The Quiet Revolution |
Acknowledgments |
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 |
• | 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 |
![]() | 12— Aromatic Chemistry |
![]() | 13— Life and Work in Leipzig |
![]() | 14— Pride and Prejudice |
Issues and Reflections |
![]() | Notes |
Abbreviations for Frequently Cited Sources |
![]() | Glossary |
![]() | Bibliography |
![]() | Index |