Friday, May 26, 2023

Part 2 We are Not the First...The Blacksmith of Olympus ...The Forgotten Art of Gold Making ... The Caduceus of Hermes ... From Temples and Forums to Atomic Reactors

We are Not the First 
by Andrew Tomas
Chapter 4: 
The Blacksmith of Olympus 
Technology began with Hephaestus, or Vulcan, the world's first metallurgist, according to Greek mythology. His workshop - a sparkling dwelling of bronze - was on Mount Olympus. But eventually he settled in Sicily on Mount Etna, and legends affirm that the smoke from the crater comes from the furnaces of the god. Although the author has seen this smoke from Taormina, he could not confirm whether Hephaestus was still at his anvil. 

Greek myths speak of the four ages of man. First came the Golden Age, followed by the Silver Age, after which arrived the Bronze Age. The last epoch is the Iron Age in which we live today. Although iron is more plentiful than copper or gold, it is more difficult to melt and forge. Thus the ancient Greeks told us about the progress of metallurgy by this simple tale of how it had started with soft metals and ended with hard iron. 

The Stone Age, which had lasted for a long time, was followed by the Chalcolithic Age, when the old perfected stone implements were mainly used but copper tools and weapons were also making their appearance as luxuries. 

Then came bronze, a hard alloy made of copper with the addition of one tenth part of tin. The Third Millenium B.C.E. in Sumeria and Egypt is predominantly the Copper and Bronze Age. No clear picture is available of where and how the bronze first appeared. To combine copper which came from Sinai, Crete, Cyprus, Spain, Portugal or other parts of the Mediterranean with rare tin from Etruria, Gaul, Spain, Cornwall and Bohemia, it would have been necessary to have organized transport, skilled labour and furnaces with temperatures well over 1000 ° C. 

Bronze, a mixture of copper and tin, is strong and durable. It should have taken long ages to discover that the addition of one-tenth part of tin to copper creates a better metal. Yet strangely enough, copper artifacts in our museums are few. Bronze seems to have appeared suddenly and spread far and wide in great profusion. The similarity of bronze articles found in different parts of Europe compels us to conclude that they came from one manufacturing centre or school of technology. 

The history of bronze in Central and South America is similar. The alloy appears quite suddenly. Was the discovery made by experimentation or by chance? The discovery of bronze was not simultaneous in the Old World and the New. Copper, which is a component of bronze, was mined in Mesopotamia about 3500 B.C.E. but not before 2000 B.C.E. in Peru (iron was unknown to the Incas until after the arrival of Pizarro). 

Certain achievements of the South Americans in metallurgy are enigmatic. Ornaments of platinum were found in Ecuador. This poses a provoking question; how could Native Americans produce the temperature of over 1770° C. necessary to melt it. It should be borne in mind here that the melting of platinum in Europe was achieved only two centuries ago. 

In testing an alloy from a prehistoric artifact the United States Bureau of Standards ascertained that the original dwellers of America had furnaces capable of producing a temperature of 8000° C. seven thousand years ago. No satisfactory explanation has yet been given of how such a technical feat was possible at all at so remote a date as 5000 B.C.E. 

The tomb of the Chinese general Chow Chu (A.D. 265 - 316) presents a mystery. When analysed by the spectroscope, a metal girdle showed 10% copper, 5% manganese and 85% aluminium. But according to the history of science, aluminium was obtained for the first time by Oerstead in 1825 by a chemical method. To satisfy industrial demands, electrolysis was later introduced into the manufacturing process. Needless to say, an ornament made of aluminium, whether chemically or electrolytically produced, seems out of place in a 3rd-century grave in China. It is hardly reasonable to think that this aluminium article was the only one manufactured in China.
The famous Qutb Minar iron pillar in Delhi weighs 6 tons and is about 7.5 metres high. For fifteen centuries it has withstood the tropical sunshine of India plus the heavy downpours during the monsoons. It shows surprisingly few signs of rust formation, and provides proof of the superior metallurgical skill of ancient India. Aside from the mystery of the corrosion-resistant metal of which the column is made, the task of forging so large a pillar could not have been achieved anywhere in the world until recent times. The production of this type of iron is possible today due to our high technology but it is surprising to find such an achievement in the year A.D. 415. The pillar stands as a mute witness to the scientific tradition preserved by the people of antiquity in all parts of the world. Men whom time has forgotten, held the answers to these riddles of the history of science. Contents 

Chapter 5: 
The Forgotten Art of Gold Making 
Alchemy was modern chemistry in ancient garb. But it was also the art of transmutation of base metals into precious ones. For many centuries scholars thought that chemical elements were stable and could not be transformed. This is why the alchemists were regarded as dreamers, charlatans or idiots. But in the year 1919 the great English physicist Rutherford sided with the alchemists and transmuted nitrogen into oxygen and hydrogen by bombarding it with helium. That was the day of the vindication of the alchemical doctrine of transmutation. 

Alchemy, as a controlled transformation of one element into another, was the subject of prolonged study by the Orient as well as the Occident, gradually giving birth to modern chemistry. There are extant mediaeval manuscripts which describe in detail the equipment of the alchemists comprised of retorts, glass vessels, distilling stills, furnaces and other things necessary for the Great Work. The cost of an average alchemical laboratory must have been considerable. 

