<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_X" id="CHAPTER_X"></SPAN>CHAPTER X.</h2>
<h3>SUMMARY OF THE ALCHEMICAL DOCTRINE.—THE REPLACEMENT OF THE THREE PRINCIPLES OF THE ALCHEMISTS BY THE SINGLE PRINCIPLE OF PHLOGISTON.</h3>
<p>The <i>Sacred Art</i>, which had its origin and home
in Egypt, was very definitely associated with the
religious rites, and the theological teaching, recognised
by the state. The Egyptian priests
were initiated into the mysteries of the divine
art: and as the initiated claimed to imitate the
work of the deity, the priest was regarded by the
ordinary people as something more than a representative,
as a mirror, of the divinity. The
sacred art of Egypt was transmuted into alchemy
by contact with European thought and handicrafts,
and the tenets and mysticism of the Catholic
Church; and the conception of nature, which was
the result of this blending, prevailed from about
the 9th until towards the end of the 18th
century.</p>
<p>Like its predecessor, alchemy postulated an
orderly universe; but alchemy was richer in
fantastic details, more picturesquely embroidered,
more prodigal of strange fancies, than the sacred
art of Egypt.</p>
<p>The alchemist constructed his ordered scheme
of nature on the basis of the supposed universality
of life. For him, everything lived, and the life of
things was threefold. The alchemist thought he
recognised the manifestation of life in the form,
<SPAN name="Page_123" id="Page_123"></SPAN>or body, of a thing, in its soul, and in its spirit.
Things might differ much in appearance, in
size, taste, smell, and other outward properties,
and yet be intimately related, because, according
to the alchemist, they were produced from the
same principles, they were animated by the same
soul. Things might resemble one another closely
in their outward properties and yet differ widely
in essential features, because, according to the
alchemist, they were formed from different
elements, in their spiritual properties they were
unlike. The alchemists taught that the true
transformation, in alchemical language the transmutation,
of one thing into another could be
effected only by spiritual means acting on the
spirit of the thing, because the transmutation
consisted essentially in raising the substance to
the highest perfection whereof it was capable;
the result of this spiritual action might become
apparent in the material form of the substance.
In attempting to apply such vague conceptions as
these, alchemy was obliged to use the language
which had been developed for the expression of
human emotions and desires, not only for the
explanation of the facts it observed, but also for
the bare recital of these facts.</p>
<p>The outlook of alchemy on the world outside
human beings was essentially anthropomorphic.
In the image of man, the alchemist created his
universe.</p>
<p>In the times when alchemy was dominant, the
divine scheme of creation, and the place given
to man in that scheme, were supposed to be
thoroughly understood. Everything had its
<SPAN name="Page_124" id="Page_124"></SPAN>place, designed for it from the beginning, and
in that place it remained unless it were forced
from it by violent means. A great part of the
business of experimental alchemy was to discover
the natural position, or condition, of each substance;
and the discovery was to be made by
interpreting the facts brought to light by observation
and experiment by the aid of hypotheses
deduced from the general scheme of things which
had been formed independently of observation or
experiment. Alchemy was a part of magic; for
magic interprets and corrects the knowledge
gained by the senses by the touchstone of
generalisations which have been supplied, partly
by the emotions, and partly by extra-human
authority, and accepted as necessarily true.</p>
<p>The conception of natural order which regulates
the life of the savage is closely related to that
which guided the alchemists. The essential
features of both are the notion that everything
is alive, and the persuasion that things can be
radically acted on only by using life as a factor.
