Robert Boyle

The English natural philosopher and chemist Robert Boyle, b. Jan. 25, 1627, d. Dec. 30, 1691, made important contributions to experimental chemistry and is known for his ideal-gas law, subsequently termed Boyle's law. Boyle was born into an affluent English aristocratic family and received a conventional gentleman's education. He became interested in medicine and the new science of Galileo and studied chemistry. Boyle was a founder and an influential fellow of the Royal Society, was continuously active in scientific affairs, and wrote prolifically on science, philosophy, and theology.

Boyle's earliest publication was on the physical properties of air, from which he derived his law that the volume of a given amount of a gas varies inversely with pressure. His work in chemistry was aimed at establishing it as a rational theoretical science on the basis of a mechanistic theory of matter. Boyle was a skillful experimenter who insisted that experimentation was an essential part of scientific proof, an approach that influenced Sir Isaac Newton and the methodology of many later scientists.

 

Nicholas H. Clulee

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Bibliography: Alexander, P., Ideas, Qualities, and Corpuscles (1985); Boas, M., Robert Boyle and 17th-Century Chemistry (1958; repr. 1968); Hunter, M., ed., Robert Boyle Reconsidered (1994); Harwood, J., ed., The Early Essays and Ethics of Robert Boyle (1991).

Last modified on: Thursday, October 30, 1997.