Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. 2 de may. de 2024 · combustion. Johann Joachim Becher (born May 6, 1635, Speyer, Bishopric of Speyer—died October 1682/85, England) was a chemist, physician, and adventurer whose theories of combustion influenced Georg Stahl’s phlogiston theory. Becher believed substances to be composed of three earths, the vitrifiable, the mercurial, and the combustible.

  2. 1 de ene. de 2022 · Introduction. Best known for his influences on the theory of phlogiston, Johann Joachim Becher (1635–1682) was a seventeenth-century polymath whose works embraced diverse fields such as medicine, chemistry, philology, pedagogy, economical politics, ethics, and theology (Hassinger 1951; Debus 1970; Haltung 2001; Smith 2008 ).

  3. 6 de may. de 2021 · Johann Joachim Becher. Physica subterranea (1667). Quoted in R. Oesper, The Human Side of Scientists (1973), p.11. Johann Joachim Becher – Education and First Publications. Johann Joachim Becher was born in Speyer, Germany. His father, a Lutheran minister, died while he was a child, leaving a widow and three children.

  4. Johann Joachim Becher ( German: [ˈbɛçɐ]; 6 May 1635 – October 1682) was a German physician, alchemist, precursor of chemistry, scholar, polymath and adventurer, best known for his development of the phlogiston theory of combustion, and his advancement of Austrian cameralism . Page of Theatrum Chemicum Volume VI (1659), showing the first ...

  5. Johann Joachim Becher, nado en Speyer o 6 de maio de 1635 e finado en outubro de 1682, foi un médico, alquimista, economista e aventureiro alemán, coñecido por ser o pai da teoría do floxisto. Traxectoria. Seu pai, pastor da luterano, morreu mentres el era neno, deixando á súa nai viúva con tres nenos.

  6. Nació el 9 de diciembre de 1717 en Stendal (Alemania). Cursó estudios en la Universidad de Halle. En el año 1755 publicó su primera obra, un ensayo titulado Gedanken über die Nachahmung der griechischen Werke in der Malerei und Bildhauerkunst (Reflexiones sobre la imitación de las obras griegas en la pintura y la escultura).

  7. Introduction. Best known for his influences on the theory of phlogiston, Johann Joachim Becher (1635–1682) was a seventeenth-century polymath whose works embraced diverse elds such as medicine, chem-. fi. istry, philology, pedagogy, economical politics, ethics, and theology (Hassinger 1951; Debus 1970; Haltung 2001; Smith 2008).