Cathedrals of science the personalities and rivalries that made modern chemistry

In Cathedrals of Science, Patrick Coffey describes how chemistry got its modern footing-how thirteen brilliant men and one woman struggled with the laws of the universe and with each other. They wanted to discover how the world worked, but they also wanted credit for making those discoveries, and th...

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Tác giả chính: Coffey, Patrick
Tác giả khác: Patrick Coffey
Ngôn ngữ:Undetermined
English
Được phát hành: London,New York Oxford University Press 2008
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Thư viện lưu trữ: Trung tâm Học liệu Trường Đại học Trà Vinh
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520 |a In Cathedrals of Science, Patrick Coffey describes how chemistry got its modern footing-how thirteen brilliant men and one woman struggled with the laws of the universe and with each other. They wanted to discover how the world worked, but they also wanted credit for making those discoveries, and their personalities often affected how that credit was assigned. Gilbert Lewis, for example, could be reclusive and resentful, and his enmity with Walther Nernst may have cost him the Nobel Prize; Irving Langmuir, gregarious and charming, "rediscovered" Lewis's theory of the chemical bond and received much of the credit for it. Langmuir's personality smoothed his path to the Nobel Prize over Lewis 
650 |a Langmuir; Irving; Lewis; Gilbert Newton; Discoveries in science 
700 |a Patrick Coffey 
980 |a Trung tâm Học liệu Trường Đại học Trà Vinh