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From: Eric Scerri <scerri /a\ chem.ucla.edu>
Subject: philosophy of chemistry volume appearing soon
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Philosophy of Chemistry
Synthesis of a New Discipline
Series: Boston Studies in the Philosophy of Science, Vol.  242
Baird, Davis; Scerri, Eric; McIntyre, Lee (Eds.)
2005, Approx. 370 p., Hardcover
ISBN: 1-4020-3256-0


Not yet published

About this book | Table of contents

About this book

This comprehensive volume marks a new standard in scholarship in the 
still emerging field of the philosophy of chemistry. With selections 
drawn from a wide range of scholarly disciplines, philosophers, 
chemists, and historians of science here converge to ask some of the 
most fundamental questions about the relationship between philosophy 
and chemistry. What can chemistry teach us about longstanding 
disputes in the philosophy of science over such issues as 
reductionism, autonomy, and supervenience? And what new issues may 
chemistry bring to the forefront now that it has joined physics and 
biology as a serious topic for philosophical reflection? This newest 
addition to the prestigious Boston Studies in the Philosophy of 
Science series marks the true arrival of philosophy of chemistry 
within the corpus of the philosophy of science.

Table of contents

Section 1. Chemistry and the Philosophy of Chemistry.- 1. Davis 
Baird, Lee McIntyre, Eric Scerri, By Way of an Introduction: The 
Overwhelming Invisibility of Chemistry.- 2. Joachim Schummer, The 
Philosophy of Chemistry: From Infancy Toward Maturity.-
Section 2. Chemistry and the History and Philosophy of Science.- 3. 
Paul Needham, Aristotle's Theory of Chemical Reaction and Chemical 
Substances.- 4. Jaap van Brakel, Kant's Legacy for the Philosophy of 
Chemistry.-
Section 3. Chemistry and Current Philosophy of Science.- 5. Otto Ted 
Benfey, The Conceptual Structure of the Sciences: Reemergence of the 
Human Dimension.- 6. Eric Scerri, Normative and Descriptive 
Philosophy of Science and the Role of Chemistry.- 7. Johannes Hunger, 
How Classical Models of Explanation Fail to Cope with Chemistry The 
Case of Molecular Modeling.- 8. Jeffrey Kovac, Professional Ethics in 
Science.-
Section 4. Chemistry and Physics.- 9. Robin Hendry, Is There Downward 
Causation in Chemistry?.- 10. G.K. Vemulapalli, Physics in the 
Crucible of Chemistry.-
Section 5. Chemical Theory and Foundational Questions.- 11. Joseph 
Early, Some Philosophical Implications of Chemical Symmetry.- 12. Ray 
Hefferlin, The Periodic Systems of Molecules: Presuppositions, 
Problems and Prospects.- 13. Jack Woodyard, A New Paradigm for 
Schr=F6dinger and Kohn.-
Section 6. Chemistry and its Tools of Representation.- 14. Ann 
Johnson, Virtual Tools: The Epistemological and Social Issues 
Computer-Aided Chemical Process Design.- 15. Sara Vollmer, Space in 
Molecular Representations; Or How Pictures Represent Objects.- 16. 
Daniel Rothbart and John Schreifels, Visualizing Instrumental 
Techniques of Surface Chemistry.-
Section 7. Chemistry and Ontology.- 17. Nalini Bhushan, Are Chemical 
Kinds Natural Kinds?.- 18. Michael Weisberg, Water is Not H2O.- 19. 
Alfred Nordmann, From Metaphysics to Metachemistry.

further info from Spinger webpage,

http://www.springeronline.com/sgw/cda/frontpage/0,11855,4-40109-22-39745720-=
0,00.html

