Showing posts with label Paracelsus. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Paracelsus. Show all posts

Monday, November 7, 2016

Top 8: Looking for the elixir of immortality.


For hundreds of years, scientists, scholars and philosophers have chased the secret of the elixir of immortality, the transmutation of metals, and the discovery of the alkahest, a universal solvent. Work – and advances – in alchemy were so sought after that those dabbling in it went to great lengths to protect their secrets. Inspired by works like The Chymical Wedding of Christian Rosenkreutz, they often wrote in code, describing their experiments and ideas in secret languages that only they could read. The result is an esoteric practice, the history of which remains mysterious to this day. This article examines several aspects of alchemy and its history, and the works of men and women who chased the most fantastic scientific and mythological ideas of their day. We’ve also thrown in a selection of random tidbits for your alchemical pleasure.


The Real Nicolas Flamel
(Image: filip; Nicolas Flamel’s house in Paris)
When it comes to the world’s great alchemists, Nicolas Flamel is certainly one of the best-known names. All of which is ironic, really, as there is no historical evidence to suggest that he had anything at all to do with practicing alchemy.


The real Nicolas Flamel was born in 1330 and died in Paris in 1410. During his lifetime, he was well-known as a scribe and manuscript-seller, enjoying a comfortable life after marrying the wealthy widow Perenelle. Their fame came from their philanthropy, their dedication to the church and their commissioning of several sculptures. Their home still stands, one of the oldest stone buildings in Paris.

It wasn’t until the 17th century that Flamel’s name was linked to alchemy. During his days as a bookseller, Flamel supposedly published Livre des figures hieroglyphiques (which didn’t appear until 1612), and then spent the rest of his life chasing and – it’s said – eventually achieving immortality and the Philosopher’s Stone. Flamel’s reputation is one of the best examples of pseudepigraphy in history: the practice of publishing works falsely under the name of a historical personality.

Of the estimated 10 million words Newton left behind in papers and notebooks, around one million of them were written on alchemical research. This includes his code words for various substances: codes like “Green Dragon”, “the Net”, “Diana’s doves”, and, bizarrely, the “menstrual blood of the sordid whore”.


John Damian de Falcuis, Scotland’s Flying Alchemist
(Image: Otter; view toward Stirling Castle)
In 1500, the Scottish royal court noted a first of its kind: an alchemical laboratory set up with the blessing of King James IV. It was set behind a door in Stirling Castle that was off-limits to everyone but the alchemist – a shadowy figure named John Damian – and the king himself.

The Scotsman reports that Damian was less than admired at court, and that he earned the nickname of the “French leech” (despite being Italian) for the vast sums of money that the crown sank into his alchemical studies. He had wooed the king with talk of finding a way to create not just the Philosopher’s Stone, but the Elixir of Life. No one could say that he didn’t aim high, however. In 1507, he did – quite literally – just that.

During his studies, he became obsessed with the idea of finding a way to allow man to fly. By September 1507, his hard work and long hours had led to the completion of a pair of mechanical wings that he believed would let him take to the skies – and desperately maintain the patronage of the king.


The alchemist Damian hurled himself from the top of Stirling Castle, but didn’t so much fly as plummet. He broke his leg in the fall, but he retained the patronage of the king. James not only continued to fund his work, but financed a five-year tour of the continent.

Mary the Jewess
One of the earliest alchemical writers, Mary the Jewess lived some time between the first and third centuries. None of her actual writings survived, but her work was quoted and used extensively by her successors.

A remarkable number of practical inventions came from Mary’s work and research. She was the first to record the discovery of hydrochloric acid, and she developed ideas for some of the most important chemical apparatuses used today. As she was writing about her experiments with “divine water” (sulfuric acid) and “philosopher’s clay”, she also developed the mechanisms for distillation that we still use in chemistry today. The bain-marie, a double boiler still used in applications like the melting of chocolate and small-scale soap production, is little changed from Mary the Jewess’ invention some 2,000 years ago.

Legend says that Japan was discovered when Qin Shi Huang sent 500 men and 500 women to explore the eastern seas with the Taoist alchemist Xu Fu. They were looking for the elixir of immortality.



