Chemistry shapes and creates the disposition of the world's resources
and provides novel substances for the welfare and hazard of our
civilisation at an exponential rate. Can we model the evolution of
chemical knowledge? This book not only provides a positive answer to the
question, it provides the formal models and available data to model
chemical knowledge as a complex dynamical system based on the mutual
interaction of the social, semiotic and material systems of chemistry.
These systems, which have evolved over the history, include the
scientists and institutions supporting chemical knowledge (social
system); theories, concepts and forms of communication (semiotic system)
and the substances, reactions and technologies (material system) central
for the chemical practice. These three systems, which have traditionally
been mostly studied in isolation, are brought together in this book in a
grand historical narrative, on the basis of comprehensive data sets and
supplemented by appropriate tools for their formal analysis. We thereby
develop a comprehensive picture of the evolution of chemistry, needed
for better understanding the past, present and future of chemistry as a
discipline. The interdisciplinary character of this book and its
non-technical language make it an ideal complement to more traditional
material in undergraduate and graduate courses in chemistry, history of
science and digital humanities.