Pharmacy and Chemistry in the Eighteenth Century: What Lessons for the History of Science?
2014; University of Chicago Press; Volume: 29; Issue: 1 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1086/678108
ISSN1933-8287
Autores Tópico(s)Philosophy and History of Science
ResumoThis essay questions the continuity of chemistry across the eighteenth century based on an analysis of its relationship to pharmacy in France. Comparing a text by Nicolas Lémery (1675) with one by Antoine Baumé (1773), the article argues for a key transformation in chemistry across this period. The elimination of the practical side of pharmacy (indications and dosages) from chemistry texts is symptomatic of a reorientation of chemistry toward more theoretical or philosophical concerns. The essay considers several possible explanations for this change in orientation, including developments within pharmacy, but in the end privileges an approach in terms of the changing publics for chemistry in eighteenth-century France.
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