Cleopatra the Alchemist
Cleopatra wasn’t her real name, but she was a very real alchemist and philosopher writing in Egypt during the 3rd century. One of four female alchemists (along with Mary the Jewess) reported to have the knowledge needed to create the Philosopher’s Stone, she also created something that’s had a marked influence on our world today: the alembic still.


Cleopatra (not to be confused with the famous queen, Cleopatra VII) wrote extensively on the transformation of life and the quantification of alchemical experiments. She also coined the term “chrysopoeia”, referring to one of the most well-known alchemical concepts, the search for the method of turning base metals into gold.

Alchemy had its own set of symbols used to indicate some of the most common substances and processes. Some of those processes were linked to the signs of the zodiac; the sign for Separation and Scorpio are the same, for example, along with the sign for Digestion and Leo, and Fermentation and Capricorn.

The Alchemical Waters
(Image: Thejohnnler; aqua regia seen in a lab)

Alchemy had its own set of symbols used to indicate some of the most common substances and processes. Some of those processes were linked to the signs of the zodiac; the sign for Separation and Scorpio are the same, for example, along with the sign for Digestion and Leo, and Fermentation and Capricorn.

Alchemical experiments throughout history were incredibly varied, but one common theme that ran through the centuries was the idea of the alchemical waters. Aqua fortis (strong water) was a highly corrosive liquid that could dissolve anything except gold. It was made by combining various percentages of sand, vitriol, alum and saltpeter, then distilling the mixture.

Aqua vitae (the water of life), meanwhile, was originally made from distilling wine, and referred to water with a high concentration of ethanol. Eventually, it became forever linked with the idea of distilling liquors. The king’s water, or aqua regia, was given its name due to its ability to dissolve gold and platinum. A mixture of hydrochloric acid and nitric acid, it has also been called “royal water”.

Perhaps the strangest is aqua omnium florum, or all-flower water. The name is rather deceiving, as this alchemical ingredient was made by distilling the water removed from cow dung – specifically, dung that was gathered from the fields in May and produced by cows that ate meadow grass and wildflowers. It was mixed with white wine and snails.


The 17th century alchemist Hennig Brand took a bizarre approach to creating the Philosopher’s Stone. Believing that the key to alchemy could be found in water and in the human body, he collected huge amounts of urine and subjected the samples to various experiments. He didn’t find the mythical stone, but he did discover phosphorus.


Alchemy and Laudanum
(Image: Cydone)
Laudanum is well known as the bane of Victorian England, but its discovery dates back to the 16th century and Paracelsus. According to the story, Paracelsus was seeking to unlock the potential healing powers of opium, and discovered that opium was most soluble in alcohol. He would go on to claim that his concoction (which he called his “arcanum”), could cure all illnesses apart from leprosy. He even claimed that it could bring someone back from the dead.

The ingredients of Paracelsus’s laudanum are something of a mystery, as he only gave the recipe to those he initiated into his studies. According to some records, the recipe included opium, henbane, the bezoar stone from a cow’s intestines, musk oil, amber, crushed pearls, coral, mummy, and parts of the heart of a stag and a unicorn.


Later, Thomas Sydenham would claim to have created his own version of the medicine from Paracelsus’s original recipe, and would later be credited with its widespread use across Europe.


Belgian alchemist Jean Baptista van Helmont claimed to have seen the Philosopher’s Stone in action. He said that it was the colour of saffron and had the texture of glass, and that he had seen it turn quicksilver into gold.


Creating the Homunculus
(Images: (left, right) via Wikipedia)
The term “homunculus” was coined by the legendary alchemist and occultist Paracelsus, and the creation of the creature was the subject of numerous 16th century experiments. The basis of the experiment was similar to the creation of the folkloric golem. Numerous alchemists tried it, but we know Paracelsus’s methods.

According to De natura rerum, the process for creating a tiny person was pretty straightforward, if not a bit labour-intensive. Seal some sperm in a horse’s womb until it starts to move on its own, then remove the tiny little man. Feed it human blood for the next 40 weeks, and Paracelsus says that it’ll mature into a little human-like child.

Like-minded individuals loved the idea. It was rumoured that Count Johann von Kefstein had created 10 such beings that could predict the future, and others claimed to have created homunculus that could commune with the spirit world.

Since the writings of Galen, it was believed that the four humors were responsible for creating balance – or imbalance – in the human body. Paracelsus thought differently, writing about three humors: salt (stability), sulphur (combustibility), and mercury (liquidity).

