Check nearby libraries
Buy this book
This second volume of Making molecularism extends the line set out in volume one. It features the text of another 35 papers and provides some 150 abstracts of papers read in the period 1985-2013. The discovery of the details of Planck's calculation of the constant that came to be called after him is of fundamental importance: it is the first specimen of a 'calculatio crucis', that is, a calculation that straightforwardly demonstrates the correctness of the results integrated in the new narrative-historiography of the atomic and molecular theory as embodied in my successive books.
Check nearby libraries
Buy this book
Edition | Availability |
---|---|
1
Making molecularism II. Selected papers II. Abstracts
2017, Groningen University Press
Paperback (and hardcover)
in English
9081442872 9789081442879
|
aaaa
Libraries near you:
WorldCat
|
Book Details
Table of Contents
Edition Notes
The Physical Object
ID Numbers
Work Description
Sixteen years ago Henk Kubbinga’s book L’Histoire du concept de « molécule » was published by Springer-Verlag France (Paris). There followed Dutch and US-English editions in which the emphasis shifted from Antiquity-Middle Ages-Renaissance to more recent times; a German edition is well underway. The message was—and still is—clear: we are witnessing last decades the breakthrough of a new, thoroughly molecular ‘picture of the world’. Molecularism calls the tune. The series Making molecularism will highlight a collection of papers difficultly accessible that paved the way for its coming of age, with due attention for all mathematics at issue.
This second volume privileges philosophy, chemistry, and the life sciences. Robert Boyle serves as a bridge between ‘philosophy’ and ‘chemistry’. Key-concepts like valence, mole, nomenclature, and structure are followed in their historical development. ‘Chemical calculations’, then, are addressed here for the first time as a topic in their own right. Surprisingly, the biomedical notion of the cell derives straightforwardly from the molecular tradition (Buffon, Dutrochet, Schleiden, Schwann). Physiology and pathology lived, each, a cellular turn (Virchow; Pasteur, Koch, Beijerinck), while intracellular details came to be interpreted in truly molecular terms, that is, in the physico-chemical way. ‘Molecular biology’ (1933-) brought new vistas. This volume also highlights the details of the calculations which led Max Planck to his constant. The new perspective calls for a reconsideration of modern physics’ fundamental tenets.
Community Reviews (0)
Feedback?February 15, 2018 | Edited by JeffKaplan | Update covers |
February 15, 2018 | Edited by JeffKaplan | Added new cover |
February 12, 2018 | Edited by Henk Kubbinga | Edited without comment. |
February 12, 2018 | Edited by Henk Kubbinga | Edited without comment. |
February 12, 2018 | Created by Henk Kubbinga | Added new book. |