BULLETIN FOR THE HISTORY OF CHEMISTRY
Number 19, 1996
NOTE: This issue is now open access.
If you have any problems, please email
mainz@illinois.edu.
TITLE |
Author |
Page
Number |
Introduction. |
K. U. Ingold |
1 |
C. K. Ingold at University College London: Educator and Department Head. |
Gerrylynn K. Roberts |
2 |
The Progress of Physical Organic Chemistry as Mirrored in the Faraday
Society Discussions of 1923, 1937, and 1941. |
Derek A. Davenport |
13 |
Teaching Chemistry Embedded in History: Reflections on C. K. Ingold's Influence as Historian and Educator. |
Theodor Benfey |
21 |
C. K. Ingold's Development of the Concept of Mesomerism. |
Martin D. Saltzman |
25 |
Physical Organic Terminology, After Ingold. |
Joseph F. Bunnet |
33 |
Ingold, Robinson, Winstein, Woodward, and I. |
Derek H. R. Barton |
43 |
The Beginnings of Physical Organic Chemistry in the United States. |
John D. Roberts |
48 |
"Plus Commode et Plus Elegant": the Paris School of Organic Reaction Mechanisms in the 1920's and 1930's. |
Mary Jo Nye |
58 |
Base Hydrolysis of Cobalt (III) Amines. |
Fred Basolo |
66 |
Medium Effects of Micelles as Microreactors and the Scope of the Hughes-Ingold Solvent Theory. |
Clifford A. Bunton |
72 |
A Personal History of the Benzidine Rearrangement. |
Henry J. Shine |
77 |
Picture of Sir Christopher Returning from Buckingham Palace |
|
93 |
Book Notes.
American Chemists and Chemical Engineers, Vol. 2
Thinking About Matter: Studies in the History of Chemical Philosophy
|
W. D. Miles and R. F. Gould, Gould Books, Guilford, CT, 1994.
John Hedley Brooke, Variorium Ashgate Pub. Co., Brookfield, VT, 1995.
|
94 |