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1 - Reasons for the enquiry

from Part I - Molecular forces

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 January 2011

Barry W. Ninham
Affiliation:
Australian National University, Canberra
Pierandrea Lo Nostro
Affiliation:
Università degli Studi di Firenze, Italy
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Summary

Molecular forces: some of the background and history of ideas. Why molecular forces?

The matter that concerns us was most clearly articulated nearly a century ago by D'Arcy Thompson in his famous book. He reported the pleas of the early founders of the cell theory, of the then biology, and of the physiologists, that chemists should address the question of molecular forces, then unknown.

We would like to know how it is that molecular forces and the laws of statistical mechanics conspire, with the geometry of molecules and the conformations available to macromolecules, to give rise to the hierarchies of self-assembled equilibrium or dynamic steady states of matter that form cells and dictate biochemical reactivity.

In other words, the game is to link structure and function, the geometry of assemblies of molecules, to the forces that drive self assembly and recognition processes. Any insights ought to allow us to build better, useful connections between the physical and biological sciences. Despite tantalizing hints, that main aim has remained elusive.

D'Arcy Thompson tells us too that of the chemistry of his day and age, Kant said that ‘it was wisschenschaft, nicht Wissenschaft; in that the criterion of a true science lay in its reliance on mathematics’. Kant believed that Euclid's geometry was self-evidently that of nature. We now know better. Hyperbolic geometries that we shall come to later better describe the bicontinuous, random honeycombs of nature.

Type
Chapter
Information
Molecular Forces and Self Assembly
In Colloid, Nano Sciences and Biology
, pp. 3 - 16
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2010

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References

Thompson, D. W., On Growth and Form. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press (1917).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tabor, D. and Winterton, R. H. S., Nature 219 (1968), 1120–1121.CrossRef
Israelachvili, J. N. and Tabor, D., Proc. R. Soc. London, Ser. A 331 (1972), 19–38.CrossRef
Gould, S. J., Eight Little Piggies. Reflections in natural history. New York: W. W. Norton (1993).Google Scholar
Parsegian, V. A., Annu. Rev. Biophys. Bioeng. 2 (1973), 221–255.CrossRef
Stillinger, F. H., J. Solution Chem. 2 (1973), 141–158.CrossRef

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