Abstract

Note from the Editor:According to Robert K. Merton (1988), “Invisible college” is a term used “to designate the informal collectives of scientists interacting in their research on similar problems, these groups being generally limited to a size ‘that can be handled by interpersonal relationships.’ ” Invisible colleges can be highly competitive, even ugly in their priority races, or they can be congenial, even enthusiastically supportive to its members. In the community of organic chemists who studied novel aromatic chemistry in the 1950s–1990s, one man—Tetsuo Nozoe—is largely responsible for bringing together researchers from across the world and setting the tone of brotherhood. Larry Scott, today a senior scholar of that invisible college, warmly shares the spirit of Tetsuo Nozoe with each of us in the following essay. Jeffrey I. Seeman Guest Editor University of Richmond Richmond, Virginia 23173, USA E‐mail: jseeman@richmond.edu

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