1. I. B. Cohen,Revolutions in Science(Cambridge, Mass: Harvard Univ. Press, 1985), p. 201; J. B. Conant, “The Overthrow of the Phlogiston Theory: The Chemical Revolution of 1775–1789,”Harvard Case Histories in Experimental Science, Vol. 1 (Cambridge, Mass: Harvard Univ. Press, 1957), pp. 65–115.
2. Composition, a neglected aspect of the chemical revolution
3. C. A. Ronan,Science: Its History and Development Among the World's Cultures(New York: Facts-on-File, 1982), p. 389; E. Stroker,Theoriewandel in der Wissenschaftsgeschichte: Chemie in 18. Jahrhundert(Frankfurt, 1982); F. L. Holmes,Eighteenth Century Chemistry as an Investigative Enterprise(Berkeley: Univ. of California Office for History of Science and Technology, 1989), pp. 108, 110, 111; E. Melhado, “Toward an Understanding,”op. cit. (2); A. Donovan, “Lavoisier as ChemistandExperimental Physicist: A Reply to Perrin,”Isis, 81 (1990), 270–72, on p. 272; P. Thagard, “The Conceptual Structure of the Chemical Revolution,”Philosophy of Science,57(1990), 183–209, on pp. 184, 201.
4. James Hutton's Theory of the Earth and His Theory of Matter