Hostname: page-component-76dd75c94c-x59qb Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-30T09:42:06.768Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Paracelsian Medicine and Theory of Generation in ‘Exterior homo’, a Manuscript Probably Authored by Jan Baptist Van Helmont (1579–1644)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 June 2014

Georgiana D. Hedesan*
Affiliation:
University of Oxford, History Faculty, George Street, Oxford OX1 2RL, UK
*
*Email address for correspondence: georgiana.hedesan@history.ox.ac.uk
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

This article discusses a Latin manuscript that can be found in the Jan Baptist Van Helmont (1579–1644) archives in Mechelen (Malines), Belgium. The manuscript bears no author and no title, and begins with the words ‘Exterior homo’, hence being referred by this provisional title in the analysis. Ecclesiastical prosecutors investigating Van Helmont for heresy in 1634 considered that it was written by him, but this was vehemently denied by the Flemish physician. The present article takes a first detailed look at the content of the treatise and ideas contained therein. It hence identifies the manuscript as belonging to a seventeenth-century physician influenced by the ideas of Theophrastus Paracelsus (1493–1541) and his interpreter Petrus Severinus (1542–1602), and containing a complex medical philosophy drawn on alchemical thought. Thus, the anonymous author presents a comprehensive view on the nature and structure of man, as well as an idiosyncratic theory of human generation. Following the analysis of the treatise, the article further compares it with the known works of J.B. Van Helmont, and finds that it is very similar to his ideas. Hence, the article concludes that it is ‘likely’ that the manuscript is indeed written by Van Helmont, although lack of direct evidence prevents certain attribution.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The Author 2014. Published by Cambridge University Press. 

On 3 March 1634, the Flemish physician and alchemical philosopher Jan Baptist Van Helmont (1579–1644) was arrested by the order of the Mechelen (Fr Malines) ecclesiastical court under suspicion of heresy.Footnote 1 His troubles had been ignited long before this date, in 1621, when a small printing house in Paris published Van Helmont’s treatise De magnetica vulnerum curatione (On the Magnetic Cure of Wounds).Footnote 2 This work maintained that a Paracelsian cure called the weapon-salve was natural rather than diabolical, thus arousing the ire of the Jesuit Jean Roberti (1569–1651), who spent most of the following years attempting to get Van Helmont condemned for heresy. After a long delay, in 1634, the ecclesiastical court in Mechelen decided to proceed with Van Helmont’s arrest, and confiscated all papers it found at the Brussels residence of the Flemish physician. Although the court eventually released Van Helmont in 1637 without charging him, it never returned the papers, and hence these can still be found in the Archives of the Archbishopric of Mechelen today.

Amongst the confiscated papers there is a short Latin treatise bearing neither title nor author, and beginning with the words ‘Exterior homo’ (‘External Man’).Footnote 3 When the court inquired about its contents, Van Helmont affirmed that the treatise was not his, having been sent to him by Father Marin Mersenne (1588–1648) of the Minorite order in Paris as part of a consilium (medical consultation) regarding a certain prince.Footnote 4 The prosecutors were not convinced; they showed Van Helmont the annotations he himself had made in the manuscript and accused him of having, in fact, written it. This was vigorously denied by the Flemish physician; when the prosecutors recited to him a suspicious passage and asked him to comment on it, he simply stated that it was a strange statement that he could not understand.Footnote 5

The court clearly did not feel it had sufficient evidence to pursue the matter further, as the subject was never broached again in the trial records. The prosecutors were probably unaware of the treatise’s circumstances, which led historian Robert Halleux to claim that the consilium containing ‘Exterior homo’ was surely authored by Van Helmont.Footnote 6 Unfortunately, as we will see, the circumstantial evidence does not establish authorship beyond a shadow of a doubt.

In the present article I will focus on the content of the treatise, which has never before been analysed. Whether or not authored by Van Helmont, ‘Exterior homo’ is a valuable document that can be closely connected with his ideas and related to the development of his thought. Furthermore, the brief work offers a remarkable insight into Paracelsian medical philosophy and theory of human generation as it was expounded by an early seventeenth-century follower. Hence, the purpose of this article to investigate the main tenets set forth in the treatise and their possible sources, before assessing them against Van Helmont’s genuine works.

1. The Context of ‘Exterior homo’

Jan Baptist Van Helmont is one of the most famous chemical authors of the seventeenth century, a liminal figure variously seen as the last of the medical–alchemical school of Paracelsus, a transitional author at the threshold of the Scientific Revolution or as one of the first modern chemists. He was a polymath physician who dedicated himself to alchemical experiments while developing a new philosophy that made a particular impact on the following generation of chemists, including Robert Boyle, Ernst Stahl, Hermann Boerhaave and even Antoine Lavoisier. Today, many history of science books credit Van Helmont for the discovery of the concept of gas, for performing some of the first quantitative experiments in chemistry and for his contribution to the demise of Galenic medicine. Van Helmont saw himself as much more than a scientific figure: he felt called to develop a new ‘Christian philosophy’ that would be dedicated to the betterment of humanity through medicine.Footnote 7

Van Helmont’s life and works are marked by the profound disruption caused by the lengthy persecution by the Inquisition and the Mechelen ecclesiastical court. The first proceedings against him were opened in 1625; the last were ended in 1642, two years before his death. Although he was never convicted, he experienced frequent harassment and misfortune. He may have suffered even worse had he not been a member of a famous noble family, with good connections in the upper echelons of Flemish society. Even this would not have saved him, suggested French Galenic physician Guy Patin (1601–72) after his death, if he had not been in the good graces of the Queen Mother of France.Footnote 8

Patin’s commentary voiced rumours that linked Van Helmont to the French Court. There was apparently some truth to them, as during the trial Van Helmont admitted to have been in contact with a confidant of Queen Mother Maria de Medici (1573–1642).Footnote 9 More importantly for the present analysis is the 1630–31 correspondence carried out between Van Helmont and Marin Mersenne in regards to King Louis XIII (1601–43) himself. Thus, the two philosophers discussed the marriage of the monarch to Anne of Austria (1601–66), which was childless at the time of the exchange. In the letter of 29 March 1631, Van Helmont told Mersenne, who was in contact with the king, that he wished to visit France for the purpose of communicating the secret of successful procreation directly to Louis XIII.Footnote 10 He claimed that his remedies had helped numerous infertile women get pregnant even after seventeen years of sterile marriage, and promised he could do the same for the French monarch.Footnote 11 Van Helmont further asked to be informed about the king’s condition without the knowledge of the royal physicians. In the course of this letter, Van Helmont affirmed that the ‘Hermetic school’ of alchemy was superior to all others in curing infertility, because it operated on the ‘magnetic attractor in the womb’, which was the only cause of pregnancy.Footnote 12

