Sorry if this is a FAQ, but ... I'm a non-chemist looking for an answer to a simple but slightly obtuse question.
Is there a term to describe the striking "non-linearity"* of chemical reactions, specifically the way that reactants combine to form products whose properties are totally different from each other? IOW, the products of a reaction being more or less (or even the opposite) of the "sum" of their parts?
Obvious examples to a chemistry noob like me would be Na and Cl forming common salt, and C and N forming the cyanide ?radical; the former reaction seeing dangerous (to us) elements combining to form something harmless/useful, and the latter the exact opposite.
It just seems such an arbitrary phenomenon, in the sense that for many reactions the initial ingredients' properties are no indicator of the resulting ones.
* qualitatively speaking, rather than strictly mathematical.