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Roger Bacon and the Incorruptible Human, 1220-1292 - Alchemy, Pharmacology and the Desire to Prolong Life (Hardcover, 1st ed. 2023)
Loot Price: R3,962
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Roger Bacon and the Incorruptible Human, 1220-1292 - Alchemy, Pharmacology and the Desire to Prolong Life (Hardcover, 1st ed. 2023)
Series: Palgrave Studies in Medieval and Early Modern Medicine
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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This book examines the Franciscan alchemist Roger Bacon's
(1220-1292) interest in the role of alchemy in medicine, and how
this interest connected with the thirteenth-century milieu in which
he was writing. Though twelfth-century Latin alchemy had largely
been concerned with transmuting base metals into noble ones, Bacon
believed that the natural principles taught in alchemy would be
better used in medicine. In an age where many physicians were
theorizing about ways to prevent the effects of aging, Bacon held
that combining alchemy and humoral medicine would allow one to
extend their life by decades, even centuries. By examining Bacon's
alchemical, medical, and mathematical works, this book argues that
Bacon combined a number of sources to create a unique plan for
prolonging human life. His understanding of disease and aging was
ultimately Galenic in nature, and his understanding of how
pharmaceuticals work can be traced back to his mathematical
theories, especially that of the multiplication of species. The
book provides a new system for organizing Bacon's
alchemically-produced medicines, and explains what Bacon saw as the
difference between each, and how they could have different
physiological effects. Bacon is situated within the
thirteenth-century contexts in which he was writing - that of the
university-educated and newly professionalized medical
practitioners, who were invested in finding ways to extend human
life; and the Franciscan order, with their understanding of the
innate goodness of the physical body, the resurrection, and
corporeal union with God. Filling a major lacuna in scholarship on
the history of medieval medical writings, this book provides vital
reading for historians of medicine, pre- and early modern European
science, and medieval philosophy and religion.
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