Sir Isaac Newton & the Philosopher’s Stone

At the same time Newton was discovering the secrets of optics and astronomy, he was also searching for the Philosopher’s Stone. In his work “Humores mineralis”, he describes what he sees as mystical properties found in saltpeter, and suggests that this substance is as close to the stone as anyone has come.

The problem Newton faced, however, was over how there could be so many minerals on the surface of the earth, when the water cycle should have been draining them all away into the underground. Minerals never rose to the surface, after all, and that was a problem.

He speculated that there was some sort of reaction going on near the surface of the earth that was replenishing all of these minerals, and that saltpeter was the active ingredient. Along with mercury and sulphur, saltpeter was thought to be one of the crucial elements in the transmutation of minerals and ore – a reaction he studied in the laboratory.

Countless alchemical works were lost in 292 AD, when the Roman Emperor Diocletian ordered all magical and alchemical books to be burned. Only a relative handful of original documents survived.



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Saturday, September 24, 2016

Paracelsus the greatest scientists in history. He established the optimal dose of poison and hoping to create homunculi

On September 24, 1541 died Paracelsus (Theophrastus Bombastus von Hohenheim), alchemist, physician and philosopher, one of the most colorful figures of the Renaissance precursor iatrochimiei making use in the treatment of certain drugs made by chemical synthesis (b. November 10, 1493).

Paracelsus was born in the village of Einsiedeln in Switzerland. From his father, Wilhelm von Hohenheim bombastic, a doctor by profession, received the rudiments of surgery and medicine. At 16, he entered the Paracelsus Medical University of Basel, later moved to Vienna where, in 1510, obtained the baccalaureate in medicine. Paracelsus was trained and famous Johannes Trithemius (1461-1526), ​​abbot of the monastery St. Jakob in Wurzburg, one of the most renowned masters of magic, alchemy and astrology. Under the guidance of the teacher, they have been cultivated his inclinations toward science and occult practices. Thus became one of the first alchemists in the Middle Ages.



In 1516 he obtained a doctorate in medicine at the University of Ferrara, about the same time in which Copernicus studied.

Paracelsus created in a very short time fame in medicine, astrology and toxicology. Very learned, driven by curiosity to decipher the mysteries of the occult sciences, it was characterized by exaggerated pride. The air of superiority that display, including discussions with other scholars, have attracted a great deal of antipathy.

Contribution of toxicology has been shown to be very useful, being the promoter of the idea that the doses are poison. Otherwise, used in small amounts, certain poisons could be used in the treatment of certain disorders. He earned the reputation of appreciation and thanks to ideas and innovation community it offered. In particular, however, he thought he could create homunculi, little people, who once created, would not exceed the height of a foot and which were suitable to play the role of effective servants.


Paracelsus is known for having given the name calling it Zincum zinc and is recognized as the first systematic botanist. His Philippus Aureolus Theophrastus Bombastus von Hohenheim liked to be called Paracelsus, to indicate that he was "the same level" (in Greek "para" means "next", "close") Aulus Cornelius Celsus, who lived Gaius Julius Caesar during his Octavianus Augustus (Augustine) in the first half of the century I.




Paracelsus was accused of alcoholism and disinterest regarding religious ceremonies. In reality he is held to a Doctor of Sacred Scripture (Doctor of Divinity, in short, D. D.), convinced that religious faith must be lived within the human being at an intimate level, not collectively. "Temple is the heart, not within walls," he said.

Invenit Mundo  your presents the main meanings of the day September 24:

1724 - Consecration Văcăreşti Monastery, founded by Prince Nicholas Mavrocordatos, located in the southern part of Bucharest, one of the most valuable monuments of historical and artistic heritage Romanian, Nicolae Ceausescu destroyed.



1829 - Russia and the Ottoman Empire signed the Treaty of Adrianople Peace.


1896 - was born writer Francis Scott Fitzgerald, one of the leading representatives of the so-called "lost generation" ( "The Great Gatsby," "Gentleness night") (d. December 21, 1940).


1900 - was born poet Dem. Bassarabeanu (d. 1968).

1934 - He was born Manfred Wörner, the German politician, former Secretary General of NATO (1988-1994) (m.13 August 1994).


