Metals as Living Bodies. Founts of Mercury, Amalgams, and Chrysocolla.

IF 0.3 3区 哲学 Q3 HISTORY & PHILOSOPHY OF SCIENCE
Vincenzo Carlotta, Matteo Martelli
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Ancient and medieval alchemical works include several comparisons between the generation and development of metals and those of plants, animals, and living beings. These comparisons could refer to adopt physiological models in the explanation of the natural formation of metals and their artificial transformation, to justify the place occupied by alchemy within the broader study of the natural world, and to stand as metaphorical descriptions of specific alchemical procedures. This article analyses these features by focusing on the relationship between mercury and gold, the latter being the "perfect" metal that constituted both an ambitious goal of alchemical practice and one of its key ingredients. The interrelationship between gold and mercury emerges in complex myths about metallic rivers, in the use of gold-mercury amalgams in ancient technology, and in the discussion that alchemists developed around the enigmatic chrysocolla (literally "gold solder"). These three foci are discussed in relation to a variety of ancient sources - from Aristotle and the Stoics to late antique, Byzantine, and Syriac alchemical texts - to explore the different forms of conceptualising metals as living bodies and the interactions of these models with ancient theories on the formation of metals and the alchemical practices aimed at their transformation.

作为生命体的金属。水银、汞合金和金水银的喷泉。
古代和中世纪的炼金术著作中有几部将金属的产生和发展与植物、动物和生物的产生和发展进行了比较。这些比较可以指采用生理学模型来解释金属的自然形成及其人工转化,证明炼金术在更广泛的自然世界研究中所占据的地位,并作为对特定炼金术过程的隐喻性描述。本文通过关注汞和黄金之间的关系来分析这些特征,后者是“完美”的金属,既是炼金术实践的宏伟目标,也是其关键成分之一。黄金和汞之间的相互关系出现在关于金属河流的复杂神话中,在古代技术中使用金汞合金中,以及炼金术士围绕神秘的金焊料(字面意思是“金焊料”)展开的讨论中。这三个重点与各种古代来源有关-从亚里士多德和斯多葛学派到古代晚期,拜占庭和叙利亚炼金术文本-进行讨论,以探索将金属概念化为生命体的不同形式,以及这些模型与古代金属形成理论和炼金术实践的相互作用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Ambix
Ambix HISTORY & PHILOSOPHY OF SCIENCE-
CiteScore
0.80
自引率
60.00%
发文量
42
审稿时长
3 months
期刊介绍: Ambix is an internationally recognised, peer-reviewed quarterly journal devoted to publishing high-quality, original research and book reviews in the intellectual, social and cultural history of alchemy and chemistry. It publishes studies, discussions, and primary sources relevant to the historical experience of all areas related to alchemy and chemistry covering all periods (ancient to modern) and geographical regions. Ambix publishes individual papers, focused thematic sections and larger special issues (either single or double and usually guest-edited). Topics covered by Ambix include, but are not limited to, interactions between alchemy and chemistry and other disciplines; chemical medicine and pharmacy; molecular sciences; practices allied to material, instrumental, institutional and visual cultures; environmental chemistry; the chemical industry; the appearance of alchemy and chemistry within popular culture; biographical and historiographical studies; and the study of issues related to gender, race, and colonial experience within the context of chemistry.
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