This only surviving letter on the subject clearly situates ‘Exterior homo’ in the context of King Louis’ sterile marriage, and makes it possible that Van Helmont could have authored a consilium to be sent to the monarch. As we will see, the statement that the magnet in the uterus is responsible for procreation agrees very well with the ideas of the treatise. However, the circumstances do not completely exclude the possibility that Mersenne would have sent Van Helmont a treatise congenial with the physician’s views, especially since Van Helmont himself maintained that his ideas were common in the ‘Hermetic school’, by which he probably meant the medical alchemists inspired or influenced by Paracelsus.Footnote 13

There is much in the ‘Exterior homo’ that is in line with the theory of human generation advocated by Theophrastus Paracelsus (1493–1541) himself.Footnote 14 Paracelsus’s theory emphasised divine agency in the making of the human embryo and expounded a Christian view of conception.Footnote 15 Accordingly, he frequently used the Bible to understand human reproduction. He also argued that true generation was done spiritually or mentally, downplaying the role of the coitus in procreation.Footnote 16 In addition, the Swiss physician sought to highlight the role of women in generation, going beyond the traditional Galenic two-seed theory.Footnote 17 Paracelsus emphasised the importance of the womb in several treatises. He portrayed the womb as an active entity, comparing it with a ‘magnet’ that actively attracts the seed within.Footnote 18

2. Analysis of the Treatise

‘Exterior homo’ is part of volume two of the three-volume MS ‘Causa J.B. Helmontii medici’, which can be found in the Archives of the Archbishopric of Mechelen. The treatise is four folios in length, written in a neat scribal hand, which is clearly not that of Van Helmont. It may, however, be the writing of an amanuensis, as Van Helmont would have been wealthy enough to afford one. Due to the calligraphic handwriting, the treatise is largely readable; the only inconvenience is the quality of the paper, which in time has absorbed the ink and makes certain words hard to decipher.

The text itself does not offer easy reading, as it appeals to a large number of doctrines and ideas. In particular, ‘Exterior homo’ displays an impressive knowledge of the Bible, which it often interprets in an allegorical sense. Generally, many sentences in the treatise seem feats of virtuosity, distilling a vast number of sources in shorthand-like expressions. On occasions, the text becomes obscure and elusive, particularly when it refers to religious matters. It seems this opacity is purposeful, as the author is capable of being extremely clear in other passages. Although the overall sense of the text is intelligible, one is left with the impression that a lot is left unsaid.

As the prosecutors had pointed out, the text is annotated and corrected solely in Van Helmont’s hand. The majority of Van Helmont’s annotations refer to Latin grammar or choice of words. For instance, on different occasions, he corrected ‘somnolentarum’ with ‘somnolenta’, inserted ‘quippe’ or ‘quidam’, cut ‘exantlata’, and replaced ‘purum’ with ‘pretiosum’. These interventions do convey the impression that Van Helmont is correcting a transcription of his own writing. Nevertheless, he rejected this suggestion, maintaining that Mersenne had explicitly allowed him to alter the contents of someone else’s treatise. The only substantive marginalia is Van Helmont’s comment ‘hence women being preferred to men in the Scriptures’, which refers to an obscure passage in the text, according to which the serpent in Eden found it easier to corrupt the male (Adam) than the female (Eve).Footnote 19 This passage was underlined by the prosecutor for suspiciously meddling in matters of faith and for being the only passage that was commented on directly by Van Helmont. Nevertheless, the prosecutor was unsuccessful in either attracting a confession of authorship from the Flemish physician or in obtaining an explanation for the passage.

Based on its contents, ‘Exterior homo’ can be divided into two parts: in the first, the anonymous author espouses a philosophical view of man, his nature and constitution, while in the second he focuses on the subject of human generation. In the period, issues of reproduction were often seen in a larger religious and philosophical context that involved considerations about the human condition and the nature of the human soul.Footnote 20 In ‘Exterior homo’, both parts remain highly theoretical, with very little advice given. In this sense, it was probably meant to support a more practical consilium that has not been preserved.

2.1. The Treatise’s View of Man

The ‘Exterior homo’ treatise begins with a few preliminary statements which intend to position the discourse within the medical–philosophical tradition. The Hippocratics, the treatise states, divide ‘the exterior man’ into three parts: the containing (the body), the contained (the humours) and impetus faciens, which is the same as the spiritus.Footnote 21 Here the author is obviously borrowing from Claudius Galen (129–ca. 200/216) without acknowledging the source. Instead, the concept is described as ‘Hippocratic’, since Galen himself maintained that he drew it from Hippocrates’s Epidemics.Footnote 22

The treatise goes further in its classification, affirming that the physicians (Medici) divide the spiritus into insitus (resident or implanted) and influens (inflowing). Again, no authority is cited, but the source of this idea is the French physician Jean Fernel (1497–1558), for whom the spiritus influens was associated with the traditional Galenic spirits, while the spiritus insitus was a divine force associated with vital heat.Footnote 23

Further on, ‘Exterior homo’ criticises the so-called schole theoremata or the theorem-based school of medicine for neglecting the role of potestates (‘powers’) in the functioning of the human body. The term schole theoremata offers a clue as to the provenience of the treatise, since it was employed by the Danish physician Petrus Severinus (1542–1602)Footnote 24 to refer disparagingly to the Galenic school.Footnote 25 Severinus was an influential medical philosopher, who was reputed for his interpretation of the works of the Swiss physician Theophrastus Paracelsus (1493–1541) in his masterpiece Idea medicinae philosophicae (1571). His approach of placing Paracelsus within the tradition of learned medicine made Paracelsianism much more acceptable to the European intelligentsia.Footnote 26

The suspicion that the author of ‘Exterior homo’ was inspired by Severinus is strengthened in the next paragraph, where the anonymous author describes the potestates of the soul. The concept of the ‘powers of the soul,’ developed by St Augustine (354–430),Footnote 27 explained how an incorporeal soul exercised authority over the material body. Here these powers are associated with ‘Roots, Gifts, Reasons, Characters, Ideas, or Sculptures, hidden Words’.Footnote 28 The roots, gifts and reasons prominently appear in Severinus’s Idea medicinae as occult vital agents.Footnote 29 Severinus had also briefly discussed potestates as representing spiritual forces that act in bodies or in the semina.Footnote 30 His observation that potestates are ‘shadows’ is mirrored in ‘Exterior homo’, where they are described as ‘shadows of the body’.Footnote 31

The opening statements of ‘Exterior homo’ hence offer a major insight into the treatise. First, they establish the work’s adherence to the Ficinian–Fernelian current of medical–philosophical thought that emphasised the importance of the incorporeal spiritus over that of the three traditional, material Galenic spirits (the vital, animal and natural).Footnote 32 Second, the arguments identify the treatise as originating from the pen of a writer influenced by Petrus Severinus.

