In 328 BCE, Aristotle believed that all matter was made of water, air, fire, and earth.
He did not necessarily discover the atom but helped further the theory of atoms.
In the 4th century BC. Leucippus is considered the founder of the atomic theory, though no dates are known for sure. In fact some believe he did not exist at all.
460 BC
-no that's when he was born…...
Actually, Aristotle did not contribute to the atomic theory because he was against it...
With Aristotle and the ancient Greeks.
feet
It disproved Aristotle's four-element theory of matter.
Aristotle did not believe in the Atomic Theory. He believed that everything was made up of only 4 elements fire, water, air, and earth. This theory was proven incorrect as is evidenced by the periodic table of elements. In short the answer to this question is, none.
Aristotle did not propose an atomic theory; instead, he rejected the concept of atoms put forth by his predecessor, Democritus. Aristotle believed in the idea of continuous matter rather than discrete particles.
he invented biology
Aristotle was against atomic theory considering that matter is formed from fire, air, earth and water.His conceptions delayed the development of science especially because of the harmful influence of Christianity.
Aristotles theory stated that all substances were built from 4 elements, earth, air, fire, and water
Democritus, aristotle, dalton, thompson, ernest ruther ford, Bohr.
Aristotle rejected the atomic theories of Democritus and Leucippus because he believed matter was continuous and not made up of indivisible particles. This rejection led to the dominance of Aristotle's views on matter for the next 2000 years, hindering the progress of atomic theory until the scientific revolution in the 17th century.
No, Aristotle did not believe in the existence of atoms. He proposed that matter is continuous and can be subdivided infinitely. His views on the nature of matter differed significantly from the atomic theory later proposed by Democritus.