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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
References
Select bibliography
Acknowledgements
Photo acknowledgments
Index.
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
References
Select bibliography
Acknowledgements
Photo acknowledgments
Index.