‘Exterior homo’ further discourses on the nature of the soul, which it describes as a luminous substance and the image (simulacrum) of God.Footnote 33 The soul is derived from the Father of Lights or divine light (lux).Footnote 34 The soul as imago Dei was an accepted orthodox tenet since the early Fathers of the Church.Footnote 35 ‘Exterior homo’s’ view of the soul as immortal and divine in origin mirrors the Paracelsian attempt to ground its understanding in Christian sources.Footnote 36

The treatise speculates that the soul has a tripartite structure, made up of anima stans (‘Standing Soul’), anima sedens (‘Sitting Soul’) and anima cadens (the ‘Falling Soul’). The idea of a tripartite soul within the human body (rational, irrational and passionate) harks back to Plato, supported in this perspective by both Aristotle and Galen.Footnote 37 Yet the actual soul triad stans-sedens-cadens seems to occur only in this treatise, and may have originated in a phrase found in the chief work of Heinrich Cornelius Agrippa (1486–1535), De occulta philosophia libri tres (On the Occult Philosophy).Footnote 38

The treatise explains that each of these souls has its own role and its specific place in the body. It then dwells at length on the description of the anima stans and sedens. Thus, the anima stans contemplates that which is above itself, and fittingly has its location in the brain: it is the reflective side of the soul, which manifests itself in night-time prayer.Footnote 39 By comparison, the anima sedens is located in the heart: it is active and intimately linked with the potestates.Footnote 40 The location of ‘souls’ in specific organs of the human body was Galenic in origin.Footnote 41

The activity of each soul is further explained by a reference from the Bible: ‘Day unto day uttereth speech, night unto night showeth knowledge’.Footnote 42 The author of ‘Exterior homo’ interprets ‘speech’ to mean the active (solar) side of human life, with knowledge (scientia) belonging to the contemplative (lunar) side.Footnote 43 Hence, the two represent the active–contemplative poles of the human soul:

the Standing Soul, through nightly prayer (watch, pray and be sober), draws down an abundance of light from above. Meanwhile, the Sitting Soul, shining at the concentricity of the solar light (…) administers correctly all the aspects of mundane life.Footnote 44

The solar–lunar association is carried further, as ‘Exterior homo’ claims that the anima sedens and stans are the two ‘luminaries’ of the body, the Sun and the Moon.Footnote 45 The microcosm–macrocosm analogy is here made explicit and drawn in line with the popular medical–astrological tradition that had long assigned the heart to the Sun and the brain to the Moon.Footnote 46

Having discoursed on the two higher souls, the author now proceeds to the third soul, the anima cadens (‘Falling Soul’), which is ‘always prone to slide downwards’.Footnote 47 Apparently this soul also has its original seat in the heart, but travels downwards into the inferior powers. This soul is responsible for the sexual drive and reproduction, and is assigned to Venus and Mercury. The author takes a dim view of the anima cadens, which is described in religious terms as living ‘under the rule of sin’.Footnote 48

Moving onward, the author points out that the soul is incapable of communicating directly with the body, as it is incorporeal and has no spatial dimension (it lacks extremities, the author says, extremitatibus carens). Hence, the soul needs an agency to intercede on its behalf: this is the spiritus, impetus faciens. By positing a tripartite structure of man (soul, spirit and body), the treatise is in basic agreement with Galenic doctrine; nevertheless, it differs from it on its description of the spirit. Galenists commonly referred to the spirit as being finely corporeal and tripartite (natural, vital and animal).Footnote 49 By comparison, the treatise’s notion of interceding powers appears to refer to something more transcendental than the Galenic spirits. The author calls them ‘Ideas’, or more specifically ‘Agents of Ideas’ (agendorum ideas sive Potestates) or ‘Active Ideas.’ This terminology underlines the appropriation of overtly Platonic concepts in the treatise.Footnote 50

Ideas are further associated with images, which are the instruments whereby the soul acts on the corporeal matter.Footnote 51 Such images have the power of creating true entities (vera entia) within the body.Footnote 52 The treatise hence supports the Renaissance theory of imagination whereby images are deemed to have a true material impact, at least in so far as the human body is concerned.Footnote 53 To uphold this theory, the author brings the example of the ‘phantasms’ that are conceived by pregnant women and have the power to alter the foetus, a common conception in the period.Footnote 54

The anonymous author further describes the powers as normally acting mildly, but occasionally expansively and impetuously, a fact which determined Hippocrates to associate them with the impetus faciens.Footnote 55 To explain their action, the treatise appeals again to a passage in the Old Testament (Kings 19:10–12), where the Prophet Elijah, having hidden in a cave and expecting God to pass by, experiences a strong wind, earthquake and fire, but is not deluded by these and eventually, after the commotion had passed, recognises God in a gentle whisper.Footnote 56 The author of the treatise suggests that God is found more readily in the suave aura. Through this example, the text makes the rather explicit attempt to describe the internal powers as heavenly forces. Indeed, the author further maintains that the powers are of celestial origin.Footnote 57

The potestates are, in turn, impressed by the soul into the corporeal ‘radical humour’ and ‘radical balsam’ of the body.Footnote 58 The distinction between ‘humour’ and ‘balsam’ was articulated by Severinus.Footnote 59 The balsam renders the humour vital and lively and instructs it with the knowledge (scientia) of its purpose.Footnote 60

True to his agenda of emphasising the spiritual agency, the author does not discuss the body in any great detail, describing it as an instrument at the hands of the powers and ultimately of the soul. Nevertheless, he addresses the subject of blood, which is given special importance. Blood, the author maintains, is a special substance extracted from the limus of the Macrocosm.Footnote 61 Here the treatise clearly draws on Paracelsus’s idiosyncratic interpretation of Genesis 2:7, where God creates man out of the dust of the ground (limus terrae).Footnote 62 Paracelsus understood this verse to mean that the limus was a quintessence of all things; consequently, man’s body contained all things within.Footnote 63 This view was adopted by many Paracelsians.Footnote 64 ‘Exterior homo’ concurred with this standard Paracelsian view, affirming that ‘the Microcosm participates in all things in the universe (…) by containing them.’Footnote 65

