chemistry
Alchemy ended during the 18th century as a result of the birth of modern chemistry.
Alchemy was a pseudo-science that eventually evolved into modern Chemistry, which was simply found and proven to be more right.
Chemistry developed from alchemy after the 1700s. It was the Alchemist observations and accidental discoveries that brought around modern chemistry.
because he was ugly
because he was ugly
alchemy
Alchemy fell out of favor with the rise of modern chemistry in the 18th century. As scientific methods improved, alchemy's mystical and philosophical elements were seen as unscientific. Many alchemical practices were deemed outdated and replaced by more evidence-based scientific approaches.
Herbert Stanley Redgrove has written: 'Alchemy: ancient and modern' -- subject(s): History, Alchemy, Chemistry
rasavadham
Yes and no. No in that the original alchemy, with its chemically impossible goal of turning lead into gold and such, is no longer in use; if it is then it's very underground. Yes in that the methods of alchemists eventually evolved into modern chemistry. In fact, alchemy is sometimes used as a tongue-in-cheek nickname for chemistry, but this is usually purely literary. So, technically, you could say that "alchemy" is still in use, in its modern form as chemistry.
Alchemy was a past medieval phenomenon based on making potions for certain reasons. So alchemy does exist to a certain extent now in modern society.
The questions were the same - just the answers were different.