Antoine Lavoisier : science, administration, and revolution
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Bibliographic Information
Antoine Lavoisier : science, administration, and revolution
(Cambridge science biographies series)
Cambridge University Press, 1996
- : hbk
- : pbk
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Cambridge science biographies
Originally published: Oxford : Blackwell, 1993
Includes bibliographical references (p. 327-338) and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
This biography represents a comprehensive, accessible account of the great eighteenth-century French chemist and administrator, Antoine Lavoisier. Historians of science know Lavoisier as a founder of modern chemistry. Students of the French Revolution know him as an important financier and administrator in the final decades of the old regime and as the most famous scientist to be guillotined during the Terror. This volume devotes equal attention to the creation of his oxygen theory of combustion and to his efforts as a public administrator before and during the Revolution. Lavoisier was an historical figure of extraordinary importance. His biography illuminates the rise of modern science and the history of the French Revolution. Antoine Lavoisier provides its reader with a vivid, informed image of the man, his achievement, and the tumultuous age in which he lived.
Table of Contents
- List of illustrations
- General editor's preface
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- Part I. Ambition and Public Service: 1743-1775: 1. The barristers of Paris
- 2. The republic of science
- 3. Experimental physics
- 4. The chemistry of salts
- 5. The company of tax farmers
- Part II. Consolidation and Contestation: 6. A new theory of combustion
- 7. The campaign for French chemistry
- 8. Gunpowder and agriculture. 9. Mesmerism and public opinion
- Part III. Revolutionary Politics: 10. Representation, legislation and finance
- 11. The republic of virtue
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index.
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