By linking blood with the primordial limus terrae, the treatise emphasises its significance. Galenic medicine had already placed great importance on blood as the carrier of the vital spirit infused from the air into the body.Footnote 66 Yet some early modern physicians went further than Galen by speculating that blood itself was a locus of spirit and power. Heightened views of blood could be found in several Paracelsian authors, including Severinus and the Flemish physician Gerhard Dorn (1530–84), before reaching its fullest expression in the work of William Harvey (1578–1657).Footnote 67

Yet in a treatise like ‘Exterior homo’, with its strong dualist tendencies between body and soul, blood is not seen as a positive force. The author laments that the blood of man contains within it the ‘will of the flesh’ and the ‘will of man’, hence reflecting the Original Sin.Footnote 68 Every sexual relation impresses ‘necessity’ through the blood; by this the author appears to take the Augustinian position that the Original Sin is passed physically from generation to generation through the seed.Footnote 69

The criticism of sexual procreation is accompanied by a positive view of virginity. This too is in line with Paracelsian thought: Paracelsus had extolled chastity and virginity as an imitation of Christ and a path to regeneration,Footnote 70 and several of his followers shared his views.Footnote 71 Along the same lines, the treatise expresses the view that Christian Baptism regenerates the body by restoring its lost virginity.Footnote 72 By contrast, the sexual, here called ‘Adamical,’ generation is despised as being a remnant of the Fall of Man.Footnote 73 Generation, it insists, always happens under the law of sin; in support of this idea, the treatise adduces a Biblical citation from Psalms 51:5: ‘behold, I was brought forth in iniquity, and in sin my mother conceived me.’

The overview of the first part of the treatise has pointed out the strong religious themes of the work. Its Christian view has a significant Platonic undertone that clearly departs from medieval Scholastic tradition. The author talks about the august origins of the soul (anima), which it had forgotten when ‘chained’ to the body, and about the ‘prison of the body’ (corporis ergastulo) in which it has been confined. The theme of the body as the ‘prison of the soul’ had a long tradition in Christian Platonic thought where it was deemed to accurately portray the state of the soul after the Fall of man.Footnote 74

This tendency toward body–soul dualism is further enhanced by the dichotomy between ‘inner’ and ‘outer’ man (homo exterior and interior), a concept that had a venerable career in Christian thought, particularly that of mystical persuasion.Footnote 75 The inner man usually reflected the divine in man, while the outer man was the soul (sometimes seen together with the body) that lived in contact with the exterior world. In the early modern period, the dichotomy of inner and outer man was adopted by Paracelsus and many of his followers.Footnote 76 In ‘Exterior homo’, the outer man is described as being the inner spirit (impetus faciens, or spiritus) together with the body.

2.2. The Theory of Human Generation

After espousing a general theory of man, the author of ‘Exterior homo’ proceeds to express his views on human generation. He notes that fecundity is a divine quality, a prerogative of the Word itself,Footnote 77 referring to the command in Genesis 1:22 to ‘be fruitful and multiply’. The emphasis on the sacred nature of procreation was common in the early modern world.Footnote 78 At the same time, the author was ambivalent toward sexual relations, condemning human reproduction through coitus.

The key to understanding the treatise’s views rests in its radical argument on behalf of the superiority of women over men. Thus, the treatise can be inscribed within the Renaissance trope of the dignity of women, which had been inaugurated by Agrippa, but also upheld by Paracelsus.Footnote 79 The ‘Exterior homo’ author takes a similarly radical view. For him, females are superior to males, who are described as incontinent and lecherous.Footnote 80 In rather obscure words, he also seems to suggest that the serpent of Eden found Adam an easier target for sin than Eve, as the male was made weaker in virtue.Footnote 81

‘Exterior homo’ carries the praise of women even further, making reference to God’s statement in Genesis 3:15 according to which the offspring of the woman would crush the head of the serpent.Footnote 82 This verse in Genesis 3.15 was commonly thought in the early modern age to be a prophecy referring to Christ, and the treatise employs this as an argument that Christ originated only from the female seed, and not the male one.Footnote 83

The author further distinguishes the female seed, which is described as ‘foamy’ (or venereal) from the male’s ‘sanguine’ (or mercurial) seed. In espousing a two-seed doctrine of generation, the writer chooses the views of Galen over those of Aristotle, who insisted that only males had seed.Footnote 84 Yet the text goes further than both authorities and the limits of traditional natural philosophy in general. Thus, it attempts to formulate a Christian view of human generation by speculating on a ‘divine’ mode of reproduction that occurred before the Original Sin. In rather veiled words, the author explains that the Church itself blessed woman, not man, to be fruitful, and implies that pre-lapsarian generation must have occurred without a male seed. Yet this method of procreation remained possible even after the Original Sin in the case of very holy women. The writer points out that the Bible bore witness to the fact that blessed women, such as Sarah, Rachel and Elisabeth, procreated through God Himself, not through sexual intercourse.Footnote 85 The tone is oblique but allusive. The author talks about this generation being a ‘mystery’ hidden in the Church and imparted only to initiates (Ecclesia mysteriorum Synmista).

Although the sense of the text is somewhat unclear, the views seem to draw on those expressed by Paracelsus. They mirror Paracelsus’s concern of heightening the role of God in human generation, his praise of women, his emphasis on their role in reproduction, and his attempt of differentiating ordinary women from holy ones (albeit concentrating on Virgin Mary).Footnote 86

The veiled account of holy generation in ‘Exterior homo’ serves as an introduction to the author’s theory of ordinary human reproduction. This too is unusual through its radical implications. First, the writer argues that the male seed does not actually contribute to the seminal mass at all; instead, it only ‘excites’ and promotes the self-generation of women.Footnote 87 Interestingly, this idea reflects the speculations of early seventeenth-century Aristotelian physicians. According to Fabrizio d’Aquapendente, William Harvey and others, the sperm of the male did not penetrate into the uterus.Footnote 88 The Aristotelian physicians used this theory to show that the role of the male in generation was spiritual, hence superior to the material conception of the female.Footnote 89 ‘Exterior homo’ employed this theory in an exactly opposite way: in order to demote and demean the importance of the male in generation.

