
四元素 エレメンタ
The architect of a beautiful worldview explaining all matter through earth, water, fire, and air
A solemn 40-year-old philosophy teacher. Defended the elegant worldview that "all matter can be explained by four elements: earth, water, fire, and air" for over 2000 years. Protected by Aristotle's authority and dominated medieval Europe, but was forced into retirement when Boyle and Lavoisier redefined "element" as an indecomposable substance.
Empedocles proposed the four elements, Aristotle systematized them. Denied by Boyle's "The Sceptical Chymist" and Lavoisier's modern chemistry.
Key Figures
Scientific Explanation
Boyle criticized the four elements theory in "The Sceptical Chymist" (1661) and redefined elements as "substances that cannot be further decomposed." Lavoisier proved through precise experiments that water is a compound of hydrogen and oxygen, completely disproving the four elements theory.
Lesson
A beautiful theory is not necessarily correct. However, the desire to "explain all matter with a few principles" lives on in the modern Standard Model.
Catchphrase
All matter reduces to four. That is the harmony of the cosmos.
Rivalries
The discovery of oxygen and water decomposition experiments destroyed the core of four elements theory that "water is an element."
The ability to synthesize water from hydrogen and oxygen was definitive proof that the four elements' "water" was not an element.
Entrance
Oh... personifying elements? In my time, four elements were sufficient.
118 personas? In my era, four could explain all of creation. Simplicity is beauty.
Interactions
Elementa: "Oxygen. If you didn't exist, water would still be an element."
Oxygen: "Water is a compound of hydrogen and me. That's a fact, not my fault."
Elementa: "Facts... My beautiful four-element system crumbled before facts."
Oxygen: "But the ideal of 'explaining all matter with a few principles'... still drives science today."
Elementa: "...I see. My dream lives on in a different form."
Exit
Four was not enough. But the desire to "explain the world beautifully" continues to dwell in the hearts of scientists across the ages.
My system was wrong. But the question itself was right. "What is the fundamental nature of all things?"—this question has no end.