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2004, Journal of Scientific Exploration
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5 pages
1 file
A Review of the book "Des Savants face à l‘Occulte 1870-1940," a collection of essays under the direction of Bernadette Bensaude-Vincent and Christine Blondel. Paris: La Découverte , 2002. Trade paperback of 233 pages. 17.50 €. ISBN 2-7071-3616-6.
The British Journal for the History of Science, 2003
This is a remarkable book for several reasons. First of all there is the sheer detective work involved in mining the archives to produce a fascinating personal portrait of Mayerne and his times. Of particular value is Trevor-Roper's piecing together of the history of the French Huguenots before the diaspora consequent upon the Revocation of the Edict of Nantes. The book is also remarkable by virtue of its being a posthumous publication, brought to press by the dedicated labours of Blair Worden, who, although not a medical historian, has performed the task of editing in exemplary fashion. Since the book in fact originated in the 1970s, it is in many respects a period piece. This is certainly true of its historical style-the confident overarching themes underpinned by an impressive grasp of details, and an engaging focus on personalities. Perhaps the period stamp of the study is most apparent in Trevor-Roper's acceptance of Hermeticism as an important component of early modern science and medicine-testimony to his fascination with Frances Yates, whom he held in the highest regard. As a historian, he was clearly drawn to Yates's ability to capture the cultural and intellectual alterity of the Renaissance, and her genius for tapping rich seams of historical material overlooked by more conventional historiographies (as in her masterpieces, The French Academies of the Sixteenth Century (London, 1947) and The Art of Memory (London, 1966)). He shared with Yates an admiration for Marjorie Nicolson's Conway Letters (1930), where Mayerne figures as physician to Anne Conway. Yates's claims that Hermeticism played a pivotal role in the Scientific Revolution proved too much for historians of science and have damaged her own posthumous reputation. Few now accept her views. The invocation of Hermeticism does not, however, undermine Trevor-Roper's account of Mayerne, partly because his treatment of it is not intrusive ; Hermes Trismegistus is named only once in the main text and Hermeticism is defined in terms which equate to chemical medicine mainly in the account of Joseph du Chesne and Andreas Libavius. Trevor-Roper's Mayerne is certainly no mystic. His reformist mentality is compared to Francis Bacon's. Conceivably the death of Yates in 1981 and the subsequent disfavour into which her views fell may account for Trevor-Roper's abandonment of his biography. The text as published is in fact complete in all necessary respects. Notwithstanding the lapse of time between composition and publication, Europe's Physician is a compelling and richly informative study with much to offer everyone with an interest in early seventeenth-century history, science and medicine.
Medical History, 2004
of buildings as hospitals and warns against comparison with the layout of modern hospitals. Sites previously believed to be hospitals may have been used for storage. Ralph Jackson finds that instruments identified as surgical were finely crafted, and the more common``quasi medical implements'' might have had a cosmetic use. From the first century AD there was consistency in form of the mainly bronze or brass instruments. However, Roman blacksmiths could produce steel instruments and in some regions ore yielded natural steel. Several papers deal with pharmacology. Marina Ciaraldi warns that the``use of modern knowledge of medicinal plants to interpret archaeological assemblages can lead to erroneous conclusions''. Plant remains in dolia in the Villa Vesuvio were compared and were consistent with preparations found in writings by Pliny and Dioscorides. Debby Banham uses a compilation of four collections of recipes for her investigation of Anglo-Saxon materia medica. However, this is complicated by botanical name changes throughout history. Sally Crawford and Tony Randall also examine an Anglo-Saxon text, Bald's Leechbook, and are of the opinion that, although the described medicine was highly developed, archaeological resources are necessary to confirm the recipes. In his paper about the Mary Rose medical chest, Brendan Derham describes how he examined the contents of the forty-four artefacts found in the barbersurgeon's cabin by various analytical techniques and found medicaments still in use today. The final papers deal with more recent discoveries. Mouli Start writes about the burials at the Newcastle Infirmary between 1753 and 1845. The majority of skeletons are disarticulated and she speculates that some of the bodies were dissected while this was illegal before the Anatomy Act of 1832. The paper by Megan Brickley concerns the recognition of osteoporosis-related fractures in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries using historical sources. These papers, edited by Robert Arnott, emphasize the importance of cooperation between medical historians and archaeologists in revealing everything possible about medical archaeology.
