Pierre Macquer
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Pierre Joseph Macquer (1718-1784) was an influential French chemist.
He is known for his Dictionnaire de chymie (1766). He was also involved in practical applications, to medicine and industry, such as the French development of porcelain. He was an opponent of Lavoisier's theories. The scholar Phillipe Macquer was his brother.
In his 1749 Elemens de Chymie Theorique, Macquire build’s on Geoffroy’s 1718 affinity table, by devoting a whole chapter to the topic of chemical affinity:[1]
“ | All the experiments which have been hitherto carried out, and those which are still being daily performed, concur in proving that between different bodies, whether principles or compounds, there is an agreement, relation, affinity or attraction (if you will have it so), which disposes certain bodies to unite with one another, while with others they are unable to contract any union: it is this effect, whatever be its cause, which will help us to give a reason for all the phenomena furnished by chemistry, and to tie them together. | ” |
Macquer was influenced by the works of Georges-Louis Leclerc, Comte de Buffon as well as others.
[edit] References
- ^ Macquer, P. J. (1775). Elements of the Theory and Pratice of chymistry, trans. A. Reid, vol. 1. pg. 12. 2 vols., London.