It is absurd to suppose that all these goldmakers parted with their coin to sweat for months and years near their furnaces without a hope of getting some tangible results from their work. Although there were individuals who abandoned alchemy after having failed to transmute cheap metals into gold, the number of people who persevered in this art throughout their lives was surprisingly great. 

In view of the costly laboratory equipment and materials required for transmutation work, how could they afford it without reaping a profit of some kind? Down through the centuries alchemists have claimed they could perform transmutations of mercury, tin or lead into gold. Those who believe that anything the ancients could do, we can do better, will naturally express doubt as to the ability of the alchemists to accomplish this scientific feat. Wasn't alchemy a charlatanry of some sort? History mentions the names of men who tried to commercialize on the credulity and greed of their contemporaries. On the other hand, there are historical documents dating back many centuries which demonstrate that rulers often considered alchemists to be a menace to the economy of the state. 

The Roman emperor Diocletian issued an edict in Egypt around the year 300 of our era, demanding that all books on 'the art of making gold and silver' be burned. The decree shows that the Roman government was certain that such an art of transmutation of metals had existed. It would surely have been unnecessary to issue decrees banning this craft unless it were known to have been practised. 

This same emperor signed an order to destroy all secret and open places of Christian worship as well as Christian books. All the Christians were removed from official posts in the Roman Empire. Rome meant exactly what it had stated in the government proclamation. 

The decree against alchemy and its practitioners was of the same type, and presumably the existence of artificially produced gold was taken for granted as was the presence of Christians. The Roman emperor wanted to withdraw all written records of this secret art from circulation. It is not difficult to ascertain the motives of Diocletian. He realized that gold was power. An alchemist capable of making it cheaply, could become a threat to the state. Such a man could buy territories or officials. 

It is worthwhile citing the earlier case of the Praetorian Guard Didius Marcus, a Roman millionaire, who bought the whole Roman Empire for the equivalent of about thirty-five million dollars. However, he was soon beheaded by Emperor Septimus. This historical episode was still fresh in the minds of the Roman citizens when Diocletian issued the prohibition against alchemy. 

According to the alchemist Zosimus (AJ). 300), the temple of Ptah at Memphis had furnaces, and this god was revered as the patron of the alchemists. The words chemistry and alchemy are derived from the name of Egypt - Khemt. Thus even today a very ancient tradition is perpetuated by the use of the words alchemy, chemistry, chemist or chemical. 

In the 8th century the Arab Jabir (Geber) systematized alchemical knowledge from the Egyptian source, and he is justly called the father of this science. Jabir was a practising alchemist who described not only the equipment of a laboratory required for transmutation but also the mental and moral prerequisites of an apprentice. 

"The artificer of this work ought to be well skilled and perfected in the sciences of natural philosophy," wrote the Arab scholar. Considering the time and labours involved in discovering the secret of transmutation, Jabir advised the disciple not to be extravagant "least he happen not to find the art, and be left in misery". 

It goes without saying that the Arab adept spoke of very concrete things - a chemical laboratory and patient efforts which would not pay dividends for years to come. But he assured the students that "copper may be changed into gold" and "by our artifice we easily make silver". These statements can not be easily dismissed as Jabir's name figures in the history of modern chemistry. 

One of the peculiarities of alchemy was its extensiveness. Alchemy was known in China as early as 133 B.C.E. The story of Chia and the alchemist Chen mentions that whenever Chia wanted money, his friend the alchemist would rub a black stone on a tile or a brick and transform these commonplace articles into precious silver. That was an easy way to make money. 

The biography of Chang Tao-Ling who studied at the Imperial Academy in Peking, makes reference to the Treatise of the Elixir refined in nine Cauldrons which he found in a cavern and whose author was allegedly the Yellow Emperor (26th century B.C.E.). The basic ingredient of Chinese alchemy was cinnabar or mercuric sulphide used in transmutation as well as preparation of 'gold-juice', the elixir of youth. 

"You may transmute cinnabar into pure gold," assures the historical record Shih Chi written in the 1st century B.C.E. The opinion current among the practitioners of the alchemical art in China, India, Egypt and Western Europe that mercury and sulphur had unusual properties for transmutation, is somewhat baffling. After all, it was a long way from Peking to Alexandria, and from Benares to mediaeval Paris. What was the primary source of this doctrine? 

A law was enacted in China against the practice of counterfeiting gold by alchemical methods in 175 B.C.E. This fact proves two things - firstly, alchemy must have existed in China for many centuries before becoming a problem to the Celestial Empire, and secondly, the output of gold by the alchemists was sufficiently large to be felt by the state. 

India had alchemy, too. The Hindu expositors of the art also thought that mercury and sulphur were primary elements. But unlike Chinese and European alchemists they attributed positive polarity to mercury and negative to sulphur. They also tried to discover the elixir of immortality and the secret of gold making. In view of the fact that the art of transmutation and the production of gold placed its adepts in a dangerous position because of envy, malice, possible robbery and even loss of life, to say nothing of the suspicion of the authorities, the alchemists used carefully coded texts and enigmatic charts. This is particularly true of European countries where the Inquisition was busy tracking down and liquidating anyone guilty of practising the 'magical sciences' from the heathen East. 

