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History of Alchemy
History of Alchemy
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Alchemy
Ancient science
Arabic science
Aristotle
Category=PDA
Category=PDX
Category=QRYX2
Chemistry
China
Divine union
Elements
Enlightenment
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Esotericism
Gold
Greek philosophy
Hermeticism
India
Macrocosm
Metaphysics
Microcosm
Middle Ages
Mysticism
Occult
Pseudoscience
Religion
Spirituality
Symbolism
Transmutation
Product details
- ISBN 9789189882690
- Dimensions: 220 x 270mm
- Publication Date: 20 May 2025
- Publisher: Stolpe Publishing
- Publication City/Country: SE
- Product Form: Hardback
The etymological roots of alchemy are found in both the Arabic and Greek languages, and refer to the process of transmutation that leads to a complete reunion with the original divine form. However, the esoteric practice of alchemy stretches all the way to India and China and has been practiced since at least the fourth century.
During the Middle Ages, alchemy attracted many of the most prominent scholars of the time. Strongly influenced by the classical theory of the elements, the alchemists based their hypotheses on Aristotle's idea that everything can be created through different proportions of the four elements. From the 19th century onwards, alchemy has been wrongly reduced to a primitive pseudoscience with the sole aim of transmuting base metals into gold. However, this narrow interpretation ignores the true complexity of alchemy and ignores its deep philosophical and religious aspects, as well as its crucial contribution to the development of chemistry.
This richly illustrated anthology presents a diversity of perspectives on how reciprocity, metaphysical connections, and the relationship between macrocosm and microcosm form the core of the philosophy of alchemy. Some of the world's most prominent researchers and academics gather to analyze the alchemical worldview and explore how esoteric currents of thought have shaped culture, society and science.
Georgiana (Jo) Hedesan is an early modern historian of science at the University of Oxford, specialising in the study of alchemy and alchemical medicine. Her first book, An Alchemical Quest for Universal Knowledge: The ‘Christian Philosophy’ of Jan Baptist Van Helmont (1579–1644) was published in 2016 by Routledge. Mark S Morrisson is an associate dean and English professor at Penn State University, and author of several monographs, including Modern Alchemy: Occultism and the Emergence of Atomic Theory. He is completing a monograph for Oxford University Press tentatively titled Light on the Path: Genre Fiction and the Mainstreaming of Occultism, 1880–1940. Andreas Winkler is an assistant professor of Egyptology in the Department of Near and Middle Eastern Civilizations at the University of Toronto, specialising in history and philology. While his research spans the entirety of ancient Egyptian history, he focuses primarily on the Graeco- Roman period, particularly its socio-economic and intellectual history. His specific areas of work include ancient Egyptian astral sciences and the transfer of knowledge in the ancient Mediterranean world. Salam Rassi is lecturer in Islam and Christian-Muslim Relations at the School of Divinity, University of Edinburgh. His main area of research is Christian–Muslim interactions across theology, philosophy and literature. Following the completion of his doctorate at the University of Oxford, he became a Mellon Foundation postdoctoral fellow at the American University of Beirut. He has also worked as a cataloguer of Syriac and Arabic manuscripts at the Hill Museum & Manuscript Library, Minnesota and was a British Academy postdoctoral fellow at Oxford. His first book, entitled Christian Thought in the Medieval Islamicate World, was published by OUP in early 2022. DagmarWujastyk is an associate professor in the Department of History, Classics, and Religion at the University of Alberta. She is an Indologist specialising in the history and literature of classical South Asia, including Indian medicine (Ayurveda), iatrochemistry (rasaśāstra) and yoga.
History of Alchemy
€38.99
