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The European Science Foundation (ESF), an
association of 62 major national funding agencies devoted to
basic scientific research in 21 countries, acts as a catalyst for
the development of science by bringing together leading
scientists and funding agencies to debate, plan, and
implement panEuropean scientific and science policy initiatives.
The foundation sponsored a program on the Evolution of
Chemistry, which has resulted in this collection of 18 chapters
by 19 chemists and historians of chemistry or science from
13 countries (5 from the UK, two each from Belgium and
Italy, and one each from Denmark, France, Germany,
Greece, Lithuania, The Netherlands, Poland, Portugal, Spain, and
the USA). Unlike many multiauthor symposiumtype
volumes, which are often disparate collections, this book features
closely integrated essays because during workshop sessions
the contributors discussed precirculated drafts of the chapters
to elicit connections and parallels as well as differences in the
course of professionalization of chemistry in the various
countries. David M. Knight, Professor of History and Philosophy
of Science at Durham University, England, and Helge
Kragh, Professor of History of Science at Aarhus University,
Denmark, have provided a preface and an afterword, respectively,
which masterly summarize the contents and conclusions of the
individual chapters and thus give an overview of the entire
volume.
Although chemistry dates from the practical work
of ancient artisans, as a science it matured relatively late
compared to the classical sciences of mathematics, astronomy,
and physics, which played major roles in the Scientific
Revolution of the 17th century. The corresponding Chemical
Revolution did not occur until the publication of Lavoisier's
Traité élémentaire de
chimie (1789), the commencement of the period dealt with in the volume under review. Thus
chemistry, soon considered the most fundamental, fashionable, and
useful of the natural sciences, began to emerge in Europe as a
distinct science and profession only at the inception of the 19th
century. As it developed, frequently from an ancillary position
in medicine, pharmacy, or industry (e.g., Liebig's
worldrenowned laboratory at Giessen began as a
pharmaceutical-chemical institute), chemists gradually established themselves as
professionals, but very differently in different countries
because of their diversities in geography and mobility, history,
government, industrialization, employment
opportunities, economics, and other factors.
In keeping with these differences, the book, like
Gaul, is divided into three parts. Part 1 is "The big
three"--France, Germany, and Britain, where the major institutions
and developments were located (7 chapters, 127 pages). Part 2
is "Medium developed countries"--Italy, Russia, Spain,
Belgium, Ireland, and Sweden, where some eminent chemists
worked and important events occurred (6 chapters, 99 pages).
And Part 3 is "On the periphery"--Greece, Portugal,
Denmark and Norway, Lithuania, and Poland, which were then
essentially importers of chemistry, with different connections to
the major or medium countries (5 chapters, 94 pages).
Although much has previously been written about chemistry in
the three major countries and in some of the medium ones, little
has been available, especially in English, about the
peripheral countries. Travel, translation, and political alliances all
played a part in the transmission of chemistry across national
borders.
The book traces the social history of chemistry in
these 15 European countries and how it became an
autonomous and prestigious profession ("a group of people with a
full-time vocation based on a shared training which is distinct
to the group") and community with the founding of
national societies (beginning with Britain's Chemical Society in
1841), the publication of journals, establishment of courses in
universities and technical schools, and the holding of
national and international congresses, In short, it shows how
chemistry in particular and science in general transformed
European society during the 19th century, which Knight has aptly
called "the Age of Science". And during this period, chemistry
was primarily a European science; it was not until after
World War I that the center of chemical activity began to
shift toward the United States.
Replete with 17 tables, 12 figures, two maps (Europe
in 1815 and 1914), and a 5-page (doublecolumn) index,
this scrupulously documented (primary and secondary
sources, some as recent as 1997 or even in press) volume will be
of interest to historians of chemistry or science as well as
to chemists concerned with the development of their science.
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