The question as to whether gold had been produced by alchemical processes in the past, can be hotly debated. But certain decrees and documents imply that the rulers of many nations did not have any doubts about the possibility of the transmutation of metals. This is good evidence of the reality of alchemy in olden times. During the 13th and early 14th century alchemy must have been widespread as it attracted the attention of the Vatican. The science was forbidden by a bull of Pope John XXII in the year 1317. This document entitled Spondent Pariter condemned the alchemists to exile and established heavy fines against swindlers commercializing on transmutation. 

All these prohibitions of alchemy are very bewildering. A No Smoking sign in a train is put up because people have cigarettes in their pockets. What was the reason for these No Gold making orders? If there were no cases of illegal transmutation, it surely would not have been worthwhile wasting expensive parchment on long, sternly worded decrees. Henry IV of England issued an act in 1404 declaring that the multiplying of metals was a crime against the Crown. This was during the time of the Hundred Years' War and the Peasants' Revolt. A King of England was not likely to sign a decree, against a mythical menace while waging a very real war in France, and fighting angry serfs at home. Apparently, the appearance of gold from an unknown source began to worry the English government. 

On the other hand, King Henry VI granted permits to John Cobbe and John Mistelden to practise "the philosophic art of the conversion of metals", and these licences were duly approved by Parliament. This alchemically-made gold was used in coinage which makes it clear that the Crown did not mind the manufacture of alchemical gold provided His Majesty's Mint received it in the end. 

But much more significant than Henry IV's ban on alchemy was its official repeal by William and Mary of England in 1688 which reads: "And whereas, since the making of the said statute, divers persons have by their study, industry and learning, arrived to great skill and perfection in the art of melting and refining of metals, and otherwise improving and multiplying them." 

The act of Repeal states that from the reign of Henry IV many Englishmen went to foreign countries "to exercise the said art" to the great detriment of the kingdom. The new decree announced that "all the gold and silver that shall be extracted by the aforesaid art be turned over to Their Majesties Mint in the Tower of London where the precious metals would be bought at the full market value, and no questions asked." 

After this change of policy the King and Queen even made a declaration concerning the desirability of studying alchemy. These historic facts are most extraordinary because alchemically-made gold might be stacked in ingots in the vaults of the Bank of England today. It is important to note that, as far as we know, England has always received its gold supplies from foreign countries only. It is apparent that the sovereigns of England realized that there were advantages in controlling gold reserves rather than permitting this gold from an unknown source to dominate the economy of the realm. This repeal Act clearly states that artificially-manufactured gold was actually produced in England and also that its intake was centralized at Their Majesties Mint. 

This possibility of artificial gold having been produced in England is well substantiated by a specimen of alchemical gold which the author has personally examined in the Department of Coins and Medals of the British Museum in London. It is in the form of a bullet, which is understandable as that is what it was before the transmutation. The register of the Museum contains the following brief entry concerning this golden bullet: "Gold made by an alchemist from a leaden bullet in the presence of Colonel MacDonald and Doctor Colquhoun at Bupora in the month of October, 1814."

Although the information about the actual transmutation is lacking, the fact remains that this is officially recognized as a rare specimen of alchemical gold, preserved in one of the world's greatest museums. Johann Helvetius (1625-1709), physician to the Prince of Orange, was known to have accomplished alchemical transmutations of base metals into gold. Once Porelius, the Inspector-General of the Mint in Holland, came to Helvetius' laboratory to watch his alchemical work. Then Porelius went to see the jeweller Brechtel and asked him to make an analysis of Helvetius' gold. After a rigid test the gold was found to have five more grains than before the test.

Now what is transmutation? Plutonium, an element which is non-existent on earth, can be created by nuclear physics - that is a case of transmutation. A hypothetical transmutation of mercury into gold would involve changing the atomic structure of mercury. The number of electrons, their orbits and the organization of protons determines the element. It is noteworthy that, according to ancient alchemy, gold was made from mercury or lead. In the periodic table of elements the atomic number of Gold is 79, that of Mercury 80, and of Lead 82 - in other words, they are neighbours. It was Mendeleyeff who in 1879 first formulated a table of the elements and arranged them in order of increasing weight according to their atomic structure. The question is - had the alchemists discovered this table before Mendeleyeff?

Arab scholars such as Jabir, Al Razi, Farabi and Avicenna who lived between the 8th and 11th centuries, brought the science of alchemy to Western Europe. Costly handwritten books were carried from city to city. They contained ciphered writings and mysterious diagrams which few could read and fewer understand. Some of these manuscripts and tracts embodied true chemistry and alchemy, others but distorted versions of ancient formulas and methods of no practical value.

The alchemists drifted from place to place, practicing their art in secret. It was dangerous to declare one's proficiency in transmuting cheaper metals into gold because sovereigns often subjected talkative men to torture in order to obtain the alchemists' formulas. In the Compound of Alchemy (1471) Sir George Ripley advised the students and practitioners of the art "to keep thy secrets in store unto thyself for wise men say store is no sore".

The pioneers of modern science such as Albertus Magnus (1206-1280) who wrote voluminously on astronomy and chemistry, not only believed in the reality of alchemical transmutation but even made rules on how to practise the art. He advised "to carefully avoid association with princes and nobles and to cultivate discretion and silence"

Roger Bacon (c. 1214 - 1294) left a ciphered manuscript which Professor Wm. R. Newbold has allegedly decoded. It contains a formula for making copper. In the Library of the University of Pennsylvania there is a retort and the following certificate dated December 1, 1926: "This retort contains metallic copper made according to a secret formula of Roger Bacon." 