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<!doctype html public "-//W3C//DTD W3 HTML//EN">
<html><head><style type=3D"text/css"><!--
blockquote, dl, ul, ol, li { margin-top: 0 ; margin-bottom: 0 }
 --></style><title>philosophy of chemistry volume appearing
soon</title></head><body>
<div><font face=3D"Arial" color=3D"#333333"><b>Philosophy of
Chemistry</b></font><font face=3D"Arial" size=3D"+1" color=3D"#2F1A63"><br>
</font><font face=3D"Arial" color=3D"#333333">Synthesis of a New
Discipline<br>
Series:</font><font face=3D"Arial" color=3D"#0000CC"> Boston Studies in
the Philosophy of Science</font><font face=3D"Arial" color=3D"#333333">,
Vol. &nbsp;242<br>
Baird, Davis; Scerri, Eric; McIntyre, Lee (Eds.)<br>
2005, Approx. 370 p., Hardcover<br>
ISBN: 1-4020-3256-0<br>
<br>
&nbsp;</font></div>
<div><font face=3D"Arial" color=3D"#333333">Not yet published</font></div>
<div><font face=3D"Arial" size=3D"+1" color=3D"#2F1A63"><br></font></div>
<div><font face=3D"Arial" size=3D"-3" color=3D"#333333">About this book
|</font><font face=3D"Arial" size=3D"-3" color=3D"#0000CC"> Table of
contents</font><br>
<font face=3D"Arial" size=3D"+1" color=3D"#2F1A63"></font></div>
<div><font face=3D"Arial" size=3D"+3" color=3D"#333333">About this
book</font><br>
<font face=3D"Arial" size=3D"+1" color=3D"#2F1A63"></font></div>
<div><font face=3D"Arial" color=3D"#333333">This comprehensive volume
marks a new standard in scholarship in the still emerging field of
the philosophy of chemistry. With selections drawn from a wide range
of scholarly disciplines, philosophers, chemists, and historians of
science here converge to ask some of the most fundamental questions
about the relationship between philosophy and chemistry. What can
chemistry teach us about longstanding disputes in the philosophy of
science over such issues as reductionism, autonomy, and
supervenience? And what new issues may chemistry bring to the
forefront now that it has joined physics and biology as a serious
topic for philosophical reflection? This newest addition to the
prestigious<i> Boston Studies in the Philosophy of Science</i> series
marks the true arrival of philosophy of chemistry within the corpus
of the philosophy of science.</font></div>
<div><font face=3D"Arial" size=3D"+1" color=3D"#2F1A63"><br></font></div>
<div><font face=3D"Arial" size=3D"+3" color=3D"#333333">Table of
contents</font><font face=3D"Arial" size=3D"+1" color=3D"#2F1A63"><br>
<br>
</font><font face=3D"Arial" color=3D"#333333">Section 1. Chemistry and
the Philosophy of Chemistry.- 1. Davis Baird, Lee McIntyre, Eric
Scerri, By Way of an Introduction: The Overwhelming Invisibility of
Chemistry.- 2. Joachim Schummer, The Philosophy of Chemistry: From
Infancy Toward Maturity.-<br>
Section 2. Chemistry and the History and Philosophy of Science.- 3.
Paul Needham, Aristotle's Theory of Chemical Reaction and Chemical
Substances.- 4. Jaap van Brakel, Kant's Legacy for the Philosophy of
Chemistry.-<br>
Section 3. Chemistry and Current Philosophy of Science.- 5. Otto Ted
Benfey, The Conceptual Structure of the Sciences: Reemergence of the
Human Dimension.- 6. Eric Scerri, Normative and Descriptive
Philosophy of Science and the Role of Chemistry.- 7. Johannes Hunger,
How Classical Models of Explanation Fail to Cope with Chemistry The
Case of Molecular Modeling.- 8. Jeffrey Kovac, Professional Ethics in
Science.-<br>
Section 4. Chemistry and Physics.- 9. Robin Hendry, Is There Downward
Causation in Chemistry?.- 10. G.K. Vemulapalli, Physics in the
Crucible of Chemistry.-<br>
Section 5. Chemical Theory and Foundational Questions.- 11. Joseph
Early, Some Philosophical Implications of Chemical Symmetry.- 12. Ray
Hefferlin, The Periodic Systems of Molecules: Presuppositions,
Problems and Prospects.- 13. Jack Woodyard, A New Paradigm for
Schr=F6dinger and Kohn.-<br>
Section 6. Chemistry and its Tools of Representation.- 14. Ann
Johnson, Virtual Tools: The Epistemological and Social Issues
Computer-Aided Chemical Process Design.- 15. Sara Vollmer, Space in
Molecular Representations; Or How Pictures Represent Objects.- 16.
Daniel Rothbart and John Schreifels, Visualizing Instrumental
Techniques of Surface Chemistry.-<br>
Section 7. Chemistry and Ontology.- 17. Nalini Bhushan, Are Chemical
Kinds Natural Kinds?.- 18. Michael Weisberg, Water is Not H<font
size=3D"-1">2</font>O.- 19. Alfred Nordmann, From Metaphysics to
Metachemistry.</font><br>
<font face=3D"Arial" color=3D"#333333"></font></div>
<div><font face=3D"Arial" size=3D"+1" color=3D"#2F1A63">further info from
Spinger webpage,</font></div>
<div><font face=3D"Arial" size=3D"+1" color=3D"#2F1A63"><br></font></div>
<div><font face=3D"Arial" size=3D"+1"
color=3D"#2F1A63">http://www.springeronline.com/sgw/cda/fro<span
></span>ntpage/0,11855,4-40109-22-39745720-0,00.h<span
></span>tml<br>
</font></div>
</body>
</html>
--============_-1105405491==_ma============--


From chemistry-request@ccl.net Wed Jan 26 00:33:38 2005
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Date: Wed, 26 Jan 2005 12:35:15 +0800
From: Chandra <chandra () bii.a-star.edu.sg>
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To: chemistry () ccl.net
Subject: EPR
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Many thanks for responding to my request for information on EPR. The 
summary of responses is as:

Marcel Swart:

This should be dealt with in the formidable book by Lippard and Berg:
http://www.uscibooks.com/lippard.htm


Victor Nemykin:

"Physical Methods in Bioinorganic Chemistry" book
edited by Lawrence Que published by University Science Books in 2000.



thanks again

chandra




From chemistry-request@ccl.net Wed Jan 26 16:11:24 2005
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Date: Wed, 26 Jan 2005 13:11:21 -0800 (PST)
From: Sengen Sun <sengensun +*+ yahoo.com>
Subject: CCL: orbitals and reality
To: chemistry +*+ ccl.net
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It would still be interesting and valuable if they
could have mapped out the "difference in total density
between an N2 and an N2+ molecule", although there is
no way they have imaged HOMO.  

Based on my best understanding, whatever they got is
about the continuum. They projected the continuum
information for HOMO.

This is a very strange thing in terms of how such a
mathematical manuplitation and exaggeration is
reported in the media without regard to the
well-established fundamental theory.

Why is that?

Sengen

--- Phala, Noko \(VR\ <NPhala +*+ AngloGoldAshanti.com>
wrote:

Regarding the on-going discussion on 'observation' of
orbitals, cant one of us who think that what was
observed was electron density perhaps calculate the
difference in total density between an N2 and an N2+
molecule to show that the resultant 'net' density is
similar to what was observed? Unless they can show us 
images of 'virtual' orbitals, I will never be
convinced that orbitals have suddenly gained physical
meaning.

Noko Phala
AngloGold Ashanti





	
		
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