There is also an intimate connexion between
alchemy and witchcraft. Witches were people
who were supposed to make an unlawful use
of the powers of life; alchemists were often
thought to pass beyond what is permitted to
the creature, and to encroach on the prerogative
of the Creator.</p>
<p>The long duration of alchemy shows that it
appealed to some deep-seated want of human
beings. Was not that want the necessity for
the realisation of order in the universe? Men
were unwilling to wait until patient examination
<SPAN name="Page_125" id="Page_125"></SPAN>of the facts of their own nature, and the facts of
nature outside themselves, might lead them to
the realisation of the interdependence of all
things. They found it easier to evolve a scheme
of things from a superficial glance at themselves
and their surroundings; naturally they adopted
the easier plan. Alchemy was a part of the plan
of nature produced by this method. The extraordinary
dominancy of such a scheme is testified
to by the continued belief in alchemy, although
the one experiment, which seems to us to be the
crucial experiment of the system, was never
accomplished. But it is also to be remembered
that the alchemists were acquainted with, and
practised, many processes which we should now
describe as operations of manufacturing and
technical chemistry; and the practical usefulness
of these processes bore testimony, of the
kind which convinces the plain man, to the
justness of their theories.</p>
<p>I have always regarded two facts as most
interesting and instructive: that the doctrine
of the essential unity of all things, and the
simplicity of natural order, was accepted for
centuries by many, I think one may say, by most
men, as undoubtedly a true presentation of the
divine scheme of things; and, secondly, that in
more recent times people were quite as certain of
the necessary truth of the doctrine, the exact
opposite of the alchemical, that the Creator had
divided his creation into portions each of which
was independent of all the others. Both of these
schemes were formed by the same method, by
introspection preceding observation; both were
<SPAN name="Page_126" id="Page_126"></SPAN>overthrown by the same method, by observation
and experiment proceeding hand in hand with
reasoning. In each case, the humility of science
vanquished the conceit of ignorance.</p>
<p>The change from alchemy to chemistry is an
admirable example of the change from a theory
formed by looking inwards, and then projected
on to external facts, to a theory formed by
studying facts, and then thinking about them.
This change proceeded slowly; it is not possible
to name a time when it may be said, here
alchemy finishes and chemistry begins. To
adapt a saying of one of the alchemists, quoted
in a former chapter; alchemy would not easily
give up its nature, and fought for its life; but
an agent was found strong enough to overcome
and kill it, and then that agent also had
the power to change the lifeless remains into a
new and pure body. The agent was the accurate
and imaginative investigation of facts.</p>
<p>The first great step taken in the path which
led from alchemy to chemistry was the substitution
of one Principle, the Principle of Phlogiston,
for the three Principles of salt, sulphur, and
mercury. This step was taken by concentrating
attention and investigation, by replacing the
superficial examination of many diverse phenomena
by the more searching study of one class
of occurrences. That the field of study should
be widened, it was necessary that it should first
be narrowed.</p>
<p>Lead, tin, iron, or copper is calcined. The
prominent and striking feature of these events is
the disappearance of the metal, and the formation
<SPAN name="Page_127" id="Page_127"></SPAN>of something very unlike it. But the original
metal is restored by a second process, which is
like the first because it also is a calcination, but
seems to differ from the first operation in that
the burnt metal is calcined with another substance,
with grains of wheat or powdered charcoal.
Led thereto by their theory that destruction
must precede re-vivification, death must
come before resurrection, the alchemists confined
their attention to one feature common to all calcinations
of metals, and gave a superficial description
of these occurrences by classing them
together as processes of mortification. Sulphur,
wood, wax, oil, and many other things are easily
burned: the alchemists said, these things also
undergo mortification, they too are killed; but,
as "man can restore that which man has
destroyed," it must be possible to restore to
life the thing which has been mortified. The
burnt sulphur, wood, wax, or oil, is not really
dead, the alchemists argued; to use the allegory
of Paracelsus, they are like young lions which
are born dead, and are brought to life by the
roaring of their parents: if we make a sufficiently
loud noise, if we use the proper means, we shall
bring life into what seems to be dead material.
As it is the roaring of the parents of the young
lions which alone can cause the still-born cubs to
live, so it is only by the spiritual agency of life,
proceeded the alchemical argument, that life can
be brought into the mortified sulphur, wood, wax,
and oil.</p>
<p>The alchemical explanation was superficial,
theoretical, in the wrong meaning of that word,
<SPAN name="Page_128" id="Page_128"></SPAN>and unworkable. It was superficial because it
overlooked the fact that the primary calcination,
the mortification, of the metals, and the other
substances, was effected in the air, that is to say,
in contact with something different from the
thing which was calcined; the explanation was
of the kind which people call theoretical, when
they wish to condemn an explanation and put it
out of court, because it was merely a re-statement
of the facts in the language of a theory which had
not been deduced from the facts themselves, or
from facts like those to be explained, but from
what were supposed to be facts without proper
investigation, and, if facts, were of a totally
different kind from those to which the explanation
applied; and lastly, the explanation was unworkable,
because it suggested no method whereby
its accuracy could be tested, no definite line
of investigation which might be pursued.</p>
<p>That great naturalist, the Honourable Robert
Boyle (born in 1626, died in 1691), very perseveringly
besought those who examined processes
of calcination to pay heed to the action of
everything which might take part in the processes.