The great Doctor Paracelsus (1493-1541) discovered zinc and was the first to identify hydrogen. Paracelsus' fame as an alchemist was so great that his tomb in Salzburg was opened because of rumours that alchemical secrets and great treasures had been buried with the physician. However, nothing was found in the coffin. His famous sword whose hilt contained the so-called Philosopher's Stone, had also vanished without a trace. 

Nicolas Flamel (1330-1418), a Paris notary, was another great alchemist. In his business of illuminating documents and manuscripts he came into contact with bookdealers. In his Hieroglyphical Figures he related that a very ancient Book of Abraham Eliazar, written in an unknown language, was offered to him for sale by a stranger for a reasonable amount, and that he bought it. It took Flamel and his wife Pernelle many years to come to the conclusion that the book was a work on ancient alchemy.

Using the text Nicolas Flamel was able to perform his first transmutation of one-half pound of mercury into pure silver on January 17, 1382, when he was 52 years old. On April 25 he succeeded in making his first alchemical gold. The citizens of 14th-century Paris were less skeptical about Flamel's ability to manufacture gold than the Parisians of today. But they had good reason - the alchemist built many hospitals and churches in Paris during the thirty-six years of his profitable alchemical work. This fact he admitted himself: 

"In the year 1413 after the transition of my faithful companion whom I will miss for the rest of my life, she and I had already founded and endowed fourteen hospitals in this city of Paris besides three completely new chapels, decorated with handsome gifts and having good incomes, seven churches with numerous repairs done to their cemeteries, as well what we ourselves had done in Boulogne, which is hardly less than what we did here."

Nicolas Flamel wrote that on some of his churches he "caused to be depicted marks or signs from the Book of Abraham Eliazar". They could actually be seen two hundred years ago in such places as the Cimetiere des Innocents, the church of St. Jacques de la Boucheries and St. Nicolas des Champs. The Musee Cluny contains Flamel's tombstone. 

The Book of Abraham Eliazar is probably not fictitious as it was listed in the Catalogus Zibrorum philosophicorum hermeticorum issued by Dr. Pierre Borelli in 1654. Borelli was obviously no ordinary savant as he was farsighted enough to imagine 'aerial ships' as the means "whereby one can learn the pure truth concerning the plurality of worlds". 

According to Dr. Borelli, Cardinal Richelieu ordered a search for alchemical books in Flamel's house and churches which must have been successful because at one time the cardinal was seen reading the Book of Abraham Eliazar with annotations by Flamel in the margins.

The case of George Ripley, an English alchemist of the 15th century, was equally spectacular. Elias Ashmole the English scholar of the 17th century, who left a collection at Oxford known as the Ashmolean Museum, mentioned a document in Malta citing a record of contributions of £100,000 each year made by Sir George Ripley to the Order of St. ]ohn of Jerusalem at Rhodes to help Rhodes fight the Turks. It should be stressed that the value of the pound was immensely higher five hundred years ago than it is today (a 14th century gold florin may be worth as much as five dollars today).

Other alchemists were evidently making so much gold that one of them offered to finance the Crusades, and another to pay off the national debt of his country. With the monetary crises of today and deficits piling up yearly, finance ministers might do well to try calling alchemy to the rescue to build up gold reserves. [ As shady as these people are I have no doubt that the majority of the gold on the Earth is made gold at this time, the author is correct there would be no need for a ban, if it was not already being done, and at a lose as we see to the controlling interests. Very telling fact about The English bankers, most famous for their fiat trick of creating money out of thin air, and their relationship with gold and the international community. d.c. ]

Pope John XXII who issued a bull against the alchemists,developed an interest in the art himself! It is quite possible that after having perused numerous confiscated documents on alchemy, he decided to experiment in the science of transmutation. In fact, he wrote an alchemical work, Ars Transmutatoria, in which he related how he had worked on the Philosopher's Stone in Avignon, and how he had alchemically manufactured two hundred bars of gold, each weighing one quintal, or one hundred kilograms. After his death in 1334, twenty-five million florins were found in the Pope's treasure vault! The source of this vast fortune could never be satisfactorily explained, because in this era of wars and the ecclesiastical conflict between Avignon and the Vatican, the papal revenues were small.

The Kunsthistorisches Museum in Vienna contains extraordinary evidence of the practice of alchemy in past centuries. It is catalogued as an Alchemistische Medaillon - an oval medal 40 by 37 centimetres in size weighing seven kilograms. Except for the one-third upper part of the disc which is silver, the lower two-thirds are solid gold. 

This medal has an exciting story to tell. In an Augustine monastery in Austria there was a young monk in the 16th century whose name was Wenzel Seiler. He was bored with life in the abbey but without riches there was no way of his getting out. An old friar who patronized Wenzel had told him of a treasure buried in the monastery, so they decided to look for it.

After a long search they found an old copper chest under a column. It contained a parchment with strange signs and letters, and four jars of reddish powder. Seiler expected to find gold coins in the box and was so disappointed that he thought of throwing out the contents. But the old monk became interested in the document and insisted that the powder be preserved.

The aged friar finally came to the conclusion that the red powder could be the precious transmuting compound of the alchemists. Then Wenzel Seiler stole an old tin plate from the abbey's kitchen and after covering it with the red powder the plate was heated in the fire. As if by magic, the tin plate shortly became solid gold!

