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Journal Article

Citation

Laszlo P. Ambix 2010; 57(2): 202-215.

Affiliation

Ecole polytechnique, Palaiseau, France and University of Liège, Belgium. pierre@pierrelaszlo.net

Copyright

(Copyright © 2010, Maney Publishing)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

20973442

Abstract

A letter by Lucien Herr, a highly regarded leading French intellectual at the time of World War I, provides capsule portraits of chemists such as Gabriel Bertrand, Paul Lebeau, Charles Moureu, and Georges Urbain. It makes us better aware of who they were and of how their contemporaries saw their work, which had much to do with their personalities, whether congenial or abrasive. This article is concerned with the kind of information carried by the so-called grapevine. It can be invaluable to the historian, for the light it sheds on the character of a scientist. The document drawn upon, from World War I (1915), depicts graphically the personalities of some of the French chemists engaged in the rush to design and produce chemical weapons. It is a frank and even brutal appraisal of their strengths and weaknesses. This is the kind of evaluation that scientists routinely engage in, but devoid of the hyperbole, pro or con, which usually flavours it.


Language: en

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