Medical History, 2004
of buildings as hospitals and warns against comparison with the layout of modern hospitals. Sites previously believed to be hospitals may have been used for storage. Ralph Jackson finds that instruments identified as surgical were finely crafted, and the more common``quasi medical implements'' might have had a cosmetic use. From the first century AD there was consistency in form of the mainly bronze or brass instruments. However, Roman blacksmiths could produce steel instruments and in some regions ore yielded natural steel. Several papers deal with pharmacology. Marina Ciaraldi warns that the``use of modern knowledge of medicinal plants to interpret archaeological assemblages can lead to erroneous conclusions''. Plant remains in dolia in the Villa Vesuvio were compared and were consistent with preparations found in writings by Pliny and Dioscorides. Debby Banham uses a compilation of four collections of recipes for her investigation of Anglo-Saxon materia medica. However, this is complicated by botanical name changes throughout history. Sally Crawford and Tony Randall also examine an Anglo-Saxon text, Bald's Leechbook, and are of the opinion that, although the described medicine was highly developed, archaeological resources are necessary to confirm the recipes. In his paper about the Mary Rose medical chest, Brendan Derham describes how he examined the contents of the forty-four artefacts found in the barbersurgeon's cabin by various analytical techniques and found medicaments still in use today. The final papers deal with more recent discoveries. Mouli Start writes about the burials at the Newcastle Infirmary between 1753 and 1845. The majority of skeletons are disarticulated and she speculates that some of the bodies were dissected while this was illegal before the Anatomy Act of 1832. The paper by Megan Brickley concerns the recognition of osteoporosis-related fractures in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries using historical sources. These papers, edited by Robert Arnott, emphasize the importance of cooperation between medical historians and archaeologists in revealing everything possible about medical archaeology.
Renaissance Quarterly, 2002
Looking Through the Occult: Instrumentation, Esotericism, and Epistemology in the 19th Century
Huntington Library Quarterly, 2013
X + 430 pages; ISBN: 9780300123586 PAUL MONOD'S STUDY deftlyintegrates tbe bistoryof Science witb tbe bistory of magic, from tbe perspective of a scbolar well grounded in tbe political and religious bistory of England. Tbe book's title alludes not just to tbe Temple on tbe Mount mentioned in tbe books of Samuel and Kings but also to tbe ecstatic vision of Ezekiel, for wbom tbe building offers a window onto divine creation. Tbe Spanisb Jesuit J. B. Villalpando publisbed an influential study of tbe Temple in 1605, wbicb saw tbe structure as a microcosm of God's mind tbrougb tbe map of Cbrist's body. Tbougb Protestants like Samuel Lee rejected Villalpando's literalism, tbe Temple itself was sometimes regarded as a model of Utopian perfection in tbe seventeentb century. Francis Bacon probably based bis college of fellows in The New Atlantis (wbicb be calls "Salomon's House") on tbe Temple, wbue Isaac Newton composed a commentary on it around tbe same time tbat an enormous model containing two tbousand rooms and some seven tbousand pillars was put on display in London. WTiat Monod ñnds particularly interesting about Newton's text is not bis descriptive, matbematical analysis of tbe structure but ratber tbe way in wbicb be invokes concepts derived from astrology and alcbemy in order to understand it. Nev\^on employs cold bard science and tbe occult simultaneously, witbout flnding tbem in conflict.
That the "death of God" produced a cataclysmic effect in nineteenth-century European consciousness is well known. Grand narratives tell us of the confrontation at that period between new representations of nature and the supernatural, life and death, the self and the beyond-all against the backdrop of an ascendant scientific materialism. Yet, the complex ways in which this was manifested in specific national contexts remains in many ways underexplored. It is those various attempts to make sense of new, seemingly marginal aspects of the modern secular experience that form the basis of Sofie Lachapelle's first book. Focusing on France between 1853 and 1931, Investigating the Supernatural depicts these efforts through the lenses of five different groups: the spiritists, the occultists, the mind doctors, the psychical researchers, and the metapsychists. This is a story of demarcation. From the beginning, Lachapelle sets the stage by reminding the reader of the role played by science and technology at that pivotal historical moment. In the nineteenth century, she observes, "human inventions seemed to be reaching into the realm of the fantastic." By introducing a sense of wonder into quotidian experiences, "science and technology created enchantment; they made the magical seem possible" (p. 2). How, then, to conceptualize the supernatural in such a context? To answer this question, the author situates her narrative within a broader theme: the attempt to "make science" at a time when science's very meaning was often undefined, when the barriers separating science from non-science remained porous.
This paper is an overview of aspects of the French journal Annales des Sciences Psychiques (ASP, 1891–1919). The ASP was founded by Charles Richet and Xavier Dariex. The development of the journal was assisted both by the prestige and infl uence of Richet as a scientist and of Félix Alcan as a publisher. For the nineteenth-century period the journal emphasized cases and experiments over theories. Much of this was about spontaneous telepathy and physical mediumship. Some of the authors included in the pages of the ASP were Émile Boirac, Ernesto Bozzano, Albert de Rochas, Giovanni Battista Ermacora, Paul Joire, and Julian Ochorowicz. The journal provided a forum in France to argue about standards in psychical research, discuss controversies, and to bring in information on the topic from foreign countries. This included translations of the work of members of the Society for Psychical Research, such as Frederic W. H. Myers. In 1908 the ASP was affi liated with the Sociétè Universelle d’Études Psychiques, becoming its offi cial publication. The ASP was important in establishing standards and in providing a forum for the development of psychical research in France.
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