
Chemistry at Oxford
by Williams, Robert J. P.; Rowlinson, John S.; Chapman, AllanBuy New
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Summary
Table of Contents
An Outline of the History of Oxford University with Reference to its Chemistry School | |
An Introduction to the University | p. 1 |
The Beginnings of Chemistry within the University | p. 4 |
The Creation of Chemistry Departments | p. 8 |
The Teaching of Chemistry | p. 12 |
A Summary of Chemistry's Development | p. 13 |
References | p. 15 |
From Alchemy to Airpumps: The Foundations of Oxford Chemistry to 1700 | |
Late Medieval English Alchemy | p. 17 |
The Hon. Robert Boyle and his Chemical World | p. 20 |
Where were the Laboratories? | p. 25 |
Oxford's `Invisible' Chemists: The City Apothecaries and their Laboratories | p. 26 |
The Oxford Airpump Discoveries | p. 30 |
John Mayow | p. 34 |
Thomas Willis | p. 36 |
The Revd John Ward: Amateur Chemist and Physician | p. 38 |
The Ashmolean Laboratory, 1683 | p. 40 |
Acknowledgements | p. 45 |
Notes and References | p. 46 |
The Eighteenth Century: Chemistry Allied to Anatomy | |
Introduction | p. 52 |
Chemistry in the Eighteenth Century | p. 53 |
Oxford in the Eighteenth Century | p. 56 |
The Teaching of Chemistry in Eighteenth-Century Oxford | p. 58 |
The Revival of Chemistry after 1775 | p. 65 |
Conclusion | p. 71 |
References and Notes | p. 73 |
Chemistry Comes of Age: The 19th Century | |
The Aldrichian Chair | p. 79 |
Charles Daubeny and Reform | p. 83 |
The Museum | p. 93 |
Benjamin Brodie | p. 96 |
William Odling and his Demonstrators | p. 103 |
The College Laboratories and the Growth of Physical Chemistry | p. 113 |
References | p. 123 |
Research as the Thing: Oxford Chemistry 1912-1939 | |
Introduction | p. 131 |
The Impact of Perkin | p. 132 |
The Contributions of the Colleges | p. 141 |
The Mancunian Inheritance | p. 157 |
The Dr Lee's Chair and Old Chemistry | p. 164 |
The Chemical Synthesiser | p. 170 |
X-Ray Crystallography | p. 173 |
Careers: The Lure of Industry | p. 175 |
Conclusion | p. 178 |
Notes and References | p. 179 |
Interlude: Chemists at War | |
References | p. 192 |
Recent Times, 1945-2005: A School of World Renown | |
General Introduction to the Period: The Three Centres of Influence | p. 195 |
The Three Periods 1945 to 1965, 1965 to 1980, 1980 to Today | p. 199 |
Summary | p. 204 |
Recruitment and the Nature of Professorships and Fellowship/Lectureships | p. 206 |
A Note on Women Fellows in Chemistry | p. 213 |
The Undergraduate Entry into Oxford and the Chemistry Course | p. 213 |
The Butler Education Act 1944 | p. 213 |
The Structure of the Chemistry Course | p. 216 |
The Content of the Undergraduate Course | p. 218 |
The Graduate School | p. 224 |
The Three Professors and the Three Departments of 1945 | p. 225 |
Hinshelwood and Physical Chemistry | p. 226 |
Robinson and Organic Chemistry | p. 231 |
The Third Professor: Sidgwick | p. 236 |
The Acting Heads and Nature of the Third Laboratory of Inorganic Chemistry (1945-1963) | p. 238 |
Research 1945 to 1965 | p. 241 |
Theory and Mathematical Research | p. 244 |
Summary | p. 246 |
Research 1965 to 1980 | p. 247 |
The Revival of Inorganic Chemistry | p. 247 |
Organo-Metallic Chemistry | p. 251 |
Traditional Organic Chemistry | p. 253 |
Physical Chemistry | p. 254 |
Chemical Crystallography and Biophysics | p. 256 |
Theoretical Chemistry and its Short-Lived Department | p. 258 |
The Enzyme Group | p. 258 |
Life in Oxford, 1945-1980 | p. 261 |
Research: 1980 to 2005 | p. 262 |
Introduction | p. 262 |
Physical Chemistry | p. 263 |
Theoretical Chemistry Department | p. 266 |
Organic Chemistry | p. 267 |
Inorganic Chemistry | p. 270 |
Oxford Chemistry Today, 2008 | p. 273 |
The Laboratories | p. 275 |
Acknowledgement | p. 282 |
The Chemistry School Finances | p. 282 |
Acknowledgement | p. 283 |
Notes on Oxford University | p. 283 |
References | p. 286 |
Index of Names | p. 292 |
Index of Subjects | p. 301 |
Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved. |
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