To substantiate this view, the treatise adduces several empirical observations that point to the minor role of males in generation. Hence, the author argues that men’s weak generational power is proven by the fact that birth defects are caused by the female, and that all beings that come out of an egg (fish, birds, insects, etc) are pre-formed by the mother.Footnote 90 More importantly, cross-breeding shows that the offspring is most like to the mother: the author points out that when a female coney is crossed with a male dormouse the outcome is always a coney, with only the tail to betray the male’s side.Footnote 91

Having thus established the comparative role of the male and female in reproduction, the treatise proceeds to explain the actual process of generation. The theory emphasises spiritual agency: nothing can be conceived without the intervention of the soul, in this case the reproductive soul, anima cadens. It vitalises the seed by a ray of light, which seals the powers, the Active Ideas, into it.Footnote 92 The author makes it clear that without the light of the falling soul the seed would be an empty husk.Footnote 93 In this, the author sets forth his theory of image-ideas that act as ‘seals’ on the generative mass, seals which contain the blueprint of the future development of the foetus.Footnote 94

Moving further, the author concentrates on the role of the uterus in conception. This emphasis on the importance of the womb is clearly a Paracelsian legacy.Footnote 95 According to his views, the womb contains a spirit Architect, also called Vulcan or Archeus.Footnote 96 The concept draws extensively on Paracelsian and Severinian ideas: Paracelsus had maintained that the spirit Archeus or Vulcan was responsible for making seeds fertile.Footnote 97 Severinus did not use the term Archeus, but had agreed with Paracelsus that the seed was inhabited by a spiritus architectonicus; his term is mirrored in the treatise by the notion of the ‘magnetic Architect’.Footnote 98 The ‘Exterior homo’ further describes the Archeus–Vulcan as a ‘vital’ or ‘seminal’ power, in line with Renaissance view of the formative power.Footnote 99 The Archeus does not lie on the material, but on the spiritual plane,Footnote 100 resembling the description of Vulcan in Paracelsus’ treatises as an alchemical agency revealed by the action of the stars.Footnote 101

In a manner reminiscent of Severinian speculation, the author describes the Archeus as containing within itself the knowledge of the future body as a type of spiritual nucleus.Footnote 102 The spirit in the womb guides the organs to their ‘entelechy’, an Aristotelian term that referred to the predestined purpose of each thing.Footnote 103 In this sense it is an architect of the body, which designs the structure and then creates it in a similar manner to that of an artist making a sculpture.Footnote 104

The treatise insists on the ‘magnetic’ nature of the process of generation. The Archeus is a ‘magnet’ which sleeps in the womb. It needs to be excited by ‘friction’ and, once awakened, attracts the male seed within itself and proceeds to create a new being. The theory of the womb’s magnet originates from Paracelsus.Footnote 105 The male seed, as such, is only responsible for the excitement, or awakening, of the somnolent Archeus in the womb.

Consequently, the treatise affirms, in order to get a woman pregnant, a physician must exclusively concentrate on the Archeus–spiritus, rather than the contained body or the containing humours as Galenists do.Footnote 106 The Archeus, being a magnet, has to be ‘amplified’ or ‘sharpened’ in order to generate a new foetus. This is done by ‘refreshing’ (refocillatur) or ‘reintegrating’ (reintegratur) the Archeus by means of alchemical medicine.

The treatise flatly rejects traditional Galenic remedies, such as the cure by heat and cold, cautery, perspirations or evacuations.Footnote 107 These in fact debilitate the Archeus further and have nefarious consequences. Instead, the author recommends the use of medicine obtained by the separation of the subtle from the gross. This principle too is supported with a quote from the Bible, Jeremiah 15:19.Footnote 108

In these passages, the treatise clearly draws on the quintessential tradition in alchemy, which dated back to the High Middle Ages and had been promoted by Paracelsus.Footnote 109 The spagyric process, described as a secret union or conjunction (syzygia), results in a purer, more powerful medicine than ordinary concoctions. In Paracelsian style, the resulting medicine is called Arcana.Footnote 110 The Arcanum is obtained by reducing the prime matter into a small but highly potent dose by distillation and sublimation. The Arcanum is essentially ‘spiritualised’ by this process, losing its ‘earthly’ and ‘immature character’Footnote 111 and acquiring a ‘firmamental temperament’.Footnote 112 By this the author means that the medicine transcends the Galenic temperaments (hot, cold, humid or dry), which are not suitable for procreation, and attains a higher, celestial power.

The microcosm–macrocosm analogy is re-affirmed, since the power of the Archeus is connected with that of its corresponding star (astrum). This means that the astrological ‘favour’ (astrologico…favore) must be sought.Footnote 113 The author does not explain what he means by this, and one is left to speculate whether he means that the Archeus of the womb, for instance, must be treated by an alchemical medicine associated with planet Venus (copper) or whether the ‘favour’ must be drawn down from Venus into a talisman.

Once the elevation of the medicine is achieved, the powers of the Arcanum work with the corporal powers in perfect harmony, or ‘symphony’, as the treatise puts it.Footnote 114 It is an important tenet of Paracelsian medicine that the cure must conform to the body: the principle of ‘like cures like’. In the treatise, the author affirms that the Arcana are ‘akin’ or ‘friendly’ to the powers of the Archeus and ‘converse’ with them.Footnote 115 The medicine becomes easily assimilated into the body and is hence able to excite the internal magnet of the womb.

The treatise concludes rather abruptly with the statement that the wise alone can dominate the malignant stars, a phrase common in the Middle Ages and attributed to Ptolemy.Footnote 116 The author again draws a microcosmic–macrocosmic analogy, as it is clear that the ‘malignant stars’ that he is referring to are present in the microcosm (human body) as disease. It is another strong affirmation that is meant to sway the reader into employing alchemical remedies rather than harmful Galenic concoctions. The ‘wise men’ are clearly the Paracelsian physicians, who are in possession of the knowledge that can ward off illnesses.

As mentioned in the introduction, the treatise was meant to be part of a practical medical consultation for King Louis XIII of France on the matter of his sterile marriage to Anne of Austria. The actual medical prescription has not been retained and perhaps was never written. If Van Helmont had indeed been its author, he would have sent the treatise to the King as a formal introduction, or advertisement of his vast knowledge and learning on the subject of human generation. In this sense, the treatise could also be read as a quest for patronage.Footnote 117 However, ‘Exterior homo’ does not read like a typical alchemical petition. As a nobleman, Van Helmont may have thought a subtler approach would be more appropriate to his status; indeed, in his later Opuscula medicina inaudita (1642), he prided in his refusal to pander to the wishes and requests of sovereigns.Footnote 118 Instead, Van Helmont would have hoped to impress the French monarch with his medical, philosophical and religious insight, in the hope of securing a private audience. The Flemish physician had made it clear in the letter to Mersenne that he could only share his reproductive secret in the king’s presence. We can speculate that this secret would have involved alchemical medicine, perhaps enriched by the influence of propitious stars.