Seiler was so happy with the results of the experiment that he went to town to sell the gold. He received twenty ducats for it but the old friar did not think it was a wise thing for a young monk to sell gold. The old man became sick and died soon after, leaving young friar Wenzel the sole possessor of the gold making powder. Realizing that he was unable to exploit his discovery and escape from the monastery without assistance, he confided his secret to Francis Preyhausen, another young monk, and they made plans to leave the abbey in the spring.

With his ducats Wenzel bought wine and enjoyed the visits of his young cousin Anastasio from Vienna. Rumours about the stolen plate, twenty ducats obtained from a jeweller and the empty wine bottles reached the abbot who summoned Seiler for questioning. Then the abbot with the older friars went to Wenzel Seiler's cell. They unlocked the door and saw naked Anastasio on Wenzel's bed. Seeing his anatomy, it suddenly dawned upon the aged monks that Anastasio was Anastasia! After a few embarrassing moments during which the girl had time to wrap herself in a cape, the men of God gave her a sermon on the dangers facing her soul.

But young Wenzel was flogged and bolted in his cell. The four precious jars with the red powder were surreptitiously handed through the bars of the window to Francis who was waiting outside. Then Wenzel Seiler was transferred to a prison cell and the future began to look very dark. However, Francis Preyhausen was not idle and he arranged their escape. During an adventurous journey the young monks understood how dangerous their life could become with the gold making powder in their hands. But Francis was more intelligent than Wenzel and he hid the powder.

In Vienna they secured the patronage of Count Peter Paar, a friend of Emperor Leopold I of Germany, Hungary and Bohemia (1640-1705) as the noble was an ardent student of alchemy. An audience was arranged with the emperor who was also interested in the ancient art.

In the presence of Leopold I, Father Spies and Dr. Joachim Becher, ex-friar Wenzel Seiler transmuted an ounce of tin into pure gold in the course of a quarter of an hour. A written declaration to that effect was signed by the witnesses. However, Count von Paar's friendship was not as sincere as it had first seemed. With pistol in hand he forced Wenzel to part with a portion of the red powder. Fortunately for Wenzel and Francis, the nobleman died soon after the incident.

Emperor Leopold I then became Seiler's protector. With Count von Waldstein, the captain of the Bodyguard, the emperor himself made alchemical gold with Wenzel Seiler's red powder. In 1675 a special ducat was struck with the image of Leopold I from the gold alchemically produced by the sovereign. On the reverse side was the following inscription: 

With Wenzel Seiler's powder was I transformed from tin into gold. 

Successful experiments in alchemy were conducted by Seiler at the Palace of the Knights of St. John in the Karntnerstrasse in Vienna, and a gold chain was made from this alchemical gold on the orders of Count Von Waldstein. 

On September 16, 1676, the emperor knighted the alchemist-monk von Rheinburg, which was the maiden name of Seiler's aristocratic mother (as his father was a commoner), and appointed him Court Chemist. With the Red Tincture almost gone, Wenzel Seiler and Leopold I concentrated their efforts on multiplying the powder but without any results. In 1677 a large silver medal was dipped into the transmuting compound and its lower part turned into gold. A photograph of the medal is featured in this book, and the only remark that has to be made about it concerns the four notches on its edge. 

These were made on request of Professor A. Bauer of Vienna in 1883 in order to analyse the content of the disc. Two-thirds were found to be solid gold, so there was no question of any gold-plating. This case of alchemy is recorded in history and offers strong evidence in support of the reality of alchemical transmutation in former times.

There is a 19th-century painting by the Polish artist Matejko which portrays dramatically an actual alchemical transmutation by Michael Sendivogius in Cracow before King Sigismund III of Poland, early in the 17th century. Alchemy was not confined to making gold alone as some alchemists claimed they could produce gems. If so, they must have been the first synthetic stone makers. 

Modern science can transform a lump of anthracite into an expensive diamond but the process is costly. Dr. Willard Libby, Nobel Prize winner, created diamonds by sandwiching a block of graphite between two nuclear devices in 1969. Dr. E. O. Lawrence of U.S.A. effected transmutations of a number of elements during the forties.

In 1897 Dr. Stephen H. Emmens, a British physician in New York, claimed that he had discovered a method to transmute silver into gold. Between April, 1897 and August, 1898 more than $10,000 worth of gold was sold by him to the U.S. Assay Office in Wall Street. The New York Herald printed the following headlines about Dr. Emmens at the time: THIS MAN MAKES GOLD AND SELLS IT TO THE UNITED STATE MINT. The Assay Office admitted buying the gold but at the same time raised the question: "Did he manufacture it out of silver as he claimed?

It is of little consequence whether or not the alchemists could actually transmute silver, tin or lead into gold. What is more significant is the fact of their thinking that one chemical element could be transformed into another. Until Curie and Rutherford science excluded this possibility. In brief, the alchemists anticipated our modern scientific concepts regarding the essence of matter. In his Interpretation of Radium published in 1909, Dr. Frederick Soddy, Nobel Prize, who coined the word 'isotope' and pioneered nuclear physics, did not deride alchemy: 

"It is curious to reflect, for example, upon the remarkable legend of the Philosopher's Stone, one of the oldest and most universal beliefs, the origin of which, however far back we penetrate into the records of the past, we do not probably trace its real source. The Philosopher's Stone was accredited the power not only of transmuting the metals but of acting as the elixir of life. Now, whatever the origin of this apparently meaningless jumble of ideas may have been, it is really a perfect and very slightly allegorical expression of the actual present views we hold today." 

