Alchemy

From Cunnan
Revision as of 03:01, 21 June 2003 by Update (talk | contribs)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigationJump to search

Alchemy was a pseudoscience of medieval times, probably influenced by the Egyptians and the Greek Philosophy from Aristotle.

It's based on the idea that the world is composed of the four elements fire, air, water and earth. These elemnts ere considered to be contained in all things, the most common example being wood which "obviously" contained earth (which was why it was hard) and water (sap when squeezed out) and air (not sure how they got air - I think that was smoke when lit) and fire (you could light it). It was a nice little theory...

The basic idea of the atom as the "smallest unit of divisibility" was also formed during this time - though this truly bears little relation to the present-day concpet of the atom (which was simply named after the aristotelian concept). Atoms were considered to be tiny, perfect spheres and made up of one of the four above-mentioned elements... liek I said, a nice little theroy and a lot more advanced than the infinite-turtles style of science that was around previously.

One of the concepts was that, because lead and gold (the perfect metal) were from the earth elemnt, earth could therefore be turned into lead and gold using an "appropriate catalyst" known as the Philosopher's Stone. This was a magical substance which could turn water into wine, heal the sick, and as mentioned, turn really boring lumps of metal into gold and silver. Most of it though was just processes like mixing copper with arsenic to giving it a silver finish, or a philosophical trick by which the alchemist's apprentice, through years of hard work and training, was turned from lead (ie an ignorant klutz) into gold (ie an alchemically educated klutz). :)

Despite never discovering the Philosopher's Stone, alchemists did come up with a number of interesting reactions and the knowledge the gathered eventually led to the foundations of modern chemistry.

Alchemy also gave rise to concept of the panacea, the "medicine" to cure all illnesses - also never found, but a search for it led to an interesting number of ways to poison oneself (mercury, silver and lead poisoning being numbered under the cheif ways that alchemists died).