The Organisation of Science in EnglandHeinemann Educational, 1972 - 268 pages |
Contents
CHAPTER ONE Science and Society | 1 |
CHAPTER TWO EighteenthCentury Background | 13 |
180040 | 36 |
Copyright | |
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A. W. Williamson achieved amateur aniline dye applied science applied scientists Armstrong Beyer-Peacock Britain British Association chemical industry chemistry chemists classes committee course degree demand dyestuffs Edward Frankland elementary endowment engineering England English established fact firms German German universities Honours Huxley important increase industrial research institutions instruction J. J. Thomson Joule Kelvin knowledge large number later lectures Lockyer London University Lyon Playfair Manchester manufacturers mathematics mechanics Natural Sciences nineteenth century organisation Oxford and Cambridge philosophy physics practice profession professional scientists Professor progress Raphael Meldola reason reform remarkable Report research laboratory Roscoe Royal Commission Royal Society scholarship science graduates scientific education secondary education secondary schools social Society of Arts specialised syllabus T. H. Huxley teachers teaching technical colleges technical education movement tion training college Tripos university colleges university education University of London W. H. Perkin Zürich Polytechnic