The Quiet Revolution |
Acknowledgments |
Introduction |
1— Academic Chemistry in Early Nineteenth-Century Germany |
• | University Reform |
Pedagogical Reform |
• | Jacob Berzelius |
• | Friedrich Wöhler |
• | Justus Liebig |
• | Robert Bunsen |
• | The New Culture of Science in Germany |
2— Growing Up and Limbering Up |
• | The Kingdom of Hanover |
• | Forefathers |
• | Beyhood |
• | Gymnasium and University |
• | Doctoral Work |
• | The Decline of Dualistic Organic Chemistry |
3— A Journeyman Chemist |
• | The Copula Theory |
• | Assistant to Playfair |
• | Back to Marburg |
• | Vieweg Verlag and Braunschweig |
• | Chemical Editor |
• | The Defection of Hofmann and Frankland |
4— Gerhardt and Wurtz |
• | Liebig and Dumas |
• | Gerhardt |
• | Wurtz |
• | The Breakthrough of Gerhardt's Reform |
• | The Conversion of Wurtz |
5— Early Years in Marburg |
• | The Call to Marburg |
• | Settling in |
• | Home Life |
• | Classroom and Laboratory |
• | Textbook Author |
6— Confronting the Reform Movement |
• | Williamson's Asymmetric Synthesis Argument |
• | Attack and Counterattack: Kolbe Versus Williamson |
• | Accommodation and Defiance |
• | The Battle Lost |
7— Kekulé, Wurtz, and the Rise of Structure Theory |
• | The French Connection |
• | The Education of August Kekulé |
• | Kekulé on the Nature of Carbon |
• | Structure Theory and the Problem of Independent Codiscovery |
8— Carbonic Acid and Natural Types |
• | Frankland and the Origins of the Carbonic Acid Theory |
• | Kolbe's Development of the Theory |
• | The Response |
• | Was Kolbe a Type Theorist? |
9— The Great Break |
• | Characterization and Causes |
• | Polyfunctionality |
• | Predictions Unfulfilled: Hydroxyacids |
• | Predictions Fulfilled: Diacids and Novel Alcohols |
• | The New Complexion of Organic Chemistry |
• | Later Years in Marburg |
10— The Theory of Chemical Structure and the Structure of Chemical Theory |
• | Organic Synthesis |
• | Structure Theory and the Philosophy of Chemistry |
• | Craft Skills and Tacit Knowledge in Organic Chemistry |
• | Exploring Atomic Ecologies: Erlenmeyer and Kolbe |
• | Butleroy, Kekulé, and Kolbe |
• | The Problem of Formulas and Their Interpretation |
11— Leipzig |
• | The Kingdom of Saxony and Its University |
• | Kolbe's Call to Leipzig and Its Context |
• | Establishing the Leipzig Laboratory |
• | Acquiring a Journal |
12— Aromatic Chemistry |
• | Early Work on Salicylic and Salylic Acids |
• | "Kekulé Always Rides a Fiery Steed" |
• | Trimethine-Trimethane |
• | The Salicylic Acid Craze |
13— Life and Work in Leipzig |
• | Kolbe's "Merry Celestials" |
• | The Leipzig Research Group |
• | The Crusade |
14— Pride and Prejudice |
• | Chauvinism |
• | Chemistry: A French or German Science? |
• | The German Jew as Chemist |
• | The Collision of Kolbe and Hofmann |
• | Hofmann Versus the Antisemites |
• | Last Years |
Issues and Reflections |
Notes |
• | Introduction |
• | 1— Academic Chemistry in Early Nineteenth-Century Germany |
• | 2— Growing Up and Limbering Up |
• | 3— A Journeyman Chemist |
• | 4— Gerhardt and Wurtz |
• | 5— Early Years in Marburg |
• | 6— Confronting the Reform Movement |
• | 7— Kekulé, Wurtz, and the Rise of Structure Theory |
• | 8— Carbonic Acid and Natural Types |
• | 9— The Great Break |
• | 10— The Theory of Chemical Structure and the Structure of Chemical Theory |
• | 11— Leipzig |
• | 12— Aromatic Chemistry |
• | 13— Life and Work in Leipzig |
• | 14— Pride and Prejudice |
• | Issues and Reflections |
Abbreviations for Frequently Cited Sources |
Glossary |
• | I— German Vocabulary |
II— Organic Chemistry |
• | A. Precis of Modern Structure Theory |
• | B. Modern Chemical Definitions |
Bibliography |
• | I— Manuscript Sources |
• | II— Texts and Monographs by Hermann Kolbe |
• | III— Obituaries and Biographical Literature on Hermann Kolbe |
• | IV— Selected Secondary Literature |
Index |
• | A |
• | B |
• | C |
• | D |
• | E |
• | F |
• | G |
• | H |
• | I |
• | J |
• | K |
• | L |
• | M |
• | N |
• | O |
• | P |
• | Q |
• | R |
• | S |
• | T |
• | U |
• | V |
• | W |
• | Y |
• | Z |