Atom Democritus To Modern Science
Atom Democritus To Modern Science
Atom Democritus To Modern Science
a. Life
b. Works
II. Atomism
a. Atom
b. Void
A. Dalton theory
B. Rutherford hypothesis
C. Bohr’s theory
Conclusion:
Bibliography
Introduction
Atom is vast topic that we have encounter in the field of science. A small particle
that can be form a greater idea that can caught the interest of thinkers to seek it
fundamental essence base on its existence. The beginning of this idea of atom came
from Leucippus the ancient philosopher and his student Democritus. Almost there is
nothing known about the works of Leucippus that why the first part of the paper is only
focus on the life and works of Democritus who founded and give deeper understanding
of the atom. To second part of the paper will give the better understanding of atom and
motion of it to the void according to the works of Democritus. Time goes by a lot of
thinkers try to give a different concept of idea of an atom and to make their own
theories. That is why on the third part of this paper will discuss the different theories of
atom and its development to the modern science. The flow of this paper is the
Exposition of life and works of Democritus and the different ideas and concept of an
atom.
A. Life
Democritus is an ancient philosopher who was born in a noble and wealthy family in
Abdera. He was born at Abdera, about 460 BCE, although according to some 490 also,
the laughing philosopher he was known in this identity because he didn’t appear to
public without the glimpse of smile and laughing while expressing his contempt to
human follies. 1After the death of his father he traveled in search of wisdom, and
devoted his inheritance to this purpose, amounting to one hundred talents. He is said to
have visited Egypt, Ethiopia, Persia, and India. Whether, in the course of his travels, he
visited Athens or studied under Anaxagoras is uncertain. During some part of his life he
he was being enlightened by the different ideas and philosophies due to his passion to
love every wisdom. Also, he was trained by his master Leucippus to be a good thinker
and to continue of what he was started. Democritus is said to have been a pupil of
Leucippus, an important figure in the early history of philosophy about whom little is
known. Aristotle and others credit Leucippus with devising the theory of atomism, and it
is commonly believed that Democritus expanded the theory under his tutelage.
However, some scholars have suggested that Leucippus was not an actual person but
For the years of traveled he go back to Abdera, he led a small school of natural
philosophers, now known as the Atomists, who believed that our macroscopic world
1
Internet encyclopedia philosophy, Democritus (460-370 B.C.E) Retrieved on December 2, 2021, Retrieved from
https://iep.utm.edu/democrit/.
2
Democritus c. 460 BC-c. 370 BC retrieved from: http://www.montejohnson.info/PDFs/Johnson2011.pdf
could best be understood in terms of indivisible microscopic building blocks called
atoms (meaning` `not'' and tomos meaning ``cut''). 3 And Democritus blinded himself to
master his intellectual faculties as he spent his days and nights in caverns and
sepulchers. Democritus died at the age of more than hundred years old and he remain
his ideas and view that a lot of thinkers try to comprehend and develop as to the
B. Works
different fields like in philosophy, Painting, even in farming and to the world of science,
also he was known as the only pre-Socratic philosopher that contributed a large number
touching on nearly every subject in philosophy and science. But, the work of Democritus
the best evidence is that reported by Aristotle, who regarded him as an important rival in
passages quoted in other sources have survived. Democritus seems to have taken over
4
and systematized the views of Leucippus, of whom little is known.
The work that made Democritus famous is his atomic theory. This theory is the one
whom he adapted to his master Leucippus and he develop this atomic theory that’s why
he caught the attention of the thinkers before him to made their own atomic theory for
A. Atom
Greek philosophers Leucippus and Democritus first developed the concept of the
atom in the 5th century B.C.E. However, since Aristotle and other prominent thinkers of
the time strongly opposed their idea of the atom, their theory was overlooked and
process, proving that “when substances burn, there is no net gain or loss of weight.”
acceptance because of the efforts of John Dalton, who modernized the ancient Greek
ideas of element, atom, compound, and molecule; and provided a means of explaining
chemical reactions in quantitative terms. 5It is without doubt that the word “atomos” is an
ancient Greek adjective with two endings. Its etymology derives from the verb temnein,
meaning “to cut, divide”. Today, the same verb is at the root of the term “anatomy” as
well. The bits of matter that we speak of today when we refer to the concept of particles,
then, refer to the same, completely solid particles that have reached an ultimately
indivisible form. From this perspective, an “atom” represents the first and smallest entity
in a substance, which is the last indivisible particle that is reached after continuous
division. 6There are multiple unchanging material principles, which persist and merely
5
The History of the Atom 1: The Ancient Greeks,Science for All Americans, pp. 153–155. Retrieved from
http://sciencenetlinks.com/lessons/history-atom-ancient-greeks/
6
A. Oguz-Unver1, S. Arabacioglu2,G. Unver (2012) ATOM IN ANCIENT TIMES. EVOLUTION PROCESS OF ATOMIC IDEA IN
ANTIQUITY, Akdeniz University, Antalya, TURKEY, Retrieved From
https://www.researchgate.net/publication/278678362_Atom_in_ancient_times_Evolution_process_of_atomic_Idea_in_antiquity
version, these unchanging material principles are indivisible particles, the atoms. 7 Atom
is an indivisible small particle that are infinite in various size and shape, perfectly solid
with no internal gaps. On the atomist perspective it these small and invisible particles
B. VOID
result of a circular motion that gathers atoms up into a whirl, creating clusters within it
these kosmoi are impermanent. Our world and the species within it have arisen from the
collision of atoms moving about in such a whirl, and will likewise disintegrate in time.
