
Most professional historians see the relationship between pre-modern and modern alchemy as one of discontinuity and contrast. Mike A. Zuber challenges this dominant understanding and explores aspects of alchemy that have been neglected by recent work in the history of science. The predominant focus on the scientific aspect of alchemy, such as laboratory experiment, practical techniques, and material ingredients, argues Zuber, marginalizes the things that render alchemy so fascinating: its rich and vivid imagery, reliance on the medium of manuscript, and complicated relationship with religion.Spiritual Alchemy traces the early-modern antecedents of modern alchemy through generations of followers of Jacob Boehme, the cobbler and theosopher of Görlitz. As Boehme's disciples down the generations -- including the Silesian nobleman Abraham von Franckenberg and the London-based German immigrant Dionysius Andreas Freher, among others -- studied his writings, they drew on his spiritual alchemy, adapted it, and communicated it to their contemporaries. Spiritual alchemy combines traditional elements of alchemical literature with Christian mysticism. Defying the boundaries between science and religion, this combination was transmitted from Görlitz ultimately to England. In 1850, it inspired a young woman, later known as Mary Anne Atwood, to write her Suggestive Inquiry into the Hermetic Mystery, usually seen as the first modern interpretation of alchemy. Drawing extensively on manuscript or otherwise obscure sources, Zuber documents continuity between pre-modern and modern forms of alchemy while exploring this hybrid phenomenon.
This work investigates the historical continuity between pre-modern and modern alchemy by tracing the evolution of spiritual alchemy from the writings of Jacob Boehme to the nineteenth-century interpretations of Mary Anne Atwood. Mike A. Zuber, a scholar of Western esotericism, challenges the prevailing academic view that separates early-modern alchemy from its modern iterations. By analyzing manuscript sources and the intellectual lineage of Boehme's disciples, Zuber argues that spiritual alchemy represents a persistent, hybrid tradition that synthesizes Christian mysticism with traditional alchemical imagery, thereby bridging the gap between historical practice and modern esoteric thought.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars in the field of Western esotericism recognize this text as a significant contribution to the study of alchemical historiography. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose and the author's meticulous use of obscure manuscript sources to support his arguments.
Page Count:
336
Publication Date:
2021-11-02
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190073047
ISBN-13:
9780190073046
No comments yet. Be the first to share your thoughts!