The problem you are running into is that basic chemistry courses are based on inorganic chemistry and basic electronic structure. You end up knee deep in element characteristics and electron distribution, arrheneius, lewis, and Bronsted-Lowry acids/bases. You study thermodynamics, energy transfer and redox. You will study bonding orbitals and molecular orbitals trying to understand why Heisenberg, deBroglie, and Bohr had some stake in bonding. You will even touch on basic nuclear chemistry but that's really it for basic chemistry. When you take organic chemistry you will find many of the names of organic compounds do not make a lot sense. Organic chemistry is a memorization course. Basic compound names follow a little less than a dozen rules that will allow about 99% of all inorganic compounds to be properly named. In organic chemistry, however, the central structure creates the base name and everything else get kind of thrown on based on how the researcher feels at that moment. Ok, it's not that chaotic but you get my point.