Physical Chemistry from Ostwald to Pauling: The Making of a Science in America
By (Author) John W. Servos
Princeton University Press
Princeton University Press
18th June 1996
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
History of science
541.30973
Winner of History of Science Society's Pfizer Award 1991
Paperback
430
Width 197mm, Height 254mm
624g
'Servos has shed considerable light on a key issue, the formation of new scientific disciplines, by his penetrating analysis of the rise of physical chemistry in America...I cannot recall any other recent book in this field which has managed to combine such high standards of verbal clarity, smoothness of narrative, and sheer elegance, with intellectual rigor and extensive archival research.' -Peter Morris, History of Science
Co-Winner of the 1991 Pfizer Most Outstanding Book Award, History of Science Society "In his careful accounting of the emergence of a new discipline at the boundaries between chemistry and physics, and of the upheaval that it wrought throughout chemistry, Servos has made his own contribution to reform, and for that reason his book deserves wide attention... [He] illustrate[s] the fact that science is, above all, a human enterprise, shaped by personalities, communities, and institutions, as well as ideas."--Robert Friedel, Science "Servos has shed considerable light on a key issue, the formation of new scientific disciplines, by his penetrating analysis of the rise of physical chemistry in America... I cannot recall any other recent book in this field that has managed to combine such high standards of verbal clarity, smoothness of narrative, and sheer elegance, with intellectual rigor and extensive archival research."--Peter Morris, History of Science
John W. Servos is Professor of History at Amherst College.