By Mark Morrisson
Mark Morrisson demanding situations the common dismissal of alchemy as a principally insignificant historic footnote to technology by way of prying into the revival of alchemy and its effect at the rising subatomic sciences of the overdue nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.Morrisson demonstrates its outstanding impact at the rising subatomic sciences of the past due nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. particularly, Morrisson examines the resurfacing of occult circles in this period of time and the way their curiosity in alchemical tropes had a considerable and traceable influence upon the technological know-how of the day. sleek Alchemy chronicles numerous encounters among occult conceptions of alchemy and the hot technology, describing how educational chemists, encouraged via the alchemy revival, tried to transmute the weather; to make gold.
Examining scientists guides, correspondence, talks, and laboratory notebooks in addition to the writings of occultists, alchemical tomes, and science-fiction tales, he argues that in the beginning of recent nuclear physics, the trajectories of technology and occultism---so frequently thought of antithetical---briefly merged.