Melissus, a follower of Parmenides, the atomists paired the term for ‘nothing’ with what
it negates, ‘thing,’ and claimed that—in a phrase typical of the atomists—the one ‘no
more’ exists than the other argues that this particular phrase originated with Democritus
and not his teacher Leucippus. By putting the full (or solid) and the void ontologically on
a par, the atomists were apparently denying the impossibility of void. Void they
places, where could bodies move into? Melissus had argued from the impossibility of
void to the impossibility of motion; the atomists apparently reasoned in reverse, arguing
from the fact that motion exists to the necessity for void space to exist. t has been
7
Stanford encyclopedia of philosophy (substantive revision Dec. 2 2016) Democritus, retrieved from
https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/democritus/#toc
regions between atoms rather than a concept of absolute space. Void does not impede
the motion of atoms because its essential quality is that of ‘yielding,’ in contrast to the
mutual resistance of atoms. Later atomist accounts attest that this ‘yielding’ explains the
tendency of bodies to drift into emptier spaces, driven out by collision from more
Some controversy surrounds the properties of the atoms. They vary in size: one report
as a cosmos, although at least in this cosmos they all seem to be too small to perceive.
They can take on an infinite variety of shapes: there are reports of an argument that
there is ‘no more’ reason for the atoms to be one shape than another. Many kinds of
atoms can interlock with one another because of their irregular shapes and hooks at
A. Dalton theory
8
Stanford encyclopedia of philosophy (substantive revision Dec. 2 2016) Democritus, retrieved from
https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/democritus/#toc
the atomic theory emerged in the 50 years following John Dalton's research.
Two views of matter competed among the Greeks and during the 18-19th Centuries:
Aristotle, Dalton and Faraday saw matter as continuous in-contact particles. Boyle, Gay-
Lussac and Avogadro envisaged dynamic particles separated by space. 9In Dalton’s
first theory, equal atoms—that is, atoms of the same substance—repelled each other;
development of a quantitative atomic theory was directly linked to the problem of the
solubility of gases. However, as Theron Cole Jr. (1978) pointed out, the extant
evidences are not decisive about this point. Cole Jr. suggests, in turn, that the solubility
problem was one of the first applications that Dalton found for his concept of relative
atomic weights, which was developed at the same time but not as a consequence of the
linked to the problem of the solubility of gases. However, as Theron Cole Jr. (1978)
pointed out, the extant evidences are not decisive about this point. Cole Jr. suggests, in
turn, that the solubility problem was one of the first applications that Dalton found for his
concept of relative atomic weights, which was developed at the same time but not as a
B. Rutherford hypothesis
9
Harrison, A (2002): John Dalton's atomic theory: using the history and nature of science to teach particle concepts?
Retrieved from (0ctober 14, 2021) University. Conference contribution. https://hdl.handle.net/10018/2872
10
Porto P. & Viana H (2009), The Development of Dalton’s Atomic Theory as a Case Study in the History of Science: Reflections for
Educators in Chemistry, Retrieved from http://www.iq.usp.br/palporto/VianaPortoSci%26Educ2010.pdf
Rutherford hypothesis model described the atom as a tiny, dense, positively
charged core called a nucleus, in which nearly all the mass is concentrated, around
the atom could not be a uniform solid but rather consisted mostly of empty space, with
its mass concentrated in a tiny nucleus. This insight (the Rutherford atomic model),
charged particles and most of the mass of an atom was concentrated in an extremely
small volume. He called this region of the atom as a nucleus. Rutherford negatively
charged electrons surround the nucleus of an atom. He also claimed that the electrons
surrounding the nucleus revolve around it with very high speed in circular paths. He
C. Bohr’s theory
atom. He proposed that electrons are arranged in concentric circular orbits around the
nucleus. This model is patterned on the solar system and is known as the planetary
model. Bohr model, description of the structure of atoms, especially that of hydrogen,
proposed (1913) by the Danish physicist Niels Bohr. The Bohr model of the atom, a
radical departure from earlier, classical descriptions, was the first that
11
Britannica, The Editors of Encyclopaedia. "Rutherford model". Encyclopedia Britannica, 9 Nov. 2020,
https://www.britannica.com/science/Rutherford-model. Accessed 12 December 2021.
