،بحث كامل نبذة عن العالم قصة حياة معلومات
بالانجليزي من هو مؤلفات انجازات فلسفة بحث جاهز باللغة الانجليزية علماء عرب ..
أبرز كتب ومؤلفات The story
بحث نشأة وحياته علوم العلوم
الفلكية علم الأحياء علم النبات الفلسفة ومترجم موضوع انجليزي
عن عالم مشهور موضوع انجليزي عن العالم معلومات مختصرة موضوع تعبير عن شخص
مشهور بالانجليزي قصير تعبير عن قدوتي معلومة عن مختصرة
الكتب انجازات وفاة مسيرته حياته علمه
تلامذته باختصار مترجم العالم
جابر بن حيان بن عبد الله الأزدي عالم مسلم عربي
جابر بن حيان نشأة جابر بن حيان دراسات جابر بن حيان دراسة علم الكيمياء دراسة علم الفلك نبذة مختصرة عن جابر بن حيان
جابر بن حيان أبو الكيمياء
بحث عن جابر بن حيان باللغه الانجليزيه
jabir ibn hayyan انجازات
جابر بن حيان تاريخ وفاة جابر بن حيان جابر بن حيان اسمه نشاته انجازاته مولده
تعليمه وفاته العلم الذي برع فيه جابر بن
حيان جابر بن حيان the invention of verity
مولد جابر بن حيان القاب
جابر بن حيان
Jabir Ibn
Hayyan: The forerunner of the nomenclature of substances
Jabir ibn
Hayyan al-Bariqi al-Azdi, born in 721 in Tus, Khorasan, Iran - died in 815 in
Kufa, Iraq, by his full name Abu Musa Jabir ibn Hayyan al-Azdi, was a Muslim
alchemist of Yemeni origin , from the tribe al-Báriqi al-Azdi.
Jabir is
the son of an alchemist and Arab pharmacist who emigrated from Yemen. As a
young man, Jabir was sent to Baghdad to study the Koran and mathematics. He
then becomes the disciple of the famous sixth Shiite Imam Jafar as-Sadiq.
His books
clearly influenced the European alchemists and justified their quest for the
Philosopher's Stone, Lapis Philosophicus. He is credited with a large number of
now-existing chemical laboratory equipment and processes, as well as the
discovery of chemicals such as hydrochloric acid and nitric acid, distillation
and crystallization, which became the foundations of modern chemistry and
chemical engineering.
Alchemical
works
Jabir has
written more than a hundred treatises on various subjects, of which 22 relate
to alchemy. Firmly built on experimental observations, his books give a
systematization of fundamental chemical processes used by alchemists, such as
crystallization, distillation, calcination, sublimation and evaporation. They
are therefore a big step in the transformation of the chemistry of an occult
art into a scientific discipline. In particular, Jabir guesses that finite
quantities of different substances are used during chemical reactions, thus
anticipating by almost a millennium the principles of modern chemistry and in
particular the law of definite proportions discovered by Joseph Louis Proust in
1794.
He is also
credited with the invention and development of a number of laboratory equipment
still in use today, such as the still, which made distillations safer, easier
and more efficient. By distilling salts in the presence of sulfuric acid, Jabir
discovered hydrochloric acid (from sodium chloride) and nitric acid (from
saltpeter). By mixing the two, he invented aqua regia, which is one of the only
chemical reagents that dissolves gold. Beyond its applications for the
extraction and purification of gold, this invention was both happiness and
desperation of the alchemists for the next millennium. It is also credited with
the discovery of citric acid (the basis of lemon acidity), acetic acid (from
vinegar) and tartaric acid (from vinification residues).
Jabir
applied his knowledge to the improvement of many manufacturing processes,
including the manufacture of steel and various metals, the prevention of rust,
gilding, the dyeing of clothes, the tanning of leather, as well as the pigment
analysis. He developed the use of manganese dioxide (MnO2) in the manufacture
of glass to offset the green tints produced by iron, a process still used
today. He noticed that the boiling of the wine produces a flammable vapor, thus
opening the way for the discovery of ethanol by Al-Razi.
He also
proposed a nomenclature of substances, which can be seen as laying the
foundations for the modern classification of elements. He proposed to separate
the substances into three categories: "spirits", which vaporise under
the effect of heat such as camphor, arsenic or ammonium chloride;
"metals" such as gold, lead, copper and iron and "stones"
that can be ground into powder form.
During the
Middle Ages, his treatises on alchemy were translated into Latin and became the
reference texts of the European alchemists. Among these are the Kitab al-Kimya
("Book of the Composition of Alchemy"), translated by Robert of
Chester in 1144, and the Kitab al-Sab'een ("The 70 books"),
translated by Gerard of Cremona (before 1187). Berthelot translated some of his
books known as the "Book of the Kingdom", "Book of
Balance", "Book of Oriental Mercury". Some technical terms introduced
by Jabir passed into European languages and became commonplace words in
scientific vocabulary, such as al kali (alkaline).
Jabir
became an alchemist at the court of Caliph Haroun al-Rashid. His interest in
alchemy was very much inspired by his teacher Ja'far al-Sadiq, who was a very
learned man and one of the highest authorities in the esoteric sciences. Jabir
himself was nicknamed "al-Sufa", which indicates that he belonged to
a mystical and ascetic branch of Islam. He wrote the Kitab al-Zuhra ("Book
of Venus", the Noble Art of Alchemy) for Haroun al-Rashid. He writes in
his "Book of Stones" that "the purpose is to unseat and mislead
all but those loved by God.
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