Egyptian tradition pointed to Thoth, Hermes or Mercury, the culture-bearer who had revealed to mankind the Hermetic Arts, one of which was alchemy. Hermes or Mercury was also the founder of Medicine. It is upon the rock of Hermetic Science that modern medicine is built. It is fascinating to trace the stream of Medical Science from prehistoric medicine man, herbalist, magician, priest to the pharmacist and doctor of contemporary life.

Chapter 6: 
The Caduceus of Hermes 
Doctors' cars usually carry an emblem - a staff with two snakes and a winged hat. This is the Caduceus of Hermes and by this ancient symbol modern medicine acknowledges its debt to the sages of antiquity. 

A recent archaeological expedition to the Valley of the Kings in Egypt excavated a number of mummies. Many of the jaws had bridges and artificial teeth which looked surprisingly like the product of a modern dentist. Few scientists had expected to find evidence of such skill in dentistry in ancient Egypt so many thousands of years ago. 

Mayan skulls dug up on the coast of jaina in Campeche, Mexico, also show astonishing proficiency in dental surgery. The crowns and fillings are still in place after many centuries! The drilling and setting of inlays was done by men who always respected the vital part of the tooth. The adhesives used are as yet unknown but they must have been of high quality if the fillings are still intact. 

The pre-Inca surgeons performed delicate operations on the brain 2,500 years ago. Trepanation is a new technique in modern surgery, so it was more than surprising to find thousands of skulls in Peru with marks of successful trephining. The instruments used were obsidian arrow-heads, scalpels, bronze knives, pincers and needles for sutures. According to the history of medicine, the same operation performed at the Hétel Dieu in Paris in 1786 was invariably fatal. 

Amputations were likewise executed in South America. The Inca doctors used gauze for dressings; and possibly cocaine as an anaesthetic. The Incas discovered important drugs such as quinine, cocaine and belladonna. 

In ancient Babylon there was a peculiar method of treating the sick. Herodotus describes the way the sufferers were brought out into the street. It was the moral duty of passers-by to enquire about their complaints. From their own experiences the sympathizers suggested remedies which they had heard were effective or had used themselves. By experimenting with different medicines the patients found out which were best for them. This mass experimentation formed the basis of pharmacopoeia and diagnosis in the centuries to, follow. 

Our wonder drugs like penicillin, aureomycin or terramycin had their origin in ancient Egypt. A medical papyrus of the 11th dynasty speaks of a certain type of fungus growing on still water which is prescribed for the treatment of wounds and open sores. Did they have penicillin 4,000 years before Fleming? 

Antibiotics were not unknown to the ancients. Warm soil and soy-bean curd, which have antibiotic properties, were employed by the ancient Greeks and Chinese respectively; to heal wounds and to eradicate boils and even carbuncles. 

The Egyptians made use of an unknown mineral drug for anaesthesia in operations. They were also aware of the relationship between the nervous system and movements of our limbs, and therefore understood the causes of paralysis. The Smith Papyrus contains forty-eight clinical cases. The ancient peoples of the Nile practiced hygiene and, generally speaking, their medicine was far superior to that practised so much later in Europe during the Middle Ages - yet another example of the withering of knowledge. 

The physicians of the land of the pyramids were aware of the functions of the heart and arteries, and how to count the pulse. Imhotep (4500 B.C.E.), the architect of Zoser Pyramid, is considered to be the first recorded physician in history. 

Ancient India possessed advanced medical knowledge. 

Her doctors knew about metabolism, the circulatory system, genetics and the nervous system as well as the transmission of specific characteristics by heredity. Vedic physicians understood medical methods to counteract the effects of poison gas, performed Caesarean sections, brain operations, and used anaesthetics. Sushruta (5th century B.C.E.) listed the diagnosis of 1120 diseases. He described 121 surgical instruments and was the first to experiment in plastic surgery. 

The Sactya Grantham, a Brahmin book compiled about 1500 B.C.E., contains the following passage giving instructions on smallpox vaccination: "Take on the tip of a knife the contents of the inflammation, inject it into the arm of a man, mixing it with his blood. A fever will follow but the malady will pass very easily and will create no complications." Edward Jenner (1749-1823) is credited with the discovery of vaccination but it appears that ancient India has prior claim! 

The United Kingdom and other countries have medical aid programmes supported by the state. But the physicians of the Inca Empire and the Land of the Pharaohs also received their remuneration from the government and medical aid was free to all. Truly, there seems to be nothing new under the sun. 

The Chinese Emperor Tsin-Shi (259-210 B.C.E.) possessed a 'magic mirror' which could 'illuminate the bones of the body'. Xray in ancient China? It was located in the palace of Hien-Yang in Shensi in 206 B.C. When a patient stood before this rectangular mirror which was 1.76 by 1.22 metres in size, the image seemed to be reversed but all the organs and bones were visible exactly as on our fluoroscopes. That mirror was used for the very same purpose - to diagnose disease. 