1941 - Aristide Maillol died, painter and sculptor (b. December 8, 1861).

1989 - He died literary critic and novelist Paul Georgescu (November 1923 n.7).

1992 - Entered into Law no. 102 on the state coat of arms and seal.

1994 - He died poet, essayist and philosopher Grigore Popa (b. July 31, 1910).

1997 - He was retired famous Deep Blue supercomputer that defeated world chess champion, Garry Kasparov, the "Match of the Century" in May 1997.


2003 - The American singer died Rosalie Allen (b. 1924)

2003 - He died actor Lyle Bettger (n. 1915)


2004 - A French writer died Françoise Sagan (n. 1935)


2005 - He died actor Tommy Bond (b. 1926)



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Saturday, September 10, 2016

Top 10: Most evil scientists in history

Over time there have been scientists, researchers, scientists eccentrics who, driven by the desire to penetrate the unknown, have left humanity a vast and rich cultural and scientific heritage. Their desire to decipher the mysteries of hermetic life, up to contempt of their community, made possible the word "evolution" used today to describe people deep difference between the human race and other creatures that inhabit the planet.


10. Paracelsus (1496-1541)
Paracelsus has created in a very short time a reputation in medicine, astrology and toxicology. Very learned, driven by curiosity to decipher the mysteries of the occult sciences, it was characterized by exaggerated pride. The air of superiority that you display, including discussions with other scholars, have attracted a lot of antipathy. His contribution in the field of toxicology has been shown to be very useful, being the promoter of the idea that the doses are poison. Otherwise, used in small doses, some poisons could be used in the treatment of certain diseasesParacelsus has earned the appreciation and reputation because ideas and innovations it offered the community. In particular, however, it was thought that can create homunculi, little people, who once created, must not exceed the height of a foot that were suited to play the role of effective servants.


 9. Johann Konrad Dippel (1673-1734)

Born in Castle Frankenstein, the eccentric doctor who was known for bizarre experiments finally brought him fame. Playing the nitroglycerin, he manages to destroy a tower, but at the same time it discovers and medicinal properties. It was rumored about him that he had tried to transfer the soul of a corpse to another, but no one knew this with certainty. Among the extravagances of his, made some discoveries that proved to be very useful, including the discovery of shades of blue paint, that would be later known under three names: Prussian blue, Prussian blue or blue Paris and an animal oil, long used in medicine in the treatment of epilepsy.

8. Alfred Nobel (1833-1897)
This famous scientist may seem inappropriate in such a top, but one of the most used its inventions produced an impressive number of casualties and the list is still open. Discovering role in the manufacture of nitroglycerin dynamite, Nobel "gave" the world's first deadly explosive that had access to the masses. One of the first victims of his invention is even brother died in an experiment that took place in a factory. It was just the first victim of a long line of thousands. He always regretted his invention functions data that had initially intended to ease the process of construction. To wash their sins or to minimize them, founded the Nobel Prize, after reading the heading deaths, which is announced (in a pure confusion) that died "Merchant of Death."


7. Trofim Lysenko (1898-1976)
Although his experiments have resulted in mass deaths, driving its mistakes threw the Soviet Union a few decades ago about scientific research. Lysenko was director of the Institute of Genetics and was specialized in agriculture. His habit was to report only successes institute superiors that he was leading, its results are based on evidence irrelevant, incomplete files and total lack of any control on his part. Lysenko's abuses made in the name of science have led to long-term stagnation of the Soviet Union any progress in the field of genetics.


6. Dr. Jack Kevorkian (1928)
He became famous after she started to support end-stage patients rights to decide over their lives, going to face up to the law to support their cause. Eventually, Kevorkian was arrested, and in the process said it has assisted more than 130 patients dying. Imprisoned in 1999, he received a sentence of eight years and one of 10 to 15 years for second-degree murder when, in 1998 poisoned a patient 52 from Michigan.


5. Dr. J.Robert Oppenheimer (1904-1967)

Headed the Manhattan Project, the group responsible for the creation and use of the atomic bomb, Dr. J.Robert Oppenheimer was a brilliant  nuclear physicist. Meanwhile, he was also a passionate supporter of communism, being registered in many communist parties on the west coast of America, recognizing that his image is associated with the communist movement. It was said to be horrified by the result of team leading. But a teammate shortly words denied it, saying that Dr. Oppenheimer J.Robert ideas often participate in the project, but its quality was that people knew how to instill confidence in what they do, creating a unique atmosphere of enthusiasm and competition which allowed the project to be completed.

