
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


This episode concerns the phenomenon in organic chemistry of classifying a set of similar reactions by a single umbrella name. Most named reactions honor a person, but not always. We discuss the early history of named reactions from the 1870s onward. We then talk about the slant of named reactions towards white men, and away from other people, and even whether that can be a problem for minority and women chemists. Patreon supporters may download a supplemental sheet that sketches some of the reactions I mention in the episode.
Support the show
By Steve Cohen4.5
4242 ratings
This episode concerns the phenomenon in organic chemistry of classifying a set of similar reactions by a single umbrella name. Most named reactions honor a person, but not always. We discuss the early history of named reactions from the 1870s onward. We then talk about the slant of named reactions towards white men, and away from other people, and even whether that can be a problem for minority and women chemists. Patreon supporters may download a supplemental sheet that sketches some of the reactions I mention in the episode.
Support the show

32,123 Listeners

26,179 Listeners

129 Listeners

298 Listeners

12,202 Listeners

6,348 Listeners

375 Listeners

2,337 Listeners

313 Listeners

296 Listeners

393 Listeners

8 Listeners

2,298 Listeners

41 Listeners

1,658 Listeners