What lots of people called chymia in the early seventeenth century was a subject that the physician, alchemist, and school teacher Andreas Libavius believed needed sorting out. He called it an art without an art. To establish what sort of thing chymia was would require rebuilding its definitions from the theoretical and practical ground up while cutting back the forest of obscure language and private meaning in which it existed. Libavius took on the job, and in thousands of pages of toughly worded criticism ranging over alchemical, moral, medical, philosophical, and religious topics wielded a polemical blade to huge effect.
Bringing to light the ideas, diverse works, and major texts of this important Renaissance figure, Bruce T. Moran tells the story of how alchemy refashioned medical practice, showing how Paracelsus’s tenacity and endurance changed the ...
In exploring the varieties of natural knowledge in the early modern era, the authors pay tribute to the work of Allen Debus, whose own endeavors cleared the way for scholars to examine subjects that were once snubbed as suitable only to the ...
Reacting to the perception that the break, early on in the scientific revolution, between alchemy and chemistry was clean and abrupt, Moran literately and engagingly recaps what was actually a slow process.
But in Atoms and Alchemy, William R. Newman—a historian widely credited for reviving recent interest in alchemy—exposes the speciousness of these views and challenges widely held beliefs about the origins of the Scientific Revolution.
Rivière, Paris Corbin A (2014) La douceur de l'ombre. Flammarion, Paris Corsi P (2005) Décrire ou classer? Taxinomies au XVIII siècle Le renouveau de la pensée linnéenne en France au XIX siècle. In: Hoquet T (ed) et al.
An accessible history of alchemy by a leading world authority explores its development and relationship with myriad disciplines and pursuits, tracing its heyday in early modern Europe while profiling some of history's most colorful ...
“The Fate of Hylomorphism: 'Matter' and 'Form' in Early Modern Science,” Early Science and Medicine, 2 (1997), 215–359. Lüthy, Christoph: and Leen Spruit: “The Doctrine, Life, and Roman Trial of the Frisian Philosopher Henricus de Veno ...
a springboard to also explore laboratory alchemy, although pseudo- Weigel, Paul Nagel, and Johann Siebmacher took the opposite route. All of this goes to show that the relation between laboratory alchemy and spiritual alchemy was not ...
What is the precise relationship between water and alchemical mercury? The answer may be found in a different treatise, 'De tria primachymicorum' ('On the Tria Prima of the Alchemists'), where we are told that 'the Mercury of things is ...
For Grasseus, see Thomas Lederer, “Leben, Werk und Wirkung des Stralsunder Fachschriftstellers Johann Grasse (nach 1560–1618),” in Pommern in der Frühen Neuzeit, ed. Wilhelm Kühlmann and Horst Langer (Tübingen: Max Niemeyer, 1994), ...