If the work was indeed by Van Helmont, we may wonder why the treatise was still in his possession when he was arrested in 1634, particularly since the discussion with Mersenne dated back to 1631. We can speculate that, in fact, he could have sent another copy and retained this annotated one for his records: surely Van Helmont would not have sent a treatise full of grammar corrections to the French sovereign. On the other hand, if he did send it to France, no records of a response from either Mersenne or the king have survived. Moreover, Van Helmont’s plans of emigrating to France and hence escaping the Spanish Inquisition’s influence never materialised.

At the same time, we cannot of course exclude Van Helmont’s own declaration, according to which this was someone else’s consilium that had been shared with him by Mersenne. Van Helmont maintained that he was permitted to retain the copy. This plausible explanation was accepted by the ecclesiastical court and cannot easily be dismissed due to our suspicions regarding Van Helmont’s authorship.

3. The Relationship between ‘Exterior homo’ and Van Helmont

This article has so far shown that the ‘Exterior homo’ treatise is a work written in the first half of the seventeenth century by a Paracelsian physician familiar with Renaissance medicine and the works of Petrus Severinus. In this section, I will seek to situate the treatise in relation to the known writings of Van Helmont, considering the likelihood that he might have been the author of the treatise.

Van Helmont’s masterpiece, Ortus medicinae (1648) was published posthumously in Amsterdam by his son Franciscus Mercurius (1614/18–98).Footnote 119 Given its comprehensiveness and influence, most scholars have based their analysis of Helmontian thought on this large compendium. However, Van Helmont’s thought had developed over time, and my doctoral dissertation has argued that his writings should be separated between the ‘early’, ‘mature’ and ‘late’ stages.Footnote 120 The early stage comprises the 1607 youthful treatise Eisagoge de artem medicam à Paracelso restitutam. The mature one contains his writings between 1608 and 1634, including De magnetica vulnerum curatione (1621), Supplementum de Spadanis fontibus (1624), surviving letters, as well as a range of manuscripts still found in the Mechelen archives. Finally, the late stage (1634–44) includes the Opuscula medica inaudita as well as the posthumous Ortus.

This proposed division is important in the context of the present analysis, as ‘Exterior homo’ can clearly be positioned at the boundary between the mature and late stage. This means that resemblance between mature Helmontian treatises (written before 1634) and ‘Exterior homo’ strengthen the suspicion that the work was written by Van Helmont himself. Of course, we cannot discount the possibility that the writer of ‘Exterior homo’ was influenced by Van Helmont’s printed works themselves. Resemblance between post-1634 work and ‘Exterior homo’ is more likely due to influence from ‘Exterior homo’ on Van Helmont’s later work, but could also be understood as exposition or correction of earlier ideas. Beyond the authorship issue, the comparison between ‘Exterior homo’ and Van Helmont’s mature and later works serves to highlight the little-studied changes in Helmontian thought over time.

For the purpose of this assessment, it is equally important to note that the youthful and mature works of Van Helmont show him as an outspoken supporter of Paracelsus and his ideas. Yet, as scholars have rightly pointed out, Van Helmont initially absorbed Paracelsian doctrine through the primary medium of Petrus Severinus.Footnote 121 The Severinian influence, strongest in the 1607 manuscript Eisagoge, is also felt in the mature treatise De Spadanis fontibus.Footnote 122

Mature Van Helmont adopted the Severinian interpretation of Hippocrates’ to enormon (impetus faciens) as being the same as the spiritus of the Ficinian–Fernelian tradition. In the mature De Spadanis fontibus, Van Helmont associated the ‘architectonical chaos’ of Severinus (similar to the spiritus mechanicus or architectonicus) with to enormon.Footnote 123 Finally, in the Ortus medicinae, Van Helmont refers to the Paracelsian spirit Archeus as an equivalent for the Hippocratic term.Footnote 124 Thus, we can find in Van Helmont’s mature and later thought the same rich association of spiritus with to enormon, the Archeus and the spirit-architect that was present in ‘Exterior homo’.

The treatise’s theoretical distinction between the spiritus insitus and influens can be found in Van Helmont’s mature work. In De magnetica we can find a sentence similar to that of ‘Exterior homo’: ‘physicians divide this spirit into the implanted or mummial, as well as the inflowing spirit, which departs with life’.Footnote 125 Here Van Helmont interprets the spiritus insitus to mean a spirit that dwells within the body for a short time after death, while the other flies away immediately.Footnote 126

The idea of the spiritus insitus and spiritus influens also appears in the late Ortus medicinae. However, at this point Van Helmont changes his terminology: he equates the spiritus insitus not with the mummy, but with the local Archeus or spiritus insitus vitalis.Footnote 127 Van Helmont now calls both the spiritus insitus and influensArchei’.Footnote 128 Yet the importance of the spiritus insitus remains; the resident spirits govern every organ of the body. The implanted spirit of the seed, the Archeus of generation, ‘constructs’ the foetus and endows it with all of the organs necessary for survival.Footnote 129

As in ‘Exterior homo’, the spiritus insitus of the late Ortus medicinae is connected with medical astrology. Van Helmont argues that ‘the planetary spirits shine brightest in the bowels’.Footnote 130 This statement is complemented in the Dutch abbreviated version of the Ortus, Dageraad (1661), and the German translation, Aufgang der Artzney Kunst (1683), with a paragraph where the different ‘planetary spirits’ are associated with the organs. The scheme is the same as in ‘Exterior homo’: the Sun is associated with the heart and the Moon with the head.Footnote 131 Why this statement is missing in Ortus is a mystery; Walter Pagel tried to explain it by suggesting that it ‘may have been thought suitable for a more popular version in the vernacular’.Footnote 132 In any case, the brief statement in the Ortus implies that Van Helmont believed in medical astrology. At the same time, the idea of the Sun in the heart and Moon in the head squares uneasily with Van Helmont’s Ortus concept of the sensitive soul and the mind being lodged in the stomach.Footnote 133

In the mature De magnetica, Van Helmont also develops a theory of the powers (potestates) that is similar to that in ‘Exterior homo’. This theory is intimately connected with the proposed dichotomy between the ‘exterior’ and ‘interior’ man. The exterior man is essentially ‘an animal making use of the reason and will of the blood’.Footnote 134 The powers of the blood belong to the exterior man, while the powers of the mind belong to the interior man.Footnote 135 Van Helmont uses the expression exterior and interior homo not only in his mature but also in his late works.Footnote 136

De magnetica also insists on the power of the blood. This power, Van Helmont maintains, lies dormant until it is somehow aroused. Once excited, it can transport the spirit of the exterior man into a distant object by means of the force of imagination, or natural magic.Footnote 137 This emphasis on blood and natural magic disappears in the Ortus medicinae, most likely due to the censorship of his earlier work by the Inquisition.

