern chemistry, principles are the constituents of a substance, specifically those that produce a certain quality or effect in the substance, such as a ''bitter principle'', which is any one of the numerous compounds having a bitter taste.
The idea of chemical principles developed out of the classical elements. Paracelsus identified the ''tria prima'' as principles in his approach to medicine.
Georg Ernst Stahl published ''Philosophical Principles of Universal Chemistry'' in 1730 as an early effort to distinguish between mixtures and compounds. He writes, "the ''simple'' are ''Principles'', or the first material causes of ''Mixts'';..."〔 Georg Ernst Stahl (1730) (Philosophical Principles of Universal Chemistry ), Peter Shaw translator, from Open Library〕 To define a Principle, he wrote
:A Principle is defined, ''à priori'', that in a mix’d matter, which ''first existed''; and ''a posteriori'', that into which it is at ''last resolved''. (...) ''chemical Principles'' are called ''Salt, Sulfur'' and ''Mercury'' (...) or ''Salt'', ''Oil'', and ''Spirit''.〔
Stahl recounts theories of chemical principles according to Helmont and J. J. Becher. He says Helmont took ''Water'' to be the "first and only material Principle of all things." According to Becher, ''Water'' and ''Earth'' are principles, where Earth is distinguished into three kinds.〔 Stahl also ascribes to Earth the "principle of ''rest'' and ''aggregation''."〔
Historians have described how early analysts used Principles to classify substances:
:The classification of substances varies from one author to the next, but it generally relied on tests to which to which materials could be submitted or procedures that could be applied to them. "Test" must be understood here in a double sense, experimental and moral: gold was considered noble because it resisted fire, humidity, and being buried underground. Camphor, like sulfur, arsenic, mercury, and ammonia, belonged to the "spirits" because it was volatile. Glass belonged among the metals because, like them, it could be melted. And since the seven known metals – gold, silver, iron, copper, tin, lead, and mercury – were characterized by their capacity to be melted, what made a metal a metal was defined by reference to the only metal that was liquid at room temperature, mercury or quicksilver. But "common" mercury differed from the mercuric principle, which was cold and wet. Like all other metals, it involved another "principle", which was hot and dry, sulfur.〔Bernadette Bensaude-Vincent & Isabelle Stengers (1996) ''A History of Chemistry'', Deborah van Dam translator, Harvard University Press, ISBN 0-674-39659-6 〕
Guillaume-Francois Rouelle "attributed two functions to principles: that of forming mixts and that of being an agent or instrument of chemical principles."〔
:Thus the four principles, earth, air, fire, and water, were principles both of the chemist's operations and of the mixts they operated upon. As instruments they were, unlike specific chemcal reagents, "natural and general," always at work in every chemical operation. As constituent elements, they did not contradict the chemistry of displacement but transcended it: the chemist could never isolate or characterize an element as he characterized a body; an element was not isolable, for it could not be separated from a mixt without re-creating a new mixt in the process.〔
In his book The Sceptical Chymist of 1661, Robert Boyle criticized the traditional understanding of the composition of materials and initiated the modern understanding of chemical elements.
==References==


抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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