Dym Warren Alexander
Department of History, Bucknell University, Lewisburg, Pennsylvania 17837, USA.
Ambix. 2008 Nov;55(3):232-54. doi: 10.1179/174582308X358105.
Historians have assumed that alchemy had a close association with mining, but exactly how and why miners were interested in alchemy remains unclear. This paper argues that alchemical theory began to be synthesised with classical and Christian theories of the earth in mining books after 1500, and served an important practical function. The theory of metals that mining officials addressed spoke of mineral vapours (Witterungen) that left visible markings on the earth's surface. The prospector searched for mineral ore in part by studying these indications. Mineral vapours also explained the functioning of the dowsing rod, which prospectors applied to the discovery of ore. Historians of early chemistry and mining have claimed that mining had a modernising influence by stripping alchemy of its theoretical component, but this paper shows something quite to the contrary: mining officials may have been sceptical of the possibility of artificial transmutation, but they were interested in a theory of the earth that could translate into prospecting knowledge.
历史学家们认为炼金术与采矿有着密切的联系,但矿工们究竟如何以及为何对炼金术感兴趣仍不清楚。本文认为,1500年后,炼金术理论开始在采矿书籍中与古典及基督教的地球理论相融合,并发挥了重要的实际作用。采矿官员所探讨的金属理论提到了矿物蒸汽(Witterungen),这些蒸汽在地球表面留下了可见的痕迹。探矿者部分地通过研究这些迹象来寻找矿石。矿物蒸汽也解释了探矿者用于发现矿石的探测棒的作用。早期化学和采矿的历史学家声称,采矿通过剥离炼金术的理论成分而产生了现代化影响,但本文所展示的情况却恰恰相反:采矿官员可能对人工嬗变的可能性持怀疑态度,但他们对一种能够转化为探矿知识的地球理论感兴趣。