He was especially desirous they should consider
what part the air might play in calcinations; he
spoke of the air as a "menstruum or additament,"
and said that, in such operations as calcination,
"We may well take the freedom to
examine ... whether there intervene not a
coalition of the parts of the body wrought upon
with those of the menstruum, whereby the produced
concrete may be judged to result from the
union of both."<SPAN name="Page_129" id="Page_129"></SPAN></p>
<p>It was by examining the part played by
the air in processes of calcination and burning
that men at last became able to give approximately
complete descriptions of these processes.</p>
<p>Boyle recognised that the air is not a simple
or elementary substance; he spoke of it as "a
confused aggregate of effluviums from such
differing bodies, that, though they all agree in
constituting by their minuteness and various
motions one great mass of fluid matter, yet perhaps
there is scarce a more heterogeneous body
in the world." Clement of Alexandria who lived
in the end of the 2nd, and the early part of
the 3rd, century A.D., seems to have regarded
the air as playing a very important part in
combustions; he said—"Airs are divided into
two categories; an air for the divine flame, which
is the soul; and a material air which is the
nourisher of sensible fire, and the basis of combustible
matter." Sentences like that I have just
quoted are found here and there in the writings
of the earlier and later alchemists; now and
again we also find statements which may be interpreted,
in the light of the fuller knowledge we
now have, as indicating at least suspicions that
the atmosphere is a mixture of different kinds
of air, and that only some of these take part
in calcining and burning operations. Those
suspicions were confirmed by experiments on
the calcination of metals and other substances,
conducted in the 17th century by Jean Rey
a French physician, and by John Mayow of
Oxford. But these observations and the conclusions
founded on them, did not bear much
<SPAN name="Page_130" id="Page_130"></SPAN>fruit until the time of Lavoisier, that is, towards
the close of the 18th century. They were overshadowed
and put aside by the work of Stahl
(1660-1724). Some of the alchemists of the
14th, 15th and 16th centuries taught that combustion
and calcination are processes wherein <i>the
igneous principle</i> is destroyed, using the word
"destroyed" in its alchemical meaning. This
description of processes of burning was much
more in keeping with the ideas of the time than
that given by Boyle, Rey and Mayow. It was
adopted by Stahl, and made the basis of a general
theory of those changes wherein one substance
disappears and another, or others, very unlike it,
are produced.</p>
<p>That he might bring into one point of view,
and compare the various changes effected by the
agency of fire, Stahl invented a new Principle,
which he named <i>Phlogiston</i>, and constructed an
hypothesis which is generally known as the
phlogistic theory. He explained, and applied,
this hypothesis in various books, especially in
one published at Halle in 1717.</p>
<p>Stahl observed that many substances which
differed much from one another in various respects
were alike in one respect; they were all
combustible. All the combustible substances, he
argued, must contain a common principle; he
named this supposed principle, <i>phlogiston</i> (from
the Greek word <i>phlogistos</i> = burnt, or set on fire).
