He did not picture the atom...he believed that matter was made of water, air, earth and fire.
Aristotle did not discover the atom. The concept of the atom was first proposed by the ancient Greek philosopher Leucippus and his student Democritus around the 5th century BCE. Aristotle, who came after them, did not accept the idea of atoms and instead favored a different view of matter.
in 1322
Aristotle did not discover the atom. The concept of the atom was first proposed by the ancient Greek philosopher Democritus around the 5th century BCE. Aristotle had a different view of matter, which did not involve indivisible particles like atoms.
Aristotle did not make an atom discovery. The concept of atoms was first introduced by ancient Greek philosophers Leucippus and Democritus around the 5th century BC, while Aristotle believed in the continuous nature of matter.
Christopher Stotland and heration milman
help me find Aristotle when he found the atoms please help me!!!!!!!!!
He thought that the atom was a creature that lived in the waters on Mars. He then thought to himself "How could thy creature get down to earth? It must've traveled through time and landed here!" He then got the idea of inventing a restuarant called Ruby Tuesdays to repel all the invaders and save the town. It is also believed that he proposed the thoery that an atom is concieved when two stars get it on and cause a supernova.
Aristotle did not believe in the existence of atoms. Instead, he proposed that all matter is composed of four elements - earth, air, fire, and water. Aristotle's view of matter influenced scientific thought for centuries before the development of modern atomic theory.
So far, no picture of an atom has ever been taken. Atoms are fundamental particles which have only been visualized and not seen.
On the outer edge of an atom on the rings of it if youv'e ever seen a picture of it before.
Aristotle did not believe in the existence of atoms. He proposed that matter is continuous and cannot be divided into indivisible particles. Aristotle's views on the nature of matter were based on his concept of the four elements (earth, water, air, fire) and his belief in qualitative rather than quantitative explanations.
Aristotealian Logic tells us that there is nothing that cannot be broken into further subdivisions. The meaning of "atom" is indivisible. Turns out he was right in his own little way (we now know of quarks)