Monday, March 30, 2020
Green Chemistry Theory and Practice
Green Chemistry Theory and PracticeGreen Chemistry Theory and Practice will introduce a new perspective to the field of chemistry. It will bring together the ancient theories of alchemy with the latest discoveries in the development of organic chemistry. A unique combination of both science and art, this work introduces a modern approach to the field of chemistry that is grounded in a philosophy based on conservation, health, life, and beauty.The philosopher said that darkness is not really something to fear but a new realm of existence that will be revealed when knowledge of the light has been achieved. It was said that the key to unlock the dark forces lies in the discovery of how a being's life force can be retained in a material substance. This philosophy was developed by Victor Frankenstein, who believed that human life can be preserved in a vegetable body by using alchemy as an explanation. This philosophy had a great impact on the society because it became part of the national obsession of alchemy.Early alchemists believed that the lost 'life force' could be preserved in the elements that were extracted from the bodies of the dead. The belief was that a person's spirit resided in the elements that could be extracted and used to recreate a person. The mixture was then eaten or drank to reanimate the person.The essence of an element was its form, i.e. the position and quality of the compounds present in its elemental state. The Philosopher would argue that this essence could be maintained by plants since they contain the essence of the primary elements of which the elements are composed. However, the understanding of this philosophy had become diluted and became a preoccupation of the establishment that considered it a perversion of nature.This Philosophy was not popularized in the Western world and remained only in the laboratories of the Swiss and German scientists who focused mainly on the organic chemistry. This was eventually exposed in the 17th centu ry when English physicist and chemist, Robert Boyle, used the alchemical principles to produce his famous book 'On the Generation and Corruption of Bodies'. This book exposed how plants could be produced from corpses.Now the demand for this theory and practice was increased in the west where the emerging modernization was beginning to see the need for a new approach to the study of organic chemistry. This came in the form of a scientific journal that was published in London by William Ewart Gladstone. However, the British publishing houses wouldn't print this journal because of its religious connotations and didn't allow its publication in the United Kingdom. It was published in America by George L. Howard, who soon made it available to other western countries.The latest discoveries in organic chemistry have presented an opportunity to many researchers to reexamine the belief in the philosophy of life. They have found that this theory is founded on the observation that humans do not exist solely in the five senses. The human soul is not part of the body, but is something that exists in all beings.A person's soul is no different from an animal's soul, since the soul exists outside the body. The soul doesn't depend on the body, it does not reside in the body, and is not confined to a specific space and time. It has been concluded that there is no distinction between the concepts of life and soul since the latter is the same.
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