1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910404241903321

Autore

Formosinho Sebastião J.

Titolo

Sementes de ciência : livro de homenagem a António Marinho Amorim da Costa / / Sebastião J. Formosinho, Hugh D. Burrows

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Coimbra : , : Coimbra University Press, , 2011

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (232 pages)

Disciplina

543

Soggetti

Analytical chemistry

Lingua di pubblicazione

Portoghese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Nota di contenuto

Prefacio/Preface -- 1. Amorim da Costa - O Historiador de Química -- II. Uma História de Ciência -- III. Algumas considerações históricas e historiográficas sobre os documentos da hermética árabe medieval -- IV. Fermat e a polémica em torno da óptica -- V. O Engenheiro Setecentista Luso-Brasileiro José Fernandes Pinto Alpoim -- VI. As produções naturais no Brasil - Colônia e Brasil - Reino: a quimica na interface com a história natural, a medicina e a mineralogia -- VII. Leprosy in Portuguese India: an Interaction between Public Health Policy and National Politics -- VIII. Dissolving Uncertainties in Water: electric fishes, Volta's alarm bell, Humphry Davy, and a dynamical science -- IX. Aspects from the history of quantum chemistry -- X. Farmácia e Saúde em Portugal - De finais do século XVIII a inícios do século XIX.

Sommario/riassunto

In recognition of António Amorim da Costa's important contributions to history of science, the various chapters of this book by his friends and colleagues cover topics related to the prehistory of chemistry, alchemy, iatrochemistry, the phlogiston period, pneumatic chemistry and more recently the history of quantic chemistry and statistical mechanics, with particular emphasis upon the historical development of chemistry in Portugal and Brazil.ALT_QUEBRA_LINHAHowever, chemistry did not develop in isolation, and the contributions to this book also touch on neighbouring areas, such as electricity, medicine, optics and mineralogy. Neither do they deal exclusively with facts; people are also studied, such as the 18th century Luso-Brazilian engineer José Fernandes Pinto Alpoim, and the 19th century Portuguese chemist from



the University of Coimbra, Thomé Rodrigues Sobral, and many more. It is hoped that these "pieces" of history of science will enrich our understanding of the field and acknowledge the contributions made by António Amorim da Costa to this area.