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  1. New Light on Lavoisier: The research of the last ten years.W. A. Smeaton - 1963 - History of Science 2 (1):51-69.
    SINCE the publication in 1952 of Douglas McKie's Antoine Lavoisier, the standard biography which is of great value to all students of eighteenth-century science, there has been a steady increase in knowledge of most aspects of Lavoisier's life and work. This survey will be concerned ,mainly with monographs and papers in scientific and historical journals, but several important books may first be noted.
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  • Public Demonstrations of Chemistry in Eighteenth Century France.Christine Lehman & Bernadette Bensaude-Vincent - 2007 - Science & Education 16 (6):573.
  • ‘Public’ Science: Hydrogen Balloons and Lavoisier's Decomposition of Water.Mi Gyung Kim - 2006 - Annals of Science 63 (3):291-318.
    Summary The balloon mania between 1783 and 1785 put an extraordinary strain on the Paris Academy of Sciences, threatening its status as the highest tribunal of European science. Faced with repeated royal directives and public frenzy, the Academy manoeuvred carefully to steer the research toward the hydrogen balloon and thereby to maintain its scientific superiority. Antoine-Laurent Lavoisier seized this moment when the promise of ?the empire of airs? brought science to the centre of public attention to push his theoretical reform (...)
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  • Priestley’s views on the composition of water and related airs.Geoffrey Blumenthal - 2018 - Foundations of Chemistry 21 (2):147-178.
    In some views in the history, philosophy and social studies of chemistry, Joseph Priestley is at least as well-known and cited for his objections to the new chemistry and his promotion of his own late version of the theory of phlogiston, as for his early series of discoveries about types of air for which he had become famous. These citations are generally not associated with any detailed indications about his late work from 1788 onwards and his late phlogistic theory, of (...)
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