Chapter Jan Baptist Van Helmont and the Medical-Alchemical Perspectives of Poison
Author(s)
Hedesan, Delia Georgiana
Collection
WellcomeLanguage
EnglishAbstract
This chapter discusses Jan Baptist Van Helmont’s (1579-1644) views on poison in light of his medical alchemy. First, it argues that his approach was fundamentally influenced by the theories of ‘universal poison’ and ‘potent poison’ developed by Theophrastus von Hohenheim, called Paracelsus (1493-1541). Paracelsus’s ideas supported Van Helmont’s own views that medical alchemy was the only key to curing all diseases and poisons. At the same time, Van Helmont sought to set these concepts more clearly in a Christian framework, and also used them to launch a scathing attack on Galenic medicine and practices. Moreover, Van Helmont used poison theory to advance his belief in the existence of a universal solvent Alkahest that could extract medical essences out of any being. The Alkahest could then be used to construct an all-powerful universal medicine that proved God’s special providence to mankind.
Keywords
Van Helmont, medical alchemy, Paracelsianism, Paracelsus, poison theories, universal solvent, Alkahest, universal medicineISBN
9780128095546, 9780128095591Publisher
Elsevier/Academic PressPublication date and place
2017Grantor
Classification
Magic, alchemy and hermetic thought
Biochemistry