During the second half of the nineteenth century and the beginning of the twentieth century chemical societies were established all over Europe. The book focuses on this process and further development of the European chemical societies before World War I and in exceptional cases up to 1930. It comprises chapters based on a common set of questions and an extensive concluding chapter that provides a comparative analysis of the early development of the European chemical societies. The book offers unique historical material showing the social, intellectual and political circumstances in which the chemical societies were constituted and function, their relations to universities and chemical industries, everyday lives, international contacts, etc. The analysis of data explores how networks in chemistry and professional autonomy were constituted, and investigates the process of demarcation that inevitably takes place when a social institution of a scientific discipline is formed. The reader gets answer to the important question of what chemistry was and was not in the latter half of nineteenth century and the first decades of the twentieth century. Various aspects of creating scientific societies have been of much interest to historians of science in recent years. Nevertheless, histories of scientific societies are mostly occasional publications written to celebrate their jubilees. This volume represents a first international comparative analysis on the beginnings of chemical societies in Europe based on a detailed historical research done by a group of renowned historians of chemistry from several countries. As such it is an entirely new contribution to the history of chemistry in Europe and European scientific societies in general and a unique source for chemists and historians. Its ambition is to become a reference work in history of chemistry, set the standard for similar studies in other disciplines, and serve European chemical societies to provide a context for their complex histories and relationships. The book can be read by miscellaneous audiences and various types of readers with diverse intentions who will benefit differently from it: - A member of a national chemical society will find there narrative on his "own" society's establishment and early history and the opportunity to compare it with societies from other countries - Historically interested chemists will find in the book details as well as wider perspectives on the institutional history of their discipline - Historians of chemistry will get a thoroughly documented and scholarly book on the early history of chemical societies in Europe, written by acknowledged colleagues. The individual chapters will offer additional literature and sources for their research into history of chemistry. - Historians of science will get material for comparative studies on scientific institutions on the roles of learned societies on national and international level. They can be inspired to create similar studies related to other scientific disciplines. The underlying common set of guidelines can provide methodological assistance. - Teachers of history of chemistry and history of science will find in the book additional reading material and literature. - Social and general historians will be given a well-edited and reliable source on a number of social institutions that played versatile roles in local/national settings. The establishment of chemical societies can be compared with other kinds of learned, professional, and amateur societies in the same period. They also will get data and information about some aspects of the scientific boom in the second half of the nineteenth century and pre-WW1 period.
PhD, Associate Professor and Senior Research Worker at the Institute of Contemporary History of the Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic. External faculty at the Department of Philosophy and History of Science, Prague Charles University Faculty of Science (1990-2005). President of the Czech National Committee for History of Science and Technology. Corresponding Fellow of the International Academy of History of Science. Vice-President of the IUHPS/DHS Commission Women in Science. Member of the Scientific Board of the European Society for History of Science. Delegate of the Czech Chemical Society in the EuCheMS working party on history of chemistry.
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这本书的叙事节奏把握得非常到位,读起来有一种流畅而富有张力的感觉,完全没有传统学术著作那种令人望而生畏的沉重感。我可以感受到作者在字里行间流淌出的那种对化学世界的好奇与热爱,他不是一个高高在上的布道者,更像是一个经验丰富的伙伴,带着你一步步深入迷宫。当涉及到一些历史上的重大突破时,作者会适时地穿插一些生动的小故事或历史背景,这极大地丰富了阅读的趣味性,让那些抽象的化学定律仿佛有了鲜活的生命和时代印记。我甚至发现自己会在通勤的地铁上,不自觉地低声复述书中的一些关键论断,试图将其内化为自己的知识体系。这种“黏性”极强的阅读体验,是很多同期出版的教材所不具备的。
评分我花了近两周的时间细细品味这本书的理论深度,深感它远超一般入门或进阶读物的范畴。它并非仅仅罗列已有的知识点,而是更侧重于构建一套系统的、可迁移的思考框架。特别是其中关于“催化剂网络优化”的章节,作者巧妙地引入了图论和复杂系统理论的视角,将化学反应路径的探索提升到了一个全新的、跨学科的高度。这种处理方式,使得原本枯燥的反应机理分析,变得像在解一个精密的工程谜题。我在阅读过程中,不得不频繁地停下来,对照着自己过去的一些研究笔记进行反思,发现很多过去凭经验摸索的“窍门”,在这本书里找到了更坚实、更具普适性的理论支撑。我尤其欣赏作者对于失败案例的坦诚剖析,这使得整本书的论述极具说服力和实践指导价值,绝非空洞的说教。
评分我必须要称赞一下这本书的附录和参考资料部分,这简直是为深度研究者准备的宝藏。它不像许多其他书籍那样,只是草草列出一些经典文献,而是极其细致地列出了每一个关键概念的源头,并附带了简短的评注,指明了后续可以深入探索的方向。更令人惊喜的是,作者似乎还为某些章节提供了在线资源链接(虽然我尚未全部验证),这种与时俱进的态度在静态的书籍中是难能可贵的。通过这些详尽的导引,我得以迅速定位到一些前沿的、尚未完全纳入主流教科书的最新研究进展。可以说,这本书不仅是一本知识的载体,更像是一张通往化学研究前沿的定制化地图,极大地提升了我的研究效率。
评分作为一名长期从事材料科学交叉研究的人员,我发现这本书在连接不同化学子领域的桥梁作用上做得尤为出色。它并没有将有机、无机、物理化学的界限划分得泾渭分明,而是着重探讨了在构建新型功能材料过程中,如何利用高效的分子组装策略来“编织”出特定的网络结构。书中提出的“自下而上”构建超分子体系的方法论,为我启发颇多,特别是关于溶剂效应与模板控制的精妙论述,让我对如何精确调控纳米尺度的形貌有了更深层次的认识。这本书的价值不在于提供了多少现成的“配方”,而在于它提供了一套强大的、可以应对未来未知挑战的“思维工具箱”,鼓励读者去打破学科壁垒,进行更具创造性的网络设计。
评分这本书的装帧设计真是别具一格,那种略带粗粝感的封面材质,搭配上沉稳的墨绿色和醒目的金色字体,一下子就抓住了我的眼球。初翻开时,我本以为会是一本晦涩难懂的专业教材,但随即被其精良的排版和清晰的逻辑结构所吸引。作者在文字的处理上极其考究,大量的图表和示意图穿插其中,仿佛不是在阅读文字,而是在进行一场视觉与思维的同步对话。尤其是那些关于复杂分子结构可视化的部分,做得极为出色,即便是对某些高级概念不甚熟悉的读者,也能通过这些精心绘制的图像,迅速建立起直观的理解。而且,这本书的开篇部分并没有直接跳入技术细节,而是用一种近乎散文诗的笔触,描绘了化学领域中“连接”这一概念的哲学意义,这无疑为接下来的学习旅程奠定了一种既严谨又充满人文关怀的基调,让人对阅读的体验充满了期待。
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