The mature Van Helmont adheres to the traditional Paracelsian interpretation of the macrocosm–microcosm analogy. In a 1631 letter to Mersenne, Van Helmont explains that blood is ‘our microcosmic sea’,Footnote 138 a statement that resembles the similar affirmation in ‘Exterior homo.’ Furthermore, in De magnetica he often refers to the microcosm as man, containing all essences of things within.Footnote 139 By comparison, in his late stage Van Helmont ‘denounces’ the microcosm–macrocosm analogy by emphasising man’s fundamental similarity to God rather than the world. Nevertheless, his argument is nuanced and complex.Footnote 140

The ‘Exterior homo’ concept of a ‘will of the flesh’ is already present in De magnetica. The will of the flesh and blood is separate from the will of God or the will of man.Footnote 141 This ‘will of flesh and blood’, which unconsciously belongs to all animated beings, dwells in the exterior man as the product of Original Sin.Footnote 142 The concept of the ‘will of the flesh’ reappears in the Ortus medicinae as well.Footnote 143

Mature Van Helmont seemed to share the ‘Exterior homo’s views of the superiority of women and of the inferiority of sexual generation. His opinions on this matter are not expressed in the published treatises, but can be inferred from his archives. As already pointed out, Van Helmont agreed with the idea of the superiority of women over men in the annotation he made on ‘Exterior homo’.

His pre-1634 support for the idea of the inferiority of sexual generation is conjectural. Amongst the documents confiscated by the court in 1634 were some extracts that Van Helmont attributed to Cornelius Agrippa. These contained potentially heretical statements that attributed the Original Sin to sexual relations. Van Helmont distanced himself from this document, but suspicion remains that he may have been sympathetic to the doctrine. This is highly important in light of the fact that his late work, the Ortus medicinae, makes this view explicit and comprehensive. Thus, in the Ortus, Van Helmont firmly believed that carnal copulation was the actual Original Sin, sharing such unorthodox beliefs with his fellow compatriots Michel de Bay and Cornelius Jansen.Footnote 144 Van Helmont maintained that the Apple contained within it an urge toward concupiscence, which made Adam defile Eve.Footnote 145

In the Ortus, Van Helmont linked this unorthodox theory with that of the superiority of women over men. Adam, not Eve, was responsible for the Original Sin. Instead, ‘Eve was of firmer chastity and her body created more perfectly’.Footnote 146 In her case, the loss of virginity due to Adam’s rape was equal to a fall from a high spiritual status, as she was reduced to a role of mothering in a similar way to animals. Hence, only virgins come close to the elevated position of undefiled Eve,Footnote 147 the Virgin Mary being the sole woman to recover the pre-fall role of divine generator.

The Original Sin hence replaced what Van Helmont described as the original, ‘virginal’ generation, with the Adamical generation through seed.Footnote 148 The Adamical generation caused an alteration in the very nature of man. In the initial divine plan, man was composed only of body and mind, the mind governing the body directly.Footnote 149 However, after the Original Sin, the mind retreated in the recesses of the body, and the place of governor of the body was taken by a new entity, the sensitive soul (anima sensitiva). This inferior soul bears strong similarity to the treatise’s anima cadens, and is similarly mortal.

Van Helmont’s theory of generation is advocated in the Ortus medicinae in very similar terms to the treatise. Just as in ‘Exterior homo’, the womb possesses magnetism, which is described as the key aspect of generation.Footnote 150 Procreation is achieved when the male seed is attracted by the womb’s magnet within the uterus. Van Helmont uses the same quote from the Bible, God opened the womb of Sarah, to show that the male seed has a relatively unimportant role in generation.Footnote 151 He also affirms, in direct line with Paracelsus and ‘Exterior homo’, that procreation is a divine gift and that God intervenes directly in generation.Footnote 152 Van Helmont also refers to the experiment whereby a dormouse was crossed with a coney to suggest the lesser importance of the male in conception, whose primary role is only to excite the mother’s womb for generation.Footnote 153

The process of generation is also explained in terms similar to the ‘Exterior homo’ treatise: the seed draws down the light (aura vitalis) which contains the seal of Image-Ideas, or the pattern of the body. Van Helmont also argued that images influenced the creation of new beings or even of disease.Footnote 154

In respect to the theory of the soul, Van Helmont’s ideas are generally comparable to those of ‘Exterior homo’. The soul is also a light descended from the ‘Father of Lights’ and an imago Dei; however, Van Helmont generally emphasises that it is the mind (mens) as the interior part of the soul that most resembles God.Footnote 155 As in ‘Exterior homo’, Van Helmont also believes that the soul requires an agency to implement its will; this agency is usually referred to as the spirit or Archeus.Footnote 156

In addition, Van Helmont’s commitment to alchemical medicine as opposed to Galenic treatment is too well known to analyse here.Footnote 157 He was thoroughly devoted to the Paracelsian view of ‘like cures like’, and maintained that Arcana cured by appeasing the Archeus, not by irritating it.Footnote 158

Given the strong similarity between Van Helmont’s ideas and those of ‘Exterior homo’, it is worth asking whether there are any obvious discrepancies. The most obvious difference is the affirmation of a Platonic tripartite theory of the soul (anima stans–anima sedens and anima cadens). This elaborate theory cannot be found in Van Helmont’s works, at least those that have been deciphered.Footnote 159 As already pointed out, there is a similarity between the treatise’s anima cadens and the sensitive soul of Van Helmont’s late works, but the ‘Exterior homo’s’ perspective of the contemplative and active souls as separate entities is harder to reconcile with Van Helmont’s works. We should not conclude by this that the subjects of contemplation and action are of no concern to Van Helmont. On the contrary, he articulates a complex process of acquiring knowledge through mystical contemplation, which then translates into practical knowledge.Footnote 160

4. Conclusion

The careful analysis of the text of ‘Exterior homo’ has revealed strong similarities between Van Helmont’s ideas and those of the treatise. These include the division of man into ‘exterior’ and ‘interior’, the separation of the spiritus into ‘resident’ (insitus) and ‘inflowing’ (influens), the impression of images into the generative mass by the light of the soul, the existence of a spirit called Archeus–Vulcan which renders the seed fertile, and the importance of magnetism in procreation. The similarity is even more striking when we consider the radical argument that women are superior to men, and that they were supposed to give birth supernaturally, without the aid of male seed. Even though the ‘Exterior homo’ is evasive on the subject of divine generation, its ideas seem to correspond well with those of Van Helmont.

