Abstract

Note from the Editor: When I was editing Tetsuo Nozoe's autobiography Seventy Years in Organic Chemistry in the late 1980s, I realized that the history of Japanese organic chemistry was not too well known in countries other than Japan. I urged Professor Nozoe to include the historical context of his life in his writings, and I was absolutely delighted that he did so. I also suggested that he publish a “Riko Majima Family Tree in Chemistry.” Majima was not only Nozoe's professor but, as detailed in Nozoe's autobiography and elsewhere in the literature, the father figure of Japanese organic chemistry. Nozoe was reluctant because to single-out some chemical academics but not others in such a public manner could—would—prove embarrassing. But faithful to his profession, the obligations to history prevailed and Nozoe's autobiography contains the Majima Family Tree. We now skip ahead 25 years where we are immersed in the publication of the Nozoe Autograph Books (see: http://www.tcr.wiley-vch.de/nozoe and this introductory essay: J. I. Seeman, Chem. Rec. 2012, 12, 517–531). I find myself once again an editor studying in the life and legacies of Riko Majima and Tetsuo Nozoe. The “repeating experiences” of history have been felt once again!22 For an interesting discussion of the repeating and also cumulative nature in the study of history, see the discussion by Mark C. Eilliot in: N. Heller, The New Yorker 2013, http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2013/05/20/130520fa_fact_heller, accessed May 21, 2013. JIS thanks Roald Hoffmann for bringing this publication to his attention. I asked Professors Ichiro Murata, Shô Itô, and Toyonobu Asao (who are Professor Nozoe's students and biographers) to follow Professor Nozoe's lead and provide his Family Tree in Chemistry. What follows is a reproduction of the Majima Family Tree as provided by Professor Nozoe along with the next generation Family Tree, that being the students of Tetsuo Nozoe's students who themselves became illustrious professors. —Jeffrey I. Seeman Guest Editor University of Richmond Richmond, Virginia 23173, USA E-mail: jseeman@richmond.edu

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