12
Melsen, Andrew G.M. van. "atomism". Encyclopedia Britannica, 15 Mar. 2016,
https://www.britannica.com/topic/atomism. Accessed 14 October 2021.
incorporated quantum theory and was the predecessor of wholly quantum-
mechanical models. The Bohr model and all of its successors describe the properties of
radiation only when the electrons abruptly jump between allowed, or stationary,
states. To make the model in accordance with the regular patterns (spectral series) of
light emitted by real hydrogen atoms, Bohr modified that idea of planetary electron
motion. Bohr was able to explain the series of discrete wavelengths in the hydrogen
emission spectrum by restricting the circling electrons to a series of circular orbits with
discrete radii. He suggested that light only emitted from hydrogen atoms when an
electron moved from an outer orbit to one closer to the nucleus. The energy lost by the
electron during the sudden transition is identical to the energy of the emitted light
quantum.13
this occurred. Arthur Haas in 1909 made a number of proposals in the field of atomic
physics. One of his proposals anticipated Bohr’s theory of the atom. However,
prominent scientists of this era dismissed Haas’ work and praised Bohr’s theory. In
Bohr’s theory a hydrogen atom exists in a stationary state unless light is absorbed or
emitted. When the state of the atom changes, the energy absorbed or emitted is
quantized. We can reproduce Bohr’s theory easily, albeit not exactly as he did. We will
use some ideas developed some 10 years after Bohr’s original work. 14
13
Britannica, The Editors of Encyclopaedia. "Bohr model". Encyclopedia Britannica, 23 Jan. 2020,
https://www.britannica.com/science/Bohr-model. Accessed 14 October 2021.
14
Squires, Gordon Leslie. "quantum mechanics". Encyclopedia Britannica, 1 Jun.
, https://www.britannica.com/science/quantum-mechanics-physics. Accessed 14 October 2021
D. Schrödinger’s atomic model
Erwin Schrödinger, an Austrian scientist, advanced the Bohr atom model in 1926.
employed mathematical equations. The quantum mechanical model of the atom is the
name given to this atomic model. Unlike the Bohr model, the quantum mechanical
model does not specify an electron's exact path; rather, it forecasts the probability of the
model. The probability of locating the electron is greatest where the cloud is most
dense, and the electron is less likely to be in a less dense portion of the cloud. As a
generally applicable. Schrödinger's theory has the advantage of not requiring any
additional arbitrary quantum conditions. The required quantum findings are the outcome
of acceptable constraints placed on the wave function, such as the requirement that it
not become infinitely big at enormous distances from the potential center. Schrödinger
applied his equation to the hydrogen atom, for which the potential function, given by
The nucleus (a proton of charge e) is situated at the origin, and r is the distance from
the origin to the position of the electron. Schrödinger solved the equation for this
atom.
Conclusion:
This paper is trying to bring out the idea of an atom which is founded by
Democritus whom offer a big contribution to the philosophical world and science to
describe the movement of change which is the movement of an atom. The idea of an
atom which Democritus describe in the ancient world is merely develop by those atomist
goes to the present modern science. Therefore, in this paper is try to give an exposition
to the different idea of an atom from Democritus to the modern science. Those
exposition shows above is the proof that the movement of an ancient idea of
Democritus is still developing to seek the fundamental truth that bring by the idea of an
atom.
Bibliography:
A. Oguz-Unver1, S. Arabacioglu2,G. Unver (2012) ATOM IN ANCIENT TIMES.
EVOLUTION PROCESS OF ATOMIC
IDEA IN ANTIQUITY, Akdeniz University, Antalya, TURKEY, Retrieved From
https://www.researchgate.net/publication/278678362_Atom_in_ancient_times_Ev
olution_process_of_atomic_Idea_in_antiquity
October 2021.
Harrison, A (2002): John Dalton's atomic theory: using the history and nature of
Porto P. & Viana H (2009), The Development of Dalton’s Atomic Theory as a Case
Study in the History of Science: Reflections forEducators in Chemistry, Retrieved
from http://www.iq.usp.br/palporto/VianaPortoSci%26Educ2010.pdf
Modern Atomic Theory: Models, retrieved on December 04, 2021, Retrieved from:
http://www.abcte.org/files/previews/chemistry/s1_p6.html
October 2021
The History of the Atom 1: The Ancient Greeks,Science for All Americans, pp. 153–155.
fromhttp://sciencenetlinks.com/lessons/history-atom-ancient-greeks/