Description:
Hardback. Very Good.
Mendeleyev's Dream. The Quest for the Elements. by STRATHERN, Paul - 2000
by STRATHERN, Paul
Similar copies are shown below.
Similar copies are shown to the right.
Stock Photo: Cover May Be Different
Mendeleyev's Dream. The Quest for the Elements.
by STRATHERN, Paul
- Used
- Hardcover
London:: Hamish Hamilton, 2000., 2000. Small 8vo. 308, [1] pp. Illustrations, index. Cloth, dust-jacket. Near fine. ISBN: 024114065X "In this elegant, erudite, but entertaining book, Paul Strathern, the award-winning novelist and expositor of complex ideas, unravels the dramatic history of chemistry through the quest for the elements. / Framing this history is the life story of the nineteenth-century Russian scientist Dmitri Mendeleyev, who fell asleep at his desk and awoke after conceiving the periodic table in a dream--the template upon which modern chemistry is founded and the formulation of which marked chemistry's coming of age as a science. From ancient philosophy through medieval alchemy to the splitting of the atom, Mendeleyev's Dream is the true story of the birth of chemistry and the role of one man's dream." "A nimble chronological history of the transformation of sorcery and superstition into chemistry. / Strathern (Foucault in 90 Minutes, 2000, etc.) does not focus on a single figure (despite his title), but instead addresses the fluidity of ideas over spans of time and space, demonstrating how the systemic ordering of the elements (a breakthrough in understanding akin to gravity) was ultimately grasped. He weaves his story from historical strands, commencing with the beginnings of scientific thought and the "pre-science" of alchemy (popular for centuries despite censure). Simultaneously, he presents his narrative as inseparable from the volatile personalities of great scientists, beginning with Paracelsus—a swashbuckling 16th-century itinerant who, in synthesizing secret arts like alchemy and midwifery, may have been the first "emergent chemist." The author demonstrates a keen eye for detail and a great affection for his subjects; these portraits are humorous and dramatic rather than dry. This is epitomized by the story of Giordano Bruno, who invented a revolutionary memory system only to be burned at the stake in 1600 under orders of Pope Clement VIII. The Inquisition aside, Strathern perceives a real jump forward in scientific development during the 17th century, sparked by such disparate achievements as Galileo's perfection of the telescope, the reason-based philosophy of Descartes, and Francis Bacon's "science of thought and practice" (which was primary in asserting the potentially enormous benefits of such experimentation for humankind). Finally, the author sees in the gnome-like, isolated figure of Mendeleyev a template both for the eternally lonesome scientific quest and for the structuring of chemical understanding (upon which biological understanding is predicated). He concludes by depicting Mendeleyev's innovations in understanding and his 1869 "dream," in which " 'the elements fell into place as required' . . . the elements were listed in order of their atomic weights, their properties repeated in a series of periodic intervals. :: Crisp, provocative entertainment for armchair scientists, and a solid survey for more serious readers." :: Kirkus Review.
- Bookseller Independent bookstores (CH)
- Book Condition Used
- Binding Hardcover
- ISBN 10 024114065X
- ISBN 13 9780241140659
- Publisher Hamish Hamilton, 2000.
- Place of Publication London:
- Date Published 2000
- Keywords Chemistry
We have 1 copies available starting at $13.44.
Mendeleyev's Dream: The Quest For the Elements
by Strathern, Paul
- Used
- very good
- Hardcover
- Condition
- Used - Very Good
- Binding
- Hardcover
- ISBN 10 / ISBN 13
- 9780241140659 / 024114065X
- Quantity Available
- 4
- Seller
-
GORING BY SEA, West Sussex, United Kingdom
- Item Price
-
$13.44$8.57 shipping to
Show Details
Item Price
$13.44
$8.57
shipping to