Kekule who dreamt of 6 serpents each eating others tail and discovered the hexavalent structure, meanwhile cries in a corner. No mention of Kekule in the article.

Agree: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/August_Kekulé#Kekulé's_dream

(I had the impression from somewhere else that his "reverie or day-dream" might have instead been a pipe dream — as in the literal pipe dream (opium?). But I can now find nothing to substantiate this at all so, maybe just ignore.)

EDIT: perhaps I was reading too much into this page from the Golden Book of Chemistry: https://www.slideshare.net/slideshow/the-golden-book-of-chem...

For a tangent on Kekule, I really enjoyed Cormac McCarthy's essay The Kekule Problem - published in 2017 and apparently his first published work of non-fiction.

Yeah, and it's especially sad because they specifically mention that the structure was worked out later in the 19th century. Why not include a fun little detail like that?

The answer is probably because the author hasn't taken organic chem and so never heard the story.

Having only taken high school and one semester of undergrad 100-level chemistry, I know 2 things about Benzene: It's very dangerous stuff, and some guy had a dream about its ring-shaped structure.

Also, I know that what the anglosphere calls "gas", "gasoline" or "petrol", some other European languages call "benzine". Benzene and petrol are both hydrocarbons, but other than that similarity I don't know why that name would be used. I saw somewhere that it is actually "Benz-ine", as in Karl Benz.. but that sounds dubious.

Omitting such an important story from the article feels sloppy.

For me, no other story from Chemistry is as fascinating as Kekule dreaming up Benzene’s molecular structure. An important reminder to me about the power of narrative and storytelling.

This does seem like an important omission.

I immediately "Ctrl+F" for "Kekule" and saw nothing on the page. Disappointing.

When I read a "History of Organic Chemistry" textbook, Kekule and Benzene were essentially the springboard.

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