It is little known that a Chinese surgeon by the name of Hua T'o carried out operations under anaesthetics over eighteen centuries ago. The chronicle Hou Han Shu of the later Han Dynasty (25-220 C.E.) reminds one of a report from a modern medical journal: 

He first made the patient swallow hemp bubble powder mixed with wine, and as soon as intoxication and unconsciousness supervened, he made an incision in the belly or the back and cut out any morbid growth. If the stomach or intestine was the part affected, he thoroughly cleansed these organs after the use of the knife, and removed the contaminating matter which had caused the infection. He would then stitch up the wound, and apply a marvellous ointment which caused it to heal in four or five days, and within a month the patient was completely restored to health. 

The Lester Institute of Shanghai founded by a British magnate in the thirties, has established scientific basis for old Chinese remedies. Every medicine, even as odd as donkey's skin, dog's brains, sheep's eyeballs, pig's liver or seaweeds, has been found by Dr. Bernard Reed to possess a chemical reason for its effectiveness. 

While blood transfusion was introduced into Western medicine in the 17th century, it has been practised by the Australian aborigines for thousands of years. Our method is similar to one that he uses in that he takes blood either from a vein in the middle of the arm or from one in the inner arm by means of a hollow reed. Blood transference is also done by mouth but the technique of this method, though shown to various investigators, remains unfathomable. 

Seemingly, the Australian medicine man is still heir to ancient knowledge. He is perfectly aware of the proper vein from which the blood should be taken. Uncannily, he also chooses the fitting donor. Blood transfusion is practised not only in critical cases of injury and illness but also to give vitality to the aged. 

When threatened by an impending drought or other calamity with the menace of food shortage, the aborigines have used oral contraceptives for centuries. Resin from a particular plant is rolled into pills to be taken by women. 

Not only are these facts astonishing but it is also a pity that because of detribalization and lack of interest on the part of the medical profession, the herbal medicines of the Australian aborigines are almost forgotten. The natives do not cultivate the medicinal plants any longer and are in the process of losing their valuable heritage. 

Chapter 7: 
From Temples and Forums to Atomic Reactors 
The so-called Emerald Tables of Hermes are of great interest to the student of the history of science. Although often considered as a document from the Middle Ages, its style and a total absence of mediaeval alchemical terms raises the possibility of its more ancient origin. Actually, on the basis of his research Dr. Sigismund Bacstrom, an 18th-century scholar, traced the Emerald Tables to about 2500 B.C.E. 

"What is above is like what is below, and what is below is like what is above to effect the wonders of one and the same work," reads the opening sentence of the Tables. These words can be interpreted as the mirror-like similarity between the world of the atom, with electrons whirling around protons as planets around the suns, and the macrocosm of stars and galaxies. 

This idea of the Oneness of the universe and the unity of matter is stressed again in another passage: "All things owe their existence to the Only One, so all things owe their origin to the One Only Thing." 

"Separate the earth from the fire, the subtle from the gross, carefully and skillfully. This substance ascends from the earth to the sky, and descends again on the earth and thus the superior and the inferior are increased in power." This paragraph might well be interpreted as the process of splitting the atom and the dangers connected with it. 

"This is the potent power of all forces for it will overcome all that is fine and penetrate all that is coarse because in this manner was the world created," says another paragraph in the Emerald Tables. It indicates the belief of the ancients in the vibratory character of matter, and the waves and rays which penetrate all substances. 

Democritus was the first to formulate the atomic theory. Anticipating the views of modern physicists, he said almost two and a half thousand years ago: "In reality there is nothing but atoms and space." Moschus, the Phoenician, communicated to the Greek philosopher this primordial knowledge, and in fact, Moschus concept of the structure of the atom was nearer to the truth because he emphasized its divisibility. His version of the atomic theory is being corroborated as new atomic particles are discovered all the time. 

Greek philosophers claimed that there was no distinction in kind between the stellar bodies and the earth. The teaching of Hermes must have been accepted as an axiom by the Hellenic thinkers. Leucippus (5th century B.C.E.) as well as Epicurus (341-270 B.C.E.) also favoured the atomic theory. Lucretius (1st century B.C.E.), a Roman scholar, wrote about atoms "rushing everlastingly throughout all space". They undergo "miriad changes under the disturbing impact of collisions". 

It is impossible to see the atoms because they are too small, he asserted. These classic writers and philosophers command respect and admiration for their advanced thinking as they had anticipated modern science and have contributed to its development. But we still do not know what led them to believe in invisible atoms. 

In his On the Nature of the Universe Lucretius expresses an opinion that "there can be no centre in infinity". This thesis is the cornerstone of the Theory of Relativity of Einstein. Heraclitus (5th century B.C.E.) must have likewise had relativist ideas because once he said: "The way up and the way down, are one and the same." 

Zeno of Elea (5th century B.C.E.) demonstrated the relativity of motion and time by his paradoxical problems. "If the flying arrow is at every instant of its flight at rest in a space equal to its length, when does it move?" he asked. In his famous problem of the chariots Zeno even attempted to prove the time shrinkage of bodies in motion which Einstein dealt with more fully in his formulas. 

Nicolaus, Cardinal of Cusa, a 15th-century scholar, wrote of a "universe without a centre", thus giving another preview of the Theory of Relativity. 

Lao Tse (6th-5th century B.C.E.), the founder of Taoism, taught that everything in the universe is made according to a natural law, or Tao, which controls the world. All creation is the result of the interplay of two cosmic principles - the male Yen and the female Yin, promulgated Lao Tse. Scientifically, this is true because positive and negative charges in the nuclear world determine all manifestations in nature. 

