On Nov 19, 2009, at 2:09 PM, Dan M wrote:
Behalf Of Nick Arnett
"Organic gardening" bugs me. Sounds like the opposite would be
"inorganic
gardening."
Like organic food...as though non-organic tomatoes were carbon free.
I like to think of it as Amis
From: brin-l-boun...@mccmedia.com [mailto:brin-l-boun...@mccmedia.com] On
Behalf Of Nick Arnett
Sent: Thursday, November 19, 2009 10:26 AM
To: Killer Bs (David Brin et al) Discussion
Subject: Re: Nomenclature (was) Chemicals R Us
>"Organic g
On Nov 19, 2009, at 8:25 AM, Nick Arnett wrote:
On Thu, Nov 19, 2009 at 3:46 AM, Alberto Monteiro > wrote:
I think that a more accurate definition is that Organic chemistry
is the chemistry of carbon compounds where carbon has a covalent
bond with hydrogen, or to a replacement of hydrogen.
"Or
On Thu, Nov 19, 2009 at 3:46 AM, Alberto Monteiro
wrote:
>
> I think that a more accurate definition is that Organic chemistry
> is the chemistry of carbon compounds where carbon has a covalent
> bond with hydrogen, or to a replacement of hydrogen.
"Organic gardening" bugs me. Sounds like the o
Ronn! Blankenship wrote:
>
> I agree with you. "Organic chemistry is the chemistry of carbon
> compounds." Though usually with the omission of most metal
> carbonates, the chemistry of which is usually covered in the section
> on inorganic chemistry. That's how *I* teach it in colleges,
>
On Nov 18, 2009, at 8:09 PM, Rceeberger wrote:
On 11/18/2009 7:00:59 PM, Ronn! Blankenship (ronn_blankens...@bellsouth.net
) wrote:
At 11:58 AM Wednesday 11/18/2009, Deborah Harrell wrote:
I'll bet there's a difference of wording -- 'organic chemistry' here
primarily refers to petrochemicals;
On 11/18/2009 7:00:59 PM, Ronn! Blankenship (ronn_blankens...@bellsouth.net)
wrote:
> At 11:58 AM Wednesday 11/18/2009, Deborah Harrell wrote:
>
> >I'll bet there's a difference of wording -- 'organic chemistry' here
> >primarily refers to petrochemicals; 'biochemistry' refers to
> >life-related
At 11:58 AM Wednesday 11/18/2009, Deborah Harrell wrote:
I'll bet there's a difference of wording -- 'organic chemistry' here
primarily refers to petrochemicals; 'biochemistry' refers to
life-related chemicals. This is an incorrect terminology in my
opinion, but I can't change what is taught
> From: Alberto Monteiro
> I think it was established that benzene is carninogen. But
> I am
> not aware that phthalates, just because they are aromatic,
> are
> harmful. In fact, a few aminoacids are aromatic.
I'll bet there's a difference of wording -- 'organic chemistry' here primarily
refe