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  1. Dalton's Atomic Theory - CK-12 Foundation

    Jun 1, 2026 · Because Dalton thought atoms were the smallest particles of matter, he envisioned them as solid, hard spheres, like billiard (pool) balls, so he used wooden balls to model them.

  2. However, it seems clear that he is also claiming the impossibility of any inductive justification of prediction. Consider the case at hand, that of two billiard balls about to collide. Past experience very …

  3. Billiard-Ball Model of the World - Natural Philosophy Wiki

    This paper argues that hard contact collisions between ether corpuscles and elementary particles may turn out to be the common mechanism for phenomena such as radiation, charge, field, wave/particle …

  4. Models in Science - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy

    Feb 27, 2006 · Standard examples of analogical models include the billiard ball model of a gas, the hydraulic model of an economic system, and the dumb hole model of a black hole.

  5. What Is The Dalton Atomic Model? - Science ABC

    Jan 10, 2019 · The Dalton atomic model—also known as the billiard ball model—was proposed by English chemist John Dalton in 1803. Built on the laws of conservation of mass, definite, multiple, …

  6. Dalton's Atomic Theory ( Read ) | Chemistry | CK-12 Foundation

    Because Dalton thought atoms were the smallest particles of matter, he envisioned them as solid, hard spheres, like billiard (pool) balls, so he used wooden balls to model them.

  7. Search results for `Billiard Ball` - PhilPapers

    When a yellow billiard ball strikes a red billiard ball, Malebranche holds that we see the yellow ball as causing the red ball to move. Given Malebranche’s occasionalism, he insists that the visual …

  8. Hume’s Billiard Ball Argument - Medium

    Feb 14, 2023 · The Billiard-balls example is a part of Hume’s endeavor to show that “causal reasoning is not a relation of ideas” (Lecture Notes).

  9. Humean definition of causality - Wikipedia

    The reductionist approach to causation can be exemplified with the case of two billiard balls: one ball is moving, hits another one and stops, and the second ball is moving.

  10. Dalton's Atomic Theory - studylib.net

    Atoms consist of several types of smaller particles, including protons, neutrons, and electrons. The Billiard Ball Model Because Dalton thought atoms were the smallest particles of matter, he …