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" Lavoisier from thinking any such opinion warranted, that till he was prevailed upon to repeat the experiment himself, he found some difficulty in believing that nearly the whole of the two airs could be converted into water. "
Mechanics' Magazine - Page 89
1840
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Works, Volume 1

Henry Brougham Baron Brougham and Vaux - 1872 - 536 pages
...that dephlogisticated air is only water deprived of its phlogiston : but at that time so far was M. Lavoisier from thinking any such opinion warranted,...whole of the two airs could be converted into water."* This passage is in Mr. Cavendish's paper ; but it is not in his own hand-writing, nor is it in the...
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Beiträge zur Geschichte der Chemie, Volume 3

Hermann Kopp - 1875 - 332 pages
...them , that dephlogisticated air is only water deprived of phlogiston; but at that time so far was M. Lavoisier from thinking any such opinion warranted,...whole of the two airs could be converted into water. It is remarkable, that neither of these gentlemen found any acid in the water produced by the combustion...
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Nature, Volume 43

Sir Norman Lockyer - 1891 - 780 pages
...to M. Lavoisier, as well as of the conclusion drawn from them. . . . But at that time so far was M. Lavoisier from thinking any such opinion warranted...whole of the two airs could be converted into water." This passage, however, was inserted with Cavendish's knowledge and consent, and by his assistant and...
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Nature, Volume 43

1891 - 902 pages
...to M. Lavoisier, as well as of the conclusion drawn from them. . . . But at that time so far was M. Lavoisier from thinking any such opinion warranted...whole of the two airs could be converted into water." This passage, however, was inserted with Cavendish's knowledge and consent, and by his assistant and...
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Report of the Annual Meeting, Issue 60

British Association for the Advancement of Science - 1891 - 1282 pages
...them, that dephlogisticated air is only water deprived of phlogiston ; but at that time so far was M. Lavoisier from thinking any such opinion warranted...some difficulty in believing that nearly the whole ot the two airs could be converted into water.' This addition, as I have had the opportunity of verifying...
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Experiments on Air: Papers Published in the Philosophical Transactions

Henry Cavendish - 1893 - 68 pages
...them, that dephlogisticated air is only water deprived of phlogiston ; but at that time so far was M. Lavoisier from thinking any such opinion warranted,...whole of the two airs could be converted into water. It is remarkable, that neither of these gentlemen found any acid in the water produced by the combustion...
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Essays in Historical Chemistry

Thomas Edward Thorpe - 1894 - 406 pages
...them, that dephlogisticated air is only water deprived of phlogiston; but at that time so far was M. Lavoisier from thinking any such opinion warranted...whole of the two airs could be converted into water." This addition, as I have had the opportunity of verifying by an inspection of the original MSS. in...
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The Gases of the Atmosphere: The History of Their Discovery

William Ramsay - 1896 - 274 pages
...Lavoisier, as well as of the conclusion drawn from them, that dephlogisticated air is only water deprived of phlogiston ; but at that time, so far was Mr. Lavoisier...whole of the two airs could be converted into water." And next comes an important deduction. " Phlogisticated air appears to be nothing else than the nitrous...
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Essays in Historical Chemistry

Thomas Edward Thorpe - 1902 - 608 pages
...to M. Lavoisier, as well as of the conclusion drawn from them. . . . But at that time, so far was M. Lavoisier from thinking any such opinion warranted...prevailed upon to repeat the experiment himself, he I/ found some difficulty in believing that nearly the whole of the two airs could be converted into...
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Essays in Historical Chemistry

Thomas Edward Thorpe - 1902 - 610 pages
...to M. Lavoisier, as well as oi the conclusion drawn from them. . . . But at that time, so fat was M. Lavoisier from thinking any such opinion warranted...was prevailed upon to repeat the experiment himself, h< found some difficulty in believing that nearly the whole of th< two airs could be converted into...
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