1st Edition
Scientific Institutions and Practice in France and Britain, c.1700–c.1870
By Maurice Crosland
Copyright 2007
288 Pages
by
Routledge
288 Pages
by
Routledge
288 Pages
by
Routledge
Also available as eBook on:
This second collection of studies by Maurice Crosland has as a first theme the differences in the style and organisation of scientific activity in Britain and France in the 18th and early 19th centuries. Science was more closely controlled in France, notably by the Paris Academy of Sciences, and the work of provincial amateurs much less prominent than in Britain. The most dramatic change in any... Read more
Contents: Preface; Supplementary bibliography. Part I Institutions: Relationships between the Royal Society and the Académie des Sciences in the late 18th century; The Copley Medal: the establishment of a reward system in the Royal Society, 1731-1839; The officiers de santé of the French Revolution: a case study in the changing language of medicine; Lavoisier, the 2 French Revolutions and the 'imperial despotism of oxygen'; A science empire in Napoleonic France;The organisation of chemistry in 19th-century France; Popular science and the arts: challenges to cultural authority in France under the Second Empire. Part II Practice: Early laboratories c.1600-c.1800 and the location of experimental science;'Slippery substances': some practical and conceptual problems in the understanding of gases in the pre-Lavoisier era; Chemistry: 18th century; Research schools of chemistry from Lavoisier to Wurtz; Difficult beginnings in experimental science at Oxford: the Gothic chemistry laboratory; Index.
Biography
Maurice Crosland is Emeritus Professor in the School of History, University of Kent at Canterbury, UK.
’Maurice Crosland is one of the most revered names in the history of eighteenth and early nineteenth-century history of science particularly for his expertise in the history of chemistry.’ H-France Review ’there is much to go at here, including not only finely focused contributions to research but also more general reflective pieces - on eighteenth-century chemistry and the organisation of chemistry in nineteenth-century France, for example - that bear the characteristic stamp of Crosland’s wide reading and measured judgements.’ Ambix






