BOYLE, Robert (1627 – 1691)
1627 – 1691
7 entries in the GMN corpus.
Image source Johann Kerseboom · digital.sciencehistory.org · Public domain
1660 CE
#914
New experiments physico-mechanical touching the spring of the air.
Boyle showed the effects of the elasticity, compressibility, and weight of air. He investigated the function of air in respiration, combustion, and conveyance of sound. Most significantly Boyle demonstrated that air i…
1661 CE
#665.1
Certain physiological essays.
In this prelude to Boyle’s Sceptical chymist Boyle describes his corpuscular view of digestion, “giving recognition to the existence of the agents now designated the ‘enzymes’ ” (Fulton, …
1662 CE
#666
A defence of the doctrine touching the spring and weight of the air.
Boyle’s law. The above pamphlet was appended to the second edition of Boyle’s The spring and weight of the air, 1662. The relevant passage is reproduced inj. F. Fulton’s Selected readings in the hist…
1684 CE
#861
Memoirs for the natural history of humane blood, especially the spirit of that liquor.
The first analysis of blood, Boyle’s Memoirs may be considered the first scientific study in physiological chemistry, exhibiting methods which have become universally adopted. This is Boyle’s most importan…
1685 CE
#11557
Of the reconcileableness of specifick medicines to the corpuscular philosophy to which is annexed a discourse about the advantages of the use of simple medicines.
In this work on drug action or pharmacodynamics Boyle argued that remedies composed of only one or two ingredients were preferable to more complex drugs for two reasons. First, because the patient would experience few…
1961 CE
#11201
A bibliography of the Honourable Robert Boyle, Fellow of the Royal Society. Second edition
1999 CE–2000 CE
#9573