Ahh fair enough.
How about any of the earlier ones, could any better B-L's theory?
No, Antoine Lavoisier stated that acids contained oxygen which was very wrong (could not explain why hydrogen halide compounds acted as acids even thought they did not contain an oxygen atom in its structure, could not eplain why metallic oxides when dissolved in water formed base instead of acid)
Humphrey Davy said that acids contained hydrogen - this was later extended by Justus von Liebig who found out that when acids reacted with metals, the metal 'replaced' the hydrogen, and so he concluded that acids contained replaceable hydrogen. His theory is not acceptable and inferior to the B-L theory was it could not explain the electrical conductivities of acids/bases and their differing strengths (Svante Arrhenius' theory could explain this)
also most reactions involved with acids and abses are usually in solution, thus arrhenius' theory is "more useful" (also simpler and easily understood) than B-L. HOWEVER, for a more deeper understanding of acids and bases, B-L theory would be better because it can explain acid/base reactions outside the aqueous reaction media, whereas arrhenius' theory can only be applied when reactions are in SOLUTION