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- Path: sparky!uunet!olivea!charnel!sifon!thunder.mcrcim.mcgill.edu!sobeco!ladislas
- From: ladislas@sobeco.com (Ladislas A.)
- Newsgroups: alt.magick
- Subject: Re: alchemy (was: Re: Dracula the Alchemist)
- Message-ID: <1993Jan21.054648.6771@sobeco.com>
- Date: 21 Jan 93 05:46:48 GMT
- References: <JOSHUA.93Jan18110540@bailey.cpac.washington.edu> <1993Jan18.222515.405@news.uwyo.edu> <C16CFC.I6H@HQ.Ileaf.COM>
- Organization: Sobeco Ernst & Young
- Lines: 75
-
- In <C16CFC.I6H@HQ.Ileaf.COM> rap@HQ.Ileaf.COM (Roger Powell) writes:
-
- >Some thoughts on the nature of alchemy:
- >
- >Transmutation:
- >
- >It certainly strikes me as physically _possible_ that the lead generally
- >available to the Alchemist routinely contained a small amount of gold as an
- >impurity, and that the alchemical processes of transmutation were actually
- >slow-acting, highly efficient refinement techniques, rather than the nuclear
- >transmutations we think of today.
-
- This has been said many times in the past. In 1618, Jean-Baptiste Van Helmont,
- a reknowned scientist who discovered gases, was visited by a stranger who
- claimed he could prove that any metal could be transmutted into gold using
- the pilosopher's stone. The stranger gave Van Helmont a small quantity of a
- reddish, heavy and sparkling powder. He instructed Van Helmont in the way to
- conduct the experiment and left. Van Helmont used 8 ounces of mercury for the
- experiment. Once the metal had melted, he wrapped the powder into a piece of
- paper and dropped in the "creuset" (could someone translate that for me please!)
- and let it sit for 15 minutes. When it was ready, he cooled it and broke it.
- Within he found the same amount of pure gold as he had put of mercury.
- If you seek references for this story, you may read Jacques Sadoul's _Le_
- Tresor_Des_Alchimistes_ or Van Helmont's _Ortus_Medicinae_. You can also
- consult Philalethes' book _The_Marrow_Of_Alchemy_ for a similar story.
-
- > As I understand it, even extracting a very
- >small amount of gold from a large-ish mass of lead would be an alchemically
- >satisfactory result. Quantity seems not to have been the point.
-
- Not quite. The Stone, when properly made, should give you an equal amount of
- gold from the metal used. Quantity is the point.
-
- >Life extension:
- >
- >This one I can't really see. The thing is, life extension is perceived as
- >such a highly desirable goal that even the *suggestion* that it might be
- >possible would be sufficient to keep people searching for it indefinitely,
- >even without any tangible evidence. I'm not ready to rule it out as a
- >possibility, but I have to classify it as "highly improbable";
-
- There is very little evidence that can be given about this. The only story
- I remember is that of Nicolas Flamel and his wife. They "died" and were
- buried in the church's cemetary. For some reason, their coffins were dug up
- later and contained only pieces of wood. Legend (for what else can it be
- called) has it that Nicolas Flamel and his wife were seen in India a century
- later.
- Since there is no tangible evidence, I would classify it as unverified.
- If it is possible to regenerate cells, then it is probable that life can be
- extended.
-
- >Physical vs Metaphorical:
- >
- >The sense I get is that the alchemists were Very Serious about their metaphors,
- >in that the vital, psychological, spiritual, and divine resonances of an
- >alchemical metaphor flow from the physical implementation; without the
- >physical base, the rest are just words. This idea turns up in wimpier form
- >in some other magical philosophies; my impression is that the alchemists
- >really meant it.
-
- There have been people who decided to take the metaphors at face value. Some
- died of poisoning, some blew up their laboratories, some even died of acute
- constipation because they thought that the Materia Prima was their excrements
- and the athanor was their bowels.
-
- What alchemists were very serious about was their secrecy. Even today, if one
- proves s/he is capable of changing lead into gold, s/he runs a very high risk of
- ending up in a governmental facility where her/his work will be "facilitated".
-
- >--roger
- >rap@HQ.Ileaf.COM
-
- >Disclaimer: Interleaf, Inc. has nothing to do with alchemy.
-
- Ladislas.
-