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Table of Contents
Introduction
Birth of the laboratory : Wolfgang von Hohenlohe and Weikersheim, 1590s
Form and function : Antoine Lavoisier and Paris, 1780s
Laboratory versus lecture hall : Michael Faraday and London, 1820s
Training chemists : Justus Liebig and Giessen, 1840s
Modern conveniences : Robert Bunsen and Heidelberg, 1850s
The chemical palace : Wilhelm Hofmann and Berlin, 1860s
Laboratory transfer : Henry Roscoe and Manchester, 1870s
Chemical museums : Charles Chandler and New York, 1890s
Cradles of innovation : Carl Duisberg and Elberfeld, 1890s
Neither fish nor fowl : Thomas Thorpe and London, 1890s
Chemistry in Silicon Valley : Bill Johnson and Stanford, 1960s
Innovation on the Isis : Graham Richards and Oxford, 2000s
Conclusion
Appendix.
Birth of the laboratory : Wolfgang von Hohenlohe and Weikersheim, 1590s
Form and function : Antoine Lavoisier and Paris, 1780s
Laboratory versus lecture hall : Michael Faraday and London, 1820s
Training chemists : Justus Liebig and Giessen, 1840s
Modern conveniences : Robert Bunsen and Heidelberg, 1850s
The chemical palace : Wilhelm Hofmann and Berlin, 1860s
Laboratory transfer : Henry Roscoe and Manchester, 1870s
Chemical museums : Charles Chandler and New York, 1890s
Cradles of innovation : Carl Duisberg and Elberfeld, 1890s
Neither fish nor fowl : Thomas Thorpe and London, 1890s
Chemistry in Silicon Valley : Bill Johnson and Stanford, 1960s
Innovation on the Isis : Graham Richards and Oxford, 2000s
Conclusion
Appendix.