Stahl said that the phlogiston of a combustible
thing escapes as the substance burns, and, becoming
apparent to the senses, is named fire or
flame. The phlogiston in a combustible substance
<SPAN name="Page_131" id="Page_131"></SPAN>was supposed to be so intimately associated
with something else that our senses cannot perceive
it; nevertheless, the theory said, it is there;
we can see only the escaping phlogiston, we can
perceive only the phlogiston which is set free
from its combination with other things. The
theory thought of phlogiston as imprisoned in
the thing which can be burnt, and as itself forming
part of the prison; that the prisoner should
be set free, the walls of the prison had to be
removed; the freeing of the prisoner destroyed
the prison. As escaping, or free, phlogiston was
called fire, or flame, so the phlogiston in a combustible
substance was sometimes called combined
fire, or flame in the state of combination. A
peculiarity of the strange thing called phlogiston
was that it preferred to be concealed in something,
hidden, imprisoned, combined; free
<ins class="correction" title="Transcriber's Note: Original "phlogstion".">phlogiston</ins>
was supposed to be always ready to become
combined phlogiston.</p>
<p>The phlogistic theory said that what remains
when a substance has been burnt is the original
substance deprived of phlogiston; and, therefore,
to restore the phlogiston to the product of burning
is to re-form the combustible substance. But
how is such a restoration of phlogiston to be
accomplished? Evidently by heating the burnt
thing with something which is very ready to
burn. Because, according to the theory, everything
which can be burnt contains phlogiston,
the more ready a substance is to burn the richer
it is in phlogiston; burning is the outrush of
phlogiston, phlogiston prefers to be combined
with something; therefore, if you mix what
<SPAN name="Page_132" id="Page_132"></SPAN>remains after burning, with something which is
very combustible, and heat the mixture, you are
bringing the burnt matter under conditions which
are very favourable for the reception of phlogiston
by it, for you are bringing it into intimate
contact with something from which freedom-hating
phlogiston is being forced to escape.</p>
<p>Charcoal, sulphur, phosphorus, oils and fats
are easily burnt; these substances were, therefore,
chosen for the purpose of changing things
which had been burnt into things which could
again be burnt; these, and a few other substances
like these, were classed together, and called <i>phlogisticating
agents</i>.</p>
<p>Very many of the substances which were dealt
with by the experimenters of the last quarter of
the 17th, and the first half of the 18th, century,
were either substances which could be burned,
or those which had been produced by burning;
hence the phlogistic theory brought into one
point of view, compared, and emphasised the
similarities between, a great many things which
had not been thought of as connected before that
theory was promulgated. Moreover, the theory
asserted that all combustible, or incinerable,
things are composed of phlogiston, and another
principle, or, as was often said, another element,
which is different in different kinds of combustible
substances. The metals, for instance, were said
to be composed of phlogiston and an earthy principle
or element, which was somewhat different
in different metals. The phlogisteans taught
that the earthy principle of a metal remains in
the form of ash, cinders, or calx, when the metal
<SPAN name="Page_133" id="Page_133"></SPAN>is calcined, or, as they expressed it, when the
metal is deprived of its phlogiston.</p>
<p>The phlogistic theory savoured of alchemy; it
postulated an undefined, undefinable, intangible
Principle; it said that all combustible substances
are formed by the union of this Principle with
another, which is sometimes of an earthy character,
sometimes of a fatty nature, sometimes
highly volatile in habit. Nevertheless, the
theory of Stahl was a step away from purely
alchemical conceptions towards the accurate description
of a very important class of changes.
The principle of phlogiston could be recognised
by the senses as it was in the act of escaping
from a substance; and the other principle of
combustible things was scarcely a Principle in
the alchemical sense, for, in the case of metals
at any rate, it remained when the things which
had contained it were burnt, and could be seen,
handled, and weighed. To say that metals are
composed of phlogiston and an earthy substance,
was to express facts in such a language that the
expression might be made the basis of experimental
inquiry; it was very different from the
assertion that metals are produced by the spiritual
actions of the three Principles, salt, mercury and
sulphur, the first of which is not salt, the second
is not mercury, and the third is not sulphur.