4. Members of the Tuskegee study

For 40 years, between 1932 and 1972, the Department of Public Health of the United States has conducted an experiment that subjects who had 399 black people, mostly poor or uneducated, are in the final stage of syphilis. The point of the experiment was to obtain more information on the course of the disease, if it is not treated. The researchers understood very quickly that subjects can provide useful information only at autopsy, so great efforts were made to ensure that patients do not go to other places to get medical care. The program was discontinued in 1972, when it was made public by Washington Star newspaper. At first glance, it seems a classic case of racism, but this theory can not stand, given that many members of this research group were themselves black.


3. Dr. Sigmund Rascher (1909-1945)

Dr.Rascher was some of the scholars who have chosen to use their science to the detriment of humanity. Manat macabre curiosities, and it was a good time to offer and meet them during the Second World War. Doctor's infamous medical experiments in the concentration camp at Dachau included studies on malaria tests for drugs, hypothermia studies in which 300 subjects (a third of which perished) were forced to stand in the cold at high altitudes. Here, he developed cyanide capsules, which could easily be swallowed intentionally or accidentally. Ironically, this was to be the mode of his close friends, Hermann Göring and Heinrich Himmler, to commit suicide.


2. Dr. Mengele Josef (1911-1979)
Known as the Angel of Death, Mengele received in 1943, in full war, to oversee the selection of transport prisoners from the camp at Birkenau with the power to decide who was fit for work, who could be used as human guinea pigs and who it was sent in gas chambers.
Mengele's scientific interests were focused in particular on problems of heredity, watching many of his experiences demonstrate the superiority of the Aryan race.

They noted cases twins, supervizandu him especially after he was closing on them in special barracks. Many children in the camp were suffering from a condition called Norma, which is manifested especially in children who have a weak immune system and suffer from malnutrition. 

Mengele commissioned a Czech doctor to deal specifically with these children, convinced that the roots of this disease is racial inferiority. No midgets were not forgotten. It seems that his favorite Mengele, called pretentious by him "my family Dwarfs", a Romanian family was Hebrew, 7 out of 10 members were dwarfs. They had formed a troupe of circus before being sent to the camp, but they represented only Mengele abnormal peak. Even the "normal" were not exempt from curiosity macabre doctor, some people inject various substances in the eye to be color, others are amputated States, up to carrying on certain prisoners tests sterilization and treatment of shock, very few of which have survived.

After the war, he fled initially in Austria, then took refuge in South America, where he died in 1979, drowned following a heart attack. His body was identified after DNA extracted from his remains.


1. Dr. Shiro Ishii (1892-1959)
Vast medical knowledge and dedication to sudiu Dr. Shiro Ishii made that very quickly be noticed by his superiors and promoted to chief of the department for the study of biological weapons, belonging to a secret unit of the Japanese Imperial Army, Unit 731. it would remain in history as a place of horror, where the most unimaginable experiments were done, with live people as guinea pigs. In 1932 began the first tests in a secret project of the Japanese army. In 1936, Unit 731 was formed. Ishii built a huge complex consisting of 150 buildings occupying over 6000 square meters outside Harbin city in China, and to divert the attention of authorities, said the huge building is a water purification center.



Some of the atrocities committed by Dr. Ishii and his team included dissections performed on living people, including pregnant women. Prisoners are removed various States, which were then reattached to another part of the body, while others are frozen bodies, and then thawed to study the evolution of untreated gangrene.

People living were used as guinea pigs in tests with grenade and mortar fire or injected with viruses and bacilli, administered in the form of vaccines, to observe the effects of diseases inoculated.
They were initiated and research about the effects of untreated venereal diseases, and for that, prisoners, both women were raped and men to be infected with syphilis and gonorrhea.
At the end of the war, the US occupation authorities have guaranteed results Dr. Ishii immunity in exchange for his studies. It therefore never spent a day in the life in prison, allowing themselves to continue their studies in another lab.

He died at the age of 67 years due to throat cancer.

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