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The Invisibility of Chemistry DAVIS BAIRD South Carolina Honors College, University of South Carolina ERIC SCERRI Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of California, Los Angeles LEE MCINTYRE Center for Philosophy and History of Science, Boston University BUTWHATAREALLTHOSECHEMISTSDOING? Recently, one of us (Davis Baird) attended a meeting of historians of science and technology spanning all of the natural sciences and engineering and all (western) periods, ancient through contemporary. In the discussion of a paper on state-of-t- art history of modern (18th century forward) chemistry, a member of the audience made the claim that there was very little left to do in contemporary chemistry and that chemistry departments in his country were having trouble attracting graduate students. Baird found this perspective on contemporary chemistry both remarkable andimplausible,andsaidasmuch. AttheUniversityofSouthCarolina(USC)where he teacheschemistry enrolls, and graduates, ?ve times as many graduate students as physics. In this, USC is not unique. The discipline of chemistry is, in fact, enormous and enormously productive. Joachim Schummer in this volume (Chapter 2) makes the point persuasively and concisely with data on the number of publications in various ?elds. With a grand total just shy of 900,000 papers indexed in chemical abstracts for the year 2000, chemistry is larger than all of the other natural sciences combined.
First comprehensive scholarly volume (not a textbook) devoted to philosophy of chemistry First volume within the Boston Studies in the Philosophy of Science series on philosophy of chemistry Collection of the best and most recent scholarly work in the field, not found in scholarly journals
Texte du rabat
This comprehensive volume marks a new standard in scholarship in the still emerging field of the philosophy of chemistry. With selections drawn from a wide range of scholarly disciplines, philosophers, chemists, and historians of science here converge to ask some of the most fundamental questions about the relationship between philosophy and chemistry. What can chemistry teach us about longstanding disputes in the philosophy of science over such issues as reductionism, autonomy, and supervenience? And what new issues may chemistry bring to the forefront now that it has joined physics and biology as a serious topic for philosophical reflection? This newest addition to the prestigious Boston Studies in the Philosophy of Science series marks the true arrival of philosophy of chemistry within the corpus of the philosophy of science.
Contenu
Chemistry and the Philosophy of Chemistry.- The Philosophy of Chemistry.- Chemistry and the History and Philosophy of Science.- Aristole's Theory of Chemical Reaction and Chemical Substances.- Kant's Legacy for the Philosophy of Chemistry.- Chemistry and Current Philosophy of Science.- The Conceptual Structure of the Sciences.- Normative and Descriptive Philosophy of Science and the Role of Chemistry.- How Classical Models of Explanation Fail to Cope with Chemistry.- Professional Ethics in Science.- Chemistry and Physics.- Is There Downward Causation in Chemistry?.- Physics in the Crucible of Chemistry.- Chemical Theory and Foundational Questions.- Some Philosophical Implications of Chemical Symmetry.- The Periodics Systems of Molecules.- A New Paradigm for Schrödinger and Kohn.- Chemistry and its Tools of Representation.- Virtual Tools.- Space in Molecular Representation; or How Pictures Represent Objects.- Visualizing Instrumental Techniques of Surface Chemistry.- Chemistry and Ontology.- Are Chemical Kinds Natural Kinds?.- Water is Not H2O.- From Metaphysics to Metachemistry.