Publishing the wrong interpretation of experimental data can result in an immediate horde of chemists feeding on the error like vultures. On rare occasions, this phenomenon can open up an entire new field of science — and the structure of ferrocene is a case in point.
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Acknowledgements
We thank a number of journal editors for sharing their criteria for publication, including A. Padwa and S. Rychnovsky (The Journal of Organic Chemistry). J.I.S. thanks W. Myers (University of Richmond) and R. Wheeler (Duquesne University) for being catalysts for this project and the Harvard University Archives for their hospitality. We also thank O. T. Benfey, J. Dunitz, A. Eschenmoser, J. Gal, G. S. Girolami, R. Hoffmann, H. Kroto, P. Laszlo and W. Myers for helpful discussions. We dedicate this paper to the memory of Robert K. Merton (1910–2003). Today, many of his concepts, three of which are discussed in this manuscript and others, such as 'role model', 'self-fulfilling prophecy' and 'unintended consequences', are so much a part of today's lexicon that his inventorship of them is relatively unknown according to his own concept, 'obliteration by incorporation'.
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Seeman, J., Cantrill, S. Wrong but seminal. Nature Chem 8, 193–200 (2016). https://doi.org/10.1038/nchem.2455
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/nchem.2455
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