Wikipedia:Scientific peer review/Joseph Priestley

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Joseph Priestley

Joseph Priestley was an important eighteenth-century natural philosopher (and educator and minister and political theorist and philosopher). Most notably, he discovered oxygen. Because Priestley made significant contributions in so many fields, it is difficult to write a succinct article on him; it is also difficult for one editor to write the article. Nevertheless, I have tried. While I have had some assistance, the bulk of the writing and research has been done by myself. Because I am more familiar with the humanities than with the sciences, I would appreciate a check of my descriptions of Priestley's experiments and discoveries. If anyone is suddenly inspired to research Priestley and help me out with this article, that would be wonderful.

talk 04:14, 13 September 2007 (UTC)[reply
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Comments by Jayron32

I must confess, though I am a chemist by training and an educator by trade, I don't know much about Priestly and his personal life, but I will make comments where I can on the chemistry in the article.

  • For completeness, provide formula of nitric oxide and hydrochloric acid in the Natural philosopher of air section. These are helpful and other compounds have them as well in this section.
  • Also in the same sentance of that section, some of Priestly's names for his airs are listed in quotes and others not... Why?
  • Eudiometry should probably link to eudiometer. Eudiometry is simply the measurement of changing gas volumes in a chemical reaction; it is such a simple concept that it probably doesn't need a separate article from the device. Not really sure what the nitrous air test is or how it relates to Eudiometry; unless he used eudiometry in this nitrous air test. This bit is unclear.
  • Apparently he used the "nitrous air" in the eudiometer (fixed link). I take it one can use other gases? I'm just not sure if they did in the eighteenth century.
    talk 05:32, 13 September 2007 (UTC)[reply
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  • Here are some quotes:
  • "The "Observations" made Priestley a leader of pneumatic chemistry, not only because of the discoveries it announced--and there were many of these:...the development of the nitrous air test (eudiometry)--but also because of the simple apparatus and manipulative techniques he had developed and described." (Schofield 1, 259)
  • "He found he could obtain it [nitrous oxide] 'from' most metals. It did not differ much in specific gravity from common air, did not precipitate lime water, was not inflammable. It preserved animal matter from putrefaction; most significant, when mixed with common air, there was effervescence, red fumes were produced, and common air was reduced in bulk in proportion to its fitness for respiration or combustion. . . . This 'nitrous air test' provided a way of examining airs for their 'degree of goodness' (there being no reaction between 'bad air' and nitrous air) that humanely replaced the mice, which had, anyway, given uncertain results." (Schofield 1, 267).
Does this help you figure out what is going on?
talk 05:00, 14 September 2007 (UTC)[reply
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  • Except I know he wasn't testing for oxygen as no one had discovered it yet. (They couldn't do your nifty calculation, by the way. Lavoisier hadn't invented the "new chemistry" quite yet.) I'll see what else I can dig up.
    talk 06:32, 14 September 2007 (UTC)[reply
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  • Perhaps Priestley actually was testing for oxygen (and the other gases in the air we breathe), but I think that the article should say what he and others thought they were doing, since it is a historical piece. By the way, the Joe Jackson book is terrible. Of all of the biographies, that is the worst. It is redolent with factual errors and wild speculation. I wouldn't bother with it, if I were you. Like I said, I will keep looking.
    talk 06:52, 14 September 2007 (UTC)[reply
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  • (Undent, same topic)... BTW, we don't use any other components of air besides oxygen. Air is roughly 78% nitrogen (inert), 1% argon (inert) and 20% oxygen (which our bodies use when we breathe). The other 1% is everything else, which includes mostly CO2 and Water Vapor, neither of which are utilized by animal respiration. We only use the oxygen when we breathe. --Jayron32|talk|contribs 07:14, 14 September 2007 (UTC)[reply]
  • That may be, but I think that in a history of science article, it is really important to discuss topics in historical terms. Anachronism is death! Here is another quotation:
  • Priestley here [reference to a quotation from the "Observations"] suggests the basis of a method of Eudiometry, or method of measuring the goodness of air, which in his hands, but more especially in those of Cavendish, led to most important results. The quantitative analysis of the air may be said to have taken its rise from the publication of Priestley's paper." (Thorpe, 182) - Do you think this means JP invented eudiometry, kinda sorta?
    talk 07:28, 14 September 2007 (UTC)[reply
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  • "grasp"?
    talk 05:00, 14 September 2007 (UTC)[reply
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  • Sure.
    talk 06:32, 14 September 2007 (UTC)[reply
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Hope that was of some help.--Jayron32|talk|contribs 04:59, 13 September 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Thanks!
talk 05:32, 13 September 2007 (UTC)[reply
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