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Mendeleyev’s Dream Paul
Strathern
Chemistry has been a neglected area
of science writing and Mendeleyev, the king of chemistry, is a
largely forgotten genius. Strathern’s insightful history goes
a long way towards correcting this injustice.
Paul Strathern’s first contribution
to the popularisation of science was as the author of a series
of witty, fast-paced and lucid science booklets published
under the broad title of “The Big Idea”, with
subtitles such as “Archimedes and the Fulcrum” and
“Hawking and Black Holes”. His vivid, pacey style is
equally present in his first full-length science book,
“Mendeleyev’s Dream”, the story of how the Russian
scientist Dmitri Mendeleyev built upon 2,400 years of
chemistry to construct the Periodic Table. Just as Newton’s
laws and Darwin’s theory of evolution laid the foundation for
modern physics and biology respectively, it was Mendeleyev’s
Periodic Table that provided the bedrock for
chemistry.
There is always a risk that
‘history of science’ books concentrate on the ripping
historical yarns at the expense of explaining the science.
Strathern avoids this trap, deftly describing the process by
which scientific ideas emerge. For example, Mendeleyev’s
Periodic Table was so successful because it was predictive as
well as descriptive. He was not embarrassed by gaps in the
Table, rather he confidently claimed that elements would
eventually be discovered to fill each gap. Indeed, in 1875
Paul Lecoq identified gallium, which had all the properties
needed to fill the gap between aluminium and
uranium.
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