Eirenaeus Philalethes was reputed to have performed miracles--restoring an aged lady's teeth and hair, bringing a withered peach tree to fruit--and was also rumored to possess a philosophers' stone. That he was merely a mythical creation didn't diminish his public reputation a whit. This is the story of the man behind the myth, George Starkey.
Taylor was an active reader of chymical literature , and in true Harvardian fashion , he compiled a synopsis of John ... Alexander B. Grosart ( printed for private circulation , 1873 ) , 2 : 199-200 ; Alistair Fowler , ed , , The New ...
This is what Principe and Margaret Osler mean when they speak of his work as “old wine in new skins.”25 But this situation poses an interesting dilemma. What does the sociologistofscientific knowledge do whenthe received ...
(Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1909–1940). Bacon, Roger. The “Opus Majus” of Roger Bacon, ed. John Henry Bridges, 2 vols. (Frankfurt: Minerva, 1964). Bacon,Roger.SaniorismedicinaemagistriD.RogeriBaconis(Frankfurt:JohannSchoenwetter, 1603).
Do the details of laboratory practices serve to strengthen or to erode the distinctions between the activities and commitments of Starkey/Phila- lethes and Boyle, or between alchemy and chemistry? What were the traditions and ...
The Aspiring Adept presents a provocative new view of Robert Boyle (1627-1691), one of the leading figures of the Scientific Revolution, by revealing for the first time his avid and lifelong pursuit of alchemy.
43–47, 68; Susan G. Gibson, ed., Burr's Hill: A Seventeenth-Century Wampanoag Burial Ground in Warren, Rhode Island (Providence, 1980), 14, 22–23, 25–33. On English Protestant burials, see Ralph Houlbrooke, Death, Religion, ...
De Maets, Carolus Ludovicus.Prodromus Chemiae Rationalis, Ratiociniis Philosophicis, Obser'vationi— hus, Medicis, Etc Illustratae. Leiden: Petrum de Graaf, 1 684. De Pater, C. “Experimental Physics.” In Leiden University in the ...
George Starkey—chymistry tutor to Robert Boyle, author of immensely popular alchemical treatises, and probably early America's most important scientist—reveals in these pages the daily laboratory experimentation of a seventeenth-century alchemist....
See Newman on Starkey: “Philalethes's term 'primary quality' means the Aristotelian elemental qualities—rather than size, shape, position, and arrangement” (Gehennical Fire, 156). 78. Newman, introduction to Summa, 176. 79.
See Newman, Gehennical Fire, pp. 44–45. 36. Cited from Kittredge's notes at Harvard by Newman, Gehennical Fire, p. 48. 37. Translated from Latin in Newman, Gehennical Fire, pp. 250–51. 38. Historical Society of Pennsylvania collection, ...