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Paperback The Elements: A Very Short Introduction Book

ISBN: 0192840991

ISBN13: 9780192840998

The Elements: A Very Short Introduction

(Part of the Very Short Introductions Series, Oxford's Very Short Introductions series Series, and Elementaire Deeltjes (#46) Series)

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Format: Paperback

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Book Overview

This Very Short Introduction is an exciting and non-traditional approach to understanding the terminology, properties, and classification of chemical elements. It traces the history and cultural impact of the elements on humankind, and examines why people have long sought to identify the substances around them. The book includes chapters on particular elements such as gold, iron, and oxygen, showing how they shaped culture and technology. Looking...

Customer Reviews

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The elements critique

The topic of the book is the elements and the periodic table. The intended audience is people who want to learn more about the elements and how they work and how they can be used.The point of the book was to explain how the elements were found. A second point was to explain what an element was. Another point of the book was to explain how the periodic table worked. A fourth point was to tell how radioactive decay worked and what it could accomplish. The author did succeed because he managed to explain how the elements were used and created. One way the author succeeded was explaining how radioactive decay made new elements.

The elements of elements

If you are familiar with this series, you will not be surprised to learn that this book is not a conventional tour of the periodic table. In fact, the table does not make an appearance until half way through. Part of what the author does is to illustrate the impact of Earth's elements on human history. The stories of oxygen and gold are singled out for particular attention. This is not the book you need for a first chemistry course. It is what you need to get you enthused about the subject, to help you appreciate what an exciting and significant discipline it can be. This fine series is slightly marred by a tendency to typographic error. This book is no exception, and you will struggle to make sense of figure 15(b). Oddly, in the list of figures at the front, there is a request that readers notify the publishers of errors in the list. I don't think I've seen anything quite like that in any book before. It suggests that they realize they have a proofreading problem. Instead of asking readers to be on the alert, wouldn't it be better just to have a word with the printer? At 179 pages, this is one of the longer entries in the series, and every page glows with the author's enthusiasm for his subject. It adopts a rambling, somewhat unstructured approach but is packed full of fascinating historical and scientific detail. And yes, when the author does finally get around to the periodic table, he gives as good an explanation of it as you will find anywhere.
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