The followers of Stahl often spoke of metals as
composed of phlogiston and an <i>element</i> of an
earthy character; this expression also was an
advance, from the hazy notion of <i>Element</i> in purely
alchemical writings, towards accuracy and fulness
of description. An element was now something
<SPAN name="Page_134" id="Page_134"></SPAN>which could he seen and experimented
with; it was no longer a semi-spiritual existence
which could not be grasped by the senses.</p>
<p>The phlogistic theory regarded the calcination
of a metal as the separation of it into two things,
unlike the metal, and unlike each other; one of
these things was phlogiston, the other was an
earth-like residue. The theory thought of the
re-formation of a metal from its calx, that is, the
earthy substance which remains after combustion,
as the combination of two things to produce one,
apparently homogeneous, substance. Metals appeared
to the phlogisteans, as they appeared to
the alchemists, to be composite substances. Processes
of burning were regarded by alchemists
and phlogisteans alike, as processes of simplification.</p>
<p>The fact had been noticed and recorded, during
the middle ages, that the earth-like matter which
remains when a metal is calcined is heavier than
the metal itself. From this fact, modern investigators
of natural phenomena would draw the
conclusion, that calcination of a metal is an addition
of something to the metal, not a separation
of the metal into different things. It seems
impossible to us that a substance should be
separated into portions, and one of these parts
should weigh as much as, or more than, the
whole.</p>
<p>The exact investigation of material changes
called chemistry rests on the statement that
<i>mass</i>, and mass is practically measured by <i>weight</i>,
is the one property of what we call matter, the
determination whereof enables us to decide
<SPAN name="Page_135" id="Page_135"></SPAN>whether a change is a combination, or coalescence,
of different things, or a separation of one
thing into parts. That any part of a material
system can be removed without the weight of
the portion which remains being less than the
original weight of the whole system, is unthinkable,
in the present state of our knowledge of
material changes.</p>
<p>But in the 17th century, and throughout
most of the 18th, only a few of those who
examined changes in the properties of substances
paid heed to changes of weight; they had not
realised the importance of the property of mass,
as measured by weight. The convinced upholder
of the phlogistic theory had two answers to the
argument, that, because the earth-like product of
the calcination of a metal weighs more than the
metal itself, therefore the metal cannot have lost
something in the process; for, if one portion of
what is taken away weighs more than the metal
from which it has been separated, it is evident
that the weight of the two portions into which
the metal is said to have been divided must be
considerably greater than the weight of the
undivided metal. The upholders of the theory
sometimes met the argument by saying, "Of
course the calx weighs more than the metal,
because phlogiston tends to lighten a body
which contains it; and therefore the body weighs
more after it has lost phlogiston than it did
when the phlogiston formed part of it;" sometimes,
and more often, their answer was—"loss
or gain of weight is an accident, the essential
thing is change of qualities."<SPAN name="Page_136" id="Page_136"></SPAN></p>
<p>If the argument against the separation of a
metal into two constituents, by calcination, were
answered to-day as it was answered by the
upholders of the phlogistic theory, in the middle
of the 18th century, the answers would justly
be considered inconsequent and ridiculous. But
it does not follow that the statements were
either far-fetched or absurd at the time they
were made. They were expressed in the
phraseology of the time; a phraseology, it is
true, sadly lacking in consistency, clearness, and
appropriateness, but the only language then
available for the description of such changes as
those which happen when metals are calcined.
One might suppose that it must always have
sounded ridiculous to say that the weight of a
thing can be decreased by adding something to
it, that part of a thing weighs more than the
whole of it. But the absurdity disappears if it
can be admitted that mass, which is measured by
weight, may be a property like colour, or taste,
or smell; for the colour, taste, or smell of a
thing may certainly be made less by adding something
else, and the colour, taste, or smell of
a thing may also be increased by adding something
else. If we did not know that what we
call <i>quantity of substance</i> is measured by the
property named <i>mass</i>, we might very well accept
the proposition that the entrance of phlogiston
into a substance decreases the quantity, hence
the mass, and, therefore, the weight, of the
substance.</p>
<p>Although Stahl and his followers were
emerging from the trammels of alchemy, they
<SPAN name="Page_137" id="Page_137"></SPAN>were still bound by many of the conceptions of
that scheme of nature. We have learned, in
previous chapters, that the central idea of
alchemy was expressed in the saying: "Matter
must be deprived of its properties in order to
draw out its soul." The properties of substances
are everything to the modern chemist—indeed,
such words as iron, copper, water, and gold are
to him merely convenient expressions for certain
definable groups of properties—but the phlogisteans
