Literature DB >> 15025075

Alchemy in popular culture: Leonardo Fioravanti and the search for the philosopher's stone.

W Eamon1.   

Abstract

This article examines the alchemical ideas and practices of the sixteenth-century Italian surgeon Leonardo Fioravanti. I argue that Fioravanti's "search for the philosopher's stone" was as much an effort at self-fashioning as a search for alchemical gold. Exploiting the fashion for alchemical drugs, he framed a "new theory" of healing that relied on the use of distilled drugs as a means of purging bodily corruptions. His theory resonated with popular culture, and made him the focus of an alternative medical movement. I conclude that Fioravanti's alchemy was not Paracelsianism, but relied much more on more immediate sources such as Arnald of Villanova, the pseudo-Lull, and the contemporary Milanese alchemist Ettore Ausonio.

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Year:  2000        PMID: 15025075     DOI: 10.1163/157338200x00182

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Early Sci Med        ISSN: 1383-7427            Impact factor:   0.756


  1 in total

1.  Distilling reliable remedies: Hieronymus Brunschwig's Liber de arte distillandi (1500) between alchemical learning and craft practice.

Authors:  Tillmann Taape
Journal:  Ambix       Date:  2014-08       Impact factor: 0.750

  1 in total

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