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Hans-Werner Scühtt. Translated from the German by
William E. Russay. History of Modern Chemical
Sciences Series. American Chemical Society and the
Chemical Heritage Foundation: Washington, DC, 1997. xvi + 239
pp. ISBN 0-8412-3345-4. $59.95.
Eilhard Mitscherlich's (1794-1863) most important
scientific contribution was that in 1819 he noted and
described for the first time the phenomenon of isomorphism.
The name derives from the Greek: isos is
the same and morphe is form.
Isomorphism is the existence of different
crystalline substances with the same crystal shape.
Isomorphous compounds have almost identical structures, but in
them one or more atoms are replaced by chemically similar
ones. A crystal of one compound can grow in the solution of
another. This observation appears very insightful even
today; imagine what it meant in 1819, almost a hundred
years before X-ray crystallography began! I would place
the importance of this observation for the development of
crystallography on par with Johannes Kepler's realization
that the regular hexagonal shape of snow crystals must
originate from the internal arrangement of their building
elements (1611) and John Dalton's atomic theory (1808).
Mitscherlich did further noteworthy research subsequently, but
isomorphism remained his most important contribution. He
was 25 at the time of this discovery.
This monograph provides a meticulous account of
the available data on Mitscherlich's life and works, with
all the necessary background that can only come from a
true scholar equally at home in chemistry and
history. Mitscherlich came from a pastor's family and studied
medicine and Oriental languages; and, while he was
studying elsewhere, the University of Giessen awarded him a
Ph.D. degree already in 1814.
This Orientalist-physician started his chemical
research in his botanist mentor's laboratory at the
University of Göttingen. In 1822, at the age of 28, he became a
member of the Royal Prussian Academy of Sciences and full
professor at the Friedrich-Wilhelm University in Berlin.
He devoted the rest of his life to chemistry and mineralogy,
and was very much part of the Prussian Establishment. He
was a protege of Jöns Jakob Berzelius (1777-1848) and
developed a very positive relationship with him; his
relationship with Justus Liebig (1803-1873) was discordant.
Hans-Werner Schütt's monograph is an
excellent source for students of the history of chemistry and
mineralogy. I can't help feeling, however, that there may
have been a missed opportunity to probe deeper into this
quite extraordinary example of somebody making a
tremendous discovery in an empirical science in a very early age.
We are much more accustomed to seeing mathematicians
excelling so early. Other examples are Louis de Broglie,
in theoretical physics, with his discovery of the wave
nature of electrons, and Svante Arrhenius, in chemistry, with
his electrolytic theory of dissociation. Both came to their
Nobel Prize-winning discoveries during their doctoral
studies. Mitscherlich, however, seems to have spent much of his
time in medicine and Oriental languages, even writing
lengthy treatises in Latin and Persian, prior to his work leading to
the discovery. May it be that such a background
contributed to his becoming especially alert in his
mineralogic-crystallographic experiments? May it also be that his field was
so rudimentary at the time that it was not so difficult even
for a newcomer to come up with something so strikingly
new? Is there an inspirational lesson in Mitscherlich's story
for us that this very scholarly monograph failed to convey?
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