regarded the properties of things, including
mass, as of secondary importance; they
were still trying to get beneath the properties of
a thing, to its hypothetical essence, or substance.</p>
<p>Looking back, we cannot think of phlogiston
as a substance, or as a thing, in the modern
meanings of these terms as they are used in
natural science. Nowadays we think, we are
obliged to think, of the sum of the quantities
of all the things in the universe as unchanging, and
unchangeable by any agency whereof we have
definite knowledge. The meaning we give to
the word <i>thing</i> rests upon the acceptance of this
hypothesis. But the terms <i>substance</i>, <i>thing</i>,
<i>properties</i> were used very vaguely a couple of
centuries ago; and it would be truly absurd to
carry back to that time the meanings which we
give to these terms to-day, and then to brand
as ridiculous the attempts of the men who studied,
then, the same problems which we study now, to
express the results of their study in generalisations
which employed the terms in question, in
what seems to us a loose, vague, and inexact
manner.<SPAN name="Page_138" id="Page_138"></SPAN></p>
<p>By asserting, and to some extent experimentally proving,
the existence of one principle in many
apparently very different substances (or, as would
be said to-day, one property common to many
substances), the phlogistic theory acted as a very
useful means for collecting, and placing in a
favourable position for closer inspection, many
substances which would probably have remained
scattered and detached from one another had
this theory not been constructed. A single
assumption was made, that all combustible
substances are alike in one respect, namely, in
containing combined fire, or phlogiston; by the
help of this assumption, the theory of phlogiston
emphasised the fundamental similarity between
all processes of combustion. The theory of
phlogiston was extraordinarily simple, compared
with the alchemical vagaries which preceded it.
Hoefer says, in his <i>Histoire de la Chimie</i>, "If it is
true that simplicity is the distinctive character
of verity, never was a theory so true as that of
Stahl."</p>
<p>The phlogistic theory did more than serve as a
means for bringing together many apparently
disconnected facts. By concentrating the attention
of the students of material changes on
one class of events, and giving descriptions of
these events without using either of the four
alchemical Elements, or the three Principles,
Stahl, and those who followed him, did an
immense service to the advancement of clear
thinking about natural occurrences. The principle
of phlogiston was more tangible, and more
readily used, than the Salt, Sulphur, and Mercury
<SPAN name="Page_139" id="Page_139"></SPAN>of the alchemists; and to accustom people to
speak of the material substance which remained
when a metal, or other combustible substance,
was calcined or burnt, as one of the <i>elements</i> of
the thing which had been changed, prepared the
way for the chemical conception of an element
as a definite substance with certain definite
properties.</p>
<p>In addition to these advantages, the phlogistic
theory was based on experiments, and led to
experiments, the results of which proved that the
capacity to undergo combustion might be conveyed
to an incombustible substance, by causing
it to react with some other substance, itself
combustible, under definite conditions. The
theory thus prepared the way for the representation
of a chemical change as an interaction
between definite kinds of substances, marked by
precise alterations both of properties and composition.</p>
<p>The great fault of the theory of phlogiston,
considered as a general conception which brings
many facts into one point of view, and leads the
way to new and exact knowledge, was its looseness,
its flexibility. It was very easy to make
use of the theory in a broad and general way; by
stretching it here, and modifying it there, it
seemed to cover all the facts concerning combustion
and calcination which were discovered
during two generations after the publication of
Stahl's books. But many of the subsidiary
hypotheses which were required to make the
theory cover the new facts were contradictory,
or at any rate seemed to be contradictory, of the
<SPAN name="Page_140" id="Page_140"></SPAN>primary assumptions of the theory. The addition
of this ancillary machinery burdened the
mechanism of the theory, threw it out of order,
and finally made it unworkable. The phlogistic
theory was destroyed by its own cumbersomeness.</p>
<p>A scientific theory never lasts long if its fundamental
assumptions are stated so loosely that they
may be easily modified, expanded, contracted, and
adjusted to meet the requirements of newly discovered
facts. It is true that the theories which
have been of the greatest service in science, as
summaries of the relations between established
facts, and suggestions of lines of investigation,
have been stated in terms whose full meaning
has gradually unfolded itself. But the foundations
of these theories have been at once so rigidly
defined and clearly stated as to be incapable of
essential modification, and so full of meaning and
widely applicable as to cover large classes of facts which
were unknown when the theories were
constructed. Of the founders of the lasting and
expansible theories of natural science, it may
be said, that "thoughts beyond their thoughts to
those high bards were given."</p>
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