Osiris, Volume 29: Chemical Knowledge in the Early Modern World
The last twenty-five years have witnessed some provocative transmutations in our understanding of early modern chemistry.  The alchemist, once marginalized as a quack, now joins the apothecary, miner, humanist, and natural historian as a practitioner of “chymistry.”  In a similar vein, the Chemical Revolution of the eighteenth century, with its focus on phlogiston and airs, has been expanded to include artisanal, medical, and industrial practices.  This collection of essays builds on these reappraisals and excavates the affinities between alchemy, chymistry, and chemistry from the sixteenth to the eighteenth centuries.  It reveals a rich world of theory and practice in which instruments, institutions, inscriptions and ideas were used to make material knowledge.  More generally, the volume will catalyze wide-ranging discussions of material and visual cultures, the role of expertise, and the religious and practical contexts of scientific inquiry.
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Osiris, Volume 29: Chemical Knowledge in the Early Modern World
The last twenty-five years have witnessed some provocative transmutations in our understanding of early modern chemistry.  The alchemist, once marginalized as a quack, now joins the apothecary, miner, humanist, and natural historian as a practitioner of “chymistry.”  In a similar vein, the Chemical Revolution of the eighteenth century, with its focus on phlogiston and airs, has been expanded to include artisanal, medical, and industrial practices.  This collection of essays builds on these reappraisals and excavates the affinities between alchemy, chymistry, and chemistry from the sixteenth to the eighteenth centuries.  It reveals a rich world of theory and practice in which instruments, institutions, inscriptions and ideas were used to make material knowledge.  More generally, the volume will catalyze wide-ranging discussions of material and visual cultures, the role of expertise, and the religious and practical contexts of scientific inquiry.
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Osiris, Volume 29: Chemical Knowledge in the Early Modern World

Osiris, Volume 29: Chemical Knowledge in the Early Modern World

Osiris, Volume 29: Chemical Knowledge in the Early Modern World

Osiris, Volume 29: Chemical Knowledge in the Early Modern World

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Overview

The last twenty-five years have witnessed some provocative transmutations in our understanding of early modern chemistry.  The alchemist, once marginalized as a quack, now joins the apothecary, miner, humanist, and natural historian as a practitioner of “chymistry.”  In a similar vein, the Chemical Revolution of the eighteenth century, with its focus on phlogiston and airs, has been expanded to include artisanal, medical, and industrial practices.  This collection of essays builds on these reappraisals and excavates the affinities between alchemy, chymistry, and chemistry from the sixteenth to the eighteenth centuries.  It reveals a rich world of theory and practice in which instruments, institutions, inscriptions and ideas were used to make material knowledge.  More generally, the volume will catalyze wide-ranging discussions of material and visual cultures, the role of expertise, and the religious and practical contexts of scientific inquiry.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780226158396
Publisher: University of Chicago Press Journals
Publication date: 03/11/2015
Series: Osiris , #29
Pages: 450
Product dimensions: 7.00(w) x 10.00(h) x 0.60(d)

About the Author

William R. Newman is the Ruth Halls Professor in the Department of the History and Philosophy of Science at Indiana University and the author of Gehennical Fire and Promethean Ambitions, as well as the coauthor of Alchemy Tried in the Fire (which was awarded the 2005 Pfizer Prize for the best book in the History of Science), all published by the University of Chicago Press.

Table of Contents

INTRODUCTION
An Introduction to Chemical Knowledge in the Early Modern World
Matthew Daniel Eddy,Seymour H. Mauskopf, and William R. Newman
 
THE AGE OF CHYMISTRY (1450-1700)
Transmuting Sericon: Alchemy as “Practical Exegesis” in Early Modern England
Jennifer M. Rampling
 
Auß Quecksilber und Schwefel Rein: Johann Mathesius (1504-65) and Sulfur-Mercurius in the Silver Mines of Joachimstal
John A. Norris
 
Eloquence in the Marketplace: Erudition and Pragmatic Humanism in the Restoration of Chymia
Bruce T. Moran
 
Robert Boyle, Transmutation, and the History of Chemistry before Lavoisier: A Response to Kuhn
William R. Newman
 
TRANSITIONS FROM CHYMISTRY TO CHEMISTRY (1675-1750)
The Chymistry of “The Learned Dr Plot” (1640-96)
Anna Marie Roos
 
The End of Alchemy?: The Repudiation and Persistence of Chrysopoeia at the Académie Royale des Sciences in the Eighteenth Century
Lawrence M. Principe
 
Etienne-François Geoffroy (1672-1731), a Chemist on the Frontiers
Bernard Joly
 
CHEMISTRY IN THE 18TH CENTURY
Communications of Chemical Knowledge: Georg Ernst Stahl and the Chemists at the French Academy of Sciences in the First Half of the Eighteenth Century
Ku-ming (Kevin) Chang
 
Measuring Fire: Herman Boerhaave and the Introduction of Thermometry into Chemistry
John C. Powers
 
How to See a Diagram: A Visual Anthropology of Chemical Affinity
Matthew Daniel Eddy
 
Between the Workshop and the Laboratory: Lavoisier’s Network of Instrument Makers
Marco Beretta
 
An Empire’s Extract: Chemical Manipulations of Cinchona Bark in the Eighteenth-Century Spanish Atlantic World
Matthew James Crawford
 
Elements in the Melting Pot: Merging Chemistry, Assaying, and Natural History, Ca. 1730-60
Hjalmar Fors
 
Pierre-Joseph Macquer: Chemistry in the French Enlightenment
Christine Lehman
 
Chemical Expertise: Chemistry in the Royal Prussian Porcelain Manufactory
Ursula Klein
 
Pharmacy and Chemistry in the Eighteenth Century: What Lessons for the History of Science?
Jonathan Simon
 
Concluding Remarks: A View of the Past through the Lens of the Present
Bernadette Bensaude-Vincent
 
Notes on Contributors
 
Index
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