The Story of Alchemy and the Beginnings of Chemistry eBook

M. M. Pattison Muir
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 171 pages of information about The Story of Alchemy and the Beginnings of Chemistry.

The Story of Alchemy and the Beginnings of Chemistry eBook

M. M. Pattison Muir
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 171 pages of information about The Story of Alchemy and the Beginnings of Chemistry.
it must be possible to restore to life the thing which has been mortified.  The burnt sulphur, wood, wax, or oil, is not really dead, the alchemists argued; to use the allegory of Paracelsus, they are like young lions which are born dead, and are brought to life by the roaring of their parents:  if we make a sufficiently loud noise, if we use the proper means, we shall bring life into what seems to be dead material.  As it is the roaring of the parents of the young lions which alone can cause the still-born cubs to live, so it is only by the spiritual agency of life, proceeded the alchemical argument, that life can be brought into the mortified sulphur, wood, wax, and oil.

The alchemical explanation was superficial, theoretical, in the wrong meaning of that word, and unworkable.  It was superficial because it overlooked the fact that the primary calcination, the mortification, of the metals, and the other substances, was effected in the air, that is to say, in contact with something different from the thing which was calcined; the explanation was of the kind which people call theoretical, when they wish to condemn an explanation and put it out of court, because it was merely a re-statement of the facts in the language of a theory which had not been deduced from the facts themselves, or from facts like those to be explained, but from what were supposed to be facts without proper investigation, and, if facts, were of a totally different kind from those to which the explanation applied; and lastly, the explanation was unworkable, because it suggested no method whereby its accuracy could be tested, no definite line of investigation which might be pursued.

That great naturalist, the Honourable Robert Boyle (born in 1626, died in 1691), very perseveringly besought those who examined processes of calcination to pay heed to the action of everything which might take part in the processes.  He was especially desirous they should consider what part the air might play in calcinations; he spoke of the air as a “menstruum or additament,” and said that, in such operations as calcination, “We may well take the freedom to examine ... whether there intervene not a coalition of the parts of the body wrought upon with those of the menstruum, whereby the produced concrete may be judged to result from the union of both.”

It was by examining the part played by the air in processes of calcination and burning that men at last became able to give approximately complete descriptions of these processes.

Boyle recognised that the air is not a simple or elementary substance; he spoke of it as “a confused aggregate of effluviums from such differing bodies, that, though they all agree in constituting by their minuteness and various motions one great mass of fluid matter, yet perhaps there is scarce a more heterogeneous body in the world.”  Clement of Alexandria who lived in the end of the 2nd, and the early part of the 3rd, century A.D., seems to have regarded the air

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The Story of Alchemy and the Beginnings of Chemistry from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.