Criticizing Chrysopoeia? Alchemy, Chemistry, Academics, and Satire in the Northern Netherlands, 1650–1750

Publication date

2018-06-01

Authors

Hendriksen, M.M.A.ORCID 0000-0001-7347-4432ISNI 0000000423020901

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Document Type

Article

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Abstract

This essay argues that we should consider perceptions of and associations with alchemical language and practices in academic and artisanal as well as popular culture in the Netherlands in order to gain a better understanding of the supposed transformation of alchemy into chemistry in this region. A fresh view on the sites of Dutch chemistry around 1700 is provided, demonstrating that the unique sociopolitical and geological characteristics of the Low Countries meant that the process of the “disappearance” of alchemy was distinctly different from that in the neighboring German lands. Finally, the essay shows that, as Lawrence M. Principe has previously suggested, the rhetoric with which Herman Boerhaave and other Dutch academics rejected the “excesses of chemistry” was less empirically than morally and socially motivated.

Keywords

Alchemy, History of Chemistry, History of Science, Intellectual history, Cultural history

Citation

Hendriksen, M M A 2018, 'Criticizing Chrysopoeia? Alchemy, Chemistry, Academics, and Satire in the Northern Netherlands, 1650–1750', Isis, vol. 109, no. 2, pp. 235-253. https://doi.org/10.1086/698233