I'm quite frankly disappointed in this one. The idea that you could get unusual compounds at pressures high enough to distort the outer electron orbitals should be more than trivially obvious to anyone with even a smidgen of P-chem, and further should be modelable with computers these days. This is what happens when you need to get papers published to advance your career, instead of doing research that's actually important.
[edit] And classical chemistry? This guy is talking about 'classical' chemistry in a 3 million PSI environment? There is nothing at all remotely classical about that, and for the researcher to even mention the octet rule borders on fraudulent. Recommend title change to "Invented Truth" instead.
Indeed! The notion of the octet rule being a "foundation of chemistry" when boron compounds typically have an incomplete octet and phosphorus and sulphur compounds (like SF_6) often exceed the octet... I guess you could call this "classical chemistry" in the sense of "classical physics"---a lie that covers most of the bases and gets corrected a couple years later for those who are interested enough to keep studying.
New Salt Compounds Challenge the Foundation of Chemistry
The title is overblown (it depends on what you think the foundation is), but get a load of this:
And here's the philosophical bit:
The obvious example of local truth is relativistic effects being pretty much invisible over the durations and distances that are normal for people, but there's also that the surface of the earth is near enough to flat for many human purposes.
Any suggestions for other truths which could turn out to be local?