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Clarendon: New York, 1996. xxvi + 646 pp. Figs., tables. 20.5
x 25.6 cm. ISBN 0-19-855843-0. $80.00.
R. J. P. Williams, Royal Society Research
Professor Emeritus at Wadham College, Oxford University, and J.
J. R. Fraústo da Silva, Professor of Analytical Chemistry at
the Instituto Superior Técnico, Universidade Técnica de
Lisboa, have collaborated on two previous volumes:
New Trends in Bio-inorganic Chemistry (1978) and
The Biological Chemistry of the Elements (3rd printing, 1994). Their latest
collaborative effort is a book whose ambitious objective is "to show
the relationship of every kind of material around us, living
and nonliving, to the properties of the chemical elements of
the periodic table." The "natural selection" of the chemical
elements results from a number of factors, all of which are
described in detail. Among these are chemical affinity related to
the electronic configuration of their atoms, thermodynamic
and kinetic stability, and "functional value to an organisation
such as a living system". The physicist's approach to
material through phase structure and the phase rule is stressed
rather than the chemist's approach through bonding theories.
The entire book possesses a strong environmental and
interdisciplinary emphasis.
Part I, "The Principles of the Natural Selection of
Chemical Elements into Physical States and Chemical
Combinations" (7 chapters, 284 pp), discusses structure and the balance
of order and disorder of elements in physical states and
in chemical compounds, including the energetics of
chemical systems and the kinetics of change. Lengthy descriptions
of binding theory, thermodynamics, and techniques such
as spectroscopy and magnetism are avoided, thus permitting
a minimal use of mathematics.
Part II, "The Observed Natural Selection of
Chemical Elements in Both Abiotic and Biotic Systems during
Their Evolution" (9 chapters, 346 pp), deals with the material
world, illustrating in three ways the selective development of
chemical elements in compounds and in particular physical
states: description of the evolution of Earth; analysis of
the evolution of organic compounds using examples from abiotic
or bioorganic chemistry to discuss the early organic
compounds found in living systems; and organized biological
chemistry, showing how and why life evolved into such
complicated organisms. The concluding chapters consider the
effect of industry on the environment and reflect a deep concern
with the future of the earth.
Most of the usual topics of traditional general and
inorganic chemistry courses are treated here, but in an
unusual and nontraditional arrangement. Also, the menu
features generous portions of physical, organic, nuclear,
polymer, bioorganic, environmental, and analytical chemistry as
well as biology, biochemistry, geochemistry, geology,
mineralogy, physics, and other related sciences. This
interdisciplinary book, which is jam-packed with hundreds of figures
and tables, is a gold mine of information on an amazing
diversity of subjects. Meticulously organized into numbered sections
and subsections, each of the 16 chapters is prefaced by an
appropriate quotation and concluded by a summary that refers
to past and future sections as well as a list of classified
and annotated further reading, including books and articles
as recent as 1995. An extensive (12 four-column pages)
index makes location of data easy.
It is the authors' "intention to give science graduates
and especially teachers an opportunity to appreciate the
involvement of chemistry within everything that is around usthe
world we live in, the immense universe still inaccessible to our
understanding, life itselfin a unified approach." They
admit that "it is obviously complementary reading, not an
undergraduate text, although we would like it to contribute to
a reconsideration of the content of general introductory
chemistry courses in which fundamental aspects and ideas are
still conspicuously absent." They hope "to make society aware
of the importance that a better understanding of chemistry
has for the future of mankind." Those concerned with this
worthy goal-and that should include all of us-will want
to read this unusual volume and possibly integrate some of
its topics and ideas into their own courses.
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