Limits of Matter
★★★★★
★★★★★
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17th century
18th
A01=Hjalmar Fors
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alchemy
assaying
astrology
Author_Hjalmar Fors
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Category1=Non-Fiction
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Category=HBLH
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Category=NHD
Category=PDX
chemistry
commerce
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economics
engineering
enlightenment
eq_history
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folk belief
folklore
geography
geology
history
imagination
industrialism
industrialization
innovation
Language_English
magic
manufacturing
material reality
materiality
matter
metals
metalwork
mineralogy
mining
mysticism
natural resources
nonfiction
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philosophy
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reason
scandinavia
science
scientific knowledge
smelting
SN=Synthesis (CHUP)
softlaunch
supernatural
sweden
swedish bureau of mines
technology
wealth
witchcraft
Product details
- ISBN 9780226194998
- Weight: 510g
- Dimensions: 16 x 24mm
- Publication Date: 06 Jan 2015
- Publisher: The University of Chicago Press
- Publication City/Country: US
- Product Form: Hardback
- Language: English
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During the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, Europeans raised a number of questions about the nature of reality and found their answers to be different from those that had satisfied their forebears. They discounted tales of witches, trolls, magic, and miraculous transformations and instead began looking elsewhere to explain the world around them. In The Limits of Matter, Hjalmar Fors investigates how conceptions of matter changed during the Enlightenment and pins this important change in European culture to the formation of the modern discipline of chemistry. Fors reveals how, early in the eighteenth century, chemists began to view metals no longer as the ingredients for "chrysopoeia" - or gold making - but as elemental substances, or the basic building blocks of matter. At the center of this emerging idea, argues Fors, was the Bureau of Mines of the Swedish State, which saw the practical and profitable potential of these materials in the economies of mining and smelting.
By studying the chemists at the Swedish Bureau of Mines and their networks, and integrating their practices into the wider European context, Fors illustrates how they and their successors played a significant role in the development of our modern notion of matter and made a significant contribution to the modern European view of reality.
Hjalmar Fors is a researcher and teacher in the Department of History of Science and Ideas at Uppsala University, Sweden.
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