Ancient sages realized the dangers of revealing knowledge to those who could use it for destructive aims. "It would be the greatest of sins to disclose the mysteries of your art to soldiers," wrote a Chinese alchemist a thousand years ago. Are modern nuclear alchemists guilty of this sin? 

The atomic structure of matter is mentioned in the Brahmin treatises Vaisesika and Nyaya. The Yoga Vasishta says: "There are vast worlds within the hollows of each atom, multifarious as the specks in a sunbeam." The Indian sage Uluka proposed a hypothesis over 2,500 years ago that all material objects were made of paramanu, or seeds of matter. He was then nicknamed Ktmada, or the swallower of grains. 

The sacred writings of ancient India contain descriptions of weapons which resembled atomic bombs. The Mausola Parva speaks of a thunderbolt - "a gigantic messenger of death" which reduced to ashes whole armies, and caused the hair and nails of the survivors to fall out. Pottery broke without any cause and the birds turned white. After a few hours all foodstuffs were poisoned. The ghastly picture of Hiroshima comes to mind when one reads this ancient text from India. 

"A blazing missile possessed of the radiance of smokeless fire was discharged. A thick gloom suddenly encompassed the heavens. Clouds roared into the higher air, showering blood. The world, scorched by the heat of that weapon, seemed to be in fever," thus describes the Drona Parva a page of the unknown past of mankind. One can almost visualize the mushroom cloud of an atomic bomb explosion and atomic radiation. Another passage compares the detonation with a flare-up of ten thousand suns. 

The physicist Frederick Soddy evidently did not take these ancient records as fable. In the Interpretation of Radium (1909) he wrote these lines: "Can we not read into them some justification for the belief that some former forgotten race of men attained not only to the knowledge we have so recently won, but also to the power that is not yet ours?" When Dr. Soddy wrote the book, the atom-box of Pandora had not yet been opened. 

A radioactive skeleton has been found in India. Its radioactivity was fifty times above the normal level. Perhaps the Sanskrit texts about atomic warfare in proto-history are true. 

The surface of the Gobi Desert near Lob Nor Lake is covered with vitreous sand which is the result of Red China's atomic tests. But the desert has certain areas of similar glassy sand which had been present for thousands of years before Chairman Mao! What was the source of heat which melted that sand in prehistory? 

The Brahmin books contain a curious division of time. For instance, the Siddhanta-Siromani subdivides the hour until it arrives at the final unit - tmti, equivalent to 0.33750 of a second. Sanskrit scholars have no idea why such a small fraction of a second was necessary at all in antiquity. And no one knows how it could have been measured without precision instruments. 

According to Pundit Kanniah Yogi of Ambattur, Madras whom I met in India in 1966, the original time measurement of the Brahmins was sexagesimal, and he quoted the Brihath Sathaka and other Sanskrit sources. In ancient times the day was divided into 60 kala, each equal to 24 minutes, subdivided into 60 vikala, each equivalent to 24 seconds. Then followed a further sixtyfold subdivision of time into para, tatpara, vitatpara, ima and finally, kashta - or 1/300 millionth of a second. The Hindus have never been in a hurry and one wonders what use the Brahmins made of these fractions of the microsecond. 

While in India the author was told that the learned Brahmins were obliged to preserve this tradition from hoary antiquity but they themselves did not understand it. Is this reckoning of time a folk memory from a highly technological civilization? Without sensitive instruments kashta, as 1/300 millionth of a second, would be absolutely meaningless. It is significant that the kashta is very close to the life spans of certain mesons and hyperons. This fact supports the bold hypothesis that the science of nuclear physics is not new. 

The Varahamihira Table dated c. 550, indicates even the size of the atom. The mathematical figure is fairly comparable with the actual size of the hydrogen atom. It appears fantastic that this ancient science recognized the atomic structure of matter and realized how small is its ultimate particle. Nothing of this kind has ever been attempted in the West until the 20th century. 

Philolaus (5th century B.C.E.) had a strange notion about an 'antichthon' or 'anti earth', an invisible body in our solar system. It is only recently that the concept of anti-matter, anti world and anti planets has been introduced into science. In nuclear physics, the positron is sometimes hypothesized as an electron travelling from the future into the past. 

This time-direction reversal in the atomic world is a new discovery. But Plato wrote in the Statesman about an oscillating universe periodically reversing its time-arrow and sometimes moving from the future into the past. We know now that sub-atomic particles can travel backwards in time but it seems that the idea was not unfamiliar to the great Plato. 

While atomic knowledge in ancient times was fragmentary in character, we can not say the same thing about astronomy. With its deep roots and constant practice over a period of millennia, the science of the stars reached a high level in antique times.

Sages under the Heavenly Vault

FAIR USE NOTICE
This site contains copyrighted material the use of which has not always been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. As a journalist, I am making such material available in my efforts to advance understanding of artistic, cultural, historic, religious and political issues. I believe this constitutes a 'fair use' of any such copyrighted material as provided for in section 107 of the US Copyright Law.

In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, the material on this site is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. Copyrighted material can be removed on the request of the owner.

No comments:

Part 1 Windswept House A VATICAN NOVEL....History as Prologue: End Signs

Windswept House A VATICAN NOVEL  by Malachi Martin History as Prologue: End Signs  1957   DIPLOMATS schooled in harsh times and in the tough...