Nevertheless, these resemblances cannot by themselves ascertain that Van Helmont is the author of the treatise, as they can be attributed to mutual influence. It is also not impossible that another Paracelsian shared his views, particularly since many of the ideas can be traced back to the thought of Paracelsus, Severinus or Croll. This is the more so as both Van Helmont and ‘Exterior homo’ maintained that these beliefs were not unique to themselves. ‘Exterior homo’ referred to the initiates (Synmista) of the inner church, while Van Helmont often talked about the ideas of the Hermetic school which he identified himself with. Therefore, we can conclude that it is ‘highly likely’ that Van Helmont wrote ‘Exterior homo’, without attributing authorship with absolute certainty.

Leaving the thorny issue of authorship aside, the treatise should be deemed valuable in and of itself through the fascinating perspective it conveys. ‘Exterior homo’ clearly draws on Paracelsian and Severinian ideas to construct a comprehensive medical philosophy, which includes a complex if underdeveloped theory of the nature and structure of man, of the Original Sin, the difference between men and women, and of the way the human body functions. In light of these, it proposes an unusual perspective of human generation, which emphasises the role of the women and of spiritual agency in procreation. It further advocates the use of non-Galenic, alchemical medicine in order to stimulate reproduction.

The reader of ‘Exterior homo’ cannot but be impressed by the breadth of philosophical and religious thought presented in only four folios of text. Biology, medicine, chemistry, physics, theology, philosophy converge into one coherent, if unusual vision of the human being. In this sense, the treatise is representative of the Paracelsian attempt to unify knowledge and then use it in pragmatic ways for the betterment of others. Thus, in ‘Exterior homo’, the grand philosophical speculation on the nature of man is ultimately ‘brought down to earth’ and converted into useful knowledge on the specific subject of reproduction. Although the treatise does not include practical recipes, a full consilium would have involved the prescription of alchemical medicine. It was indeed the application of philosophical theory to medical practice that constituted an important part of the Paracelsian worldview.

References

1. This episode is the subject of a lively narrative by Craig Harline, Miracles at the Jesus Oak(New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2011), 179–241. Another important source is Robert Halleux, ‘Le procès d’inquisition du chimiste Jean-Baptiste Van Helmont (1578–1644): les enjeux et les arguments’, Académie des inscriptions et belles-lettres, 148, 2 (2004), 1059–86, 1074–8.Google Scholar

2. In front of the ecclesiastical court, Van Helmont maintained that the treatise had been published against his will and that it was meant to be circulated only amongst a group of friends and acquaintances. See Corneille Broeckx, ‘Interrogatoires du docteur J.B. van Helmont sur le magnétisme animal, publiés pour la première fois’, Annales de l’Académie d’archéologie de Belgique, 13 (1856), 306–50: 314. For more information on the weapon-salve controversy and Van Helmont’s involvement, see Mark A. Waddell, ‘The Perversion of Nature: Johannes Baptista Van Helmont, the Society of Jesus, and the Magnetic Cure of Wounds’, Canadian Journal of History, 38 (2003), 179–97; and Carlos Ziller Camenietzki, ‘Jesuits and Alchemy in the Early Seventeenth Century: Father Johannes Roberti and the Weapon Salve Controversy’, Ambix, 48, 2 (2001), 83–101, 87–96.Google Scholar

3. I am henceforth referring to this untitled treatise as ‘Exterior homo’.Google Scholar

4. Broeckx, op. cit. (note 2), 347–8.Google Scholar

5. Ibid., 347–8.Google Scholar

6. Halleux, op. cit. (note 1), 1078.Google Scholar

7. This is the subject of my PhD thesis, Delia Georgiana Hedesan, ‘Christian Philosophy: Medical Alchemy and Christian Thought in the Work of Jan Baptista Van Helmont (1579–1644)’ (unpublished PhD thesis: University of Exeter, 2012).Google Scholar

8. Guy Patin, Lettres(Paris: J.H. Reveille-Parise, 1846), 16 December 1649.Google Scholar

9. Broeckx, op. cit. (note 2), 45.Google Scholar

10. ‘Jean-Baptiste Van Helmont, à Bruxelles, à Mersenne, à Paris, 29 mars 1631’, in Cornelis de Waard (ed.), Correspondance du Marin Mersenne, 17 vols (Paris: Gabriel Beauchesne, 1936), III, 162.Google Scholar

11. Ibid., 163.Google Scholar

12. Ibid.: ‘D’ailleurs magnetica uteri attractrix, unica impregnationis causa, a nemine certius tractabitur (absit invidia) quam ab authore Magnetismi’.Google Scholar

13. I have discussed in detail Van Helmont’s ideas of the ‘Hermetic school’ and the Adepts in op. cit. (note 7), 107–14.Google Scholar

14. On this topic, see Amy Eisen Cislo, Paracelsus’s Theory of Embodiment: Conception and Gestation in Early Modern Europe(London: Pickering & Chatto, 2010).Google Scholar

15. Ibid., 22.Google Scholar

16. Ibid., 40–1.Google Scholar

17. Ibid., 26–7, 36–9.Google Scholar

18. Theophrastus Paracelsus, ‘Buch von der Gebärung der Empfindlichen Dingen Durch der Vernunft’, in Karl Sudhoff (ed.), Sämtliche Werke: Abteilung, medizinische, naturwissenschaftliche und philosophische Schriften, 14 vols (Munich and Berlin: Oldenbourg, 1922–33), I, 243–74: 262. On the importance of the womb in Paracelsus, see also Cislo, op. cit. (note 14), 27–30, 34, 36, 47, 61.Google Scholar

19. ‘Exterior homo’, in MS ‘Causa J.B. Helmontii medici’, 3 vols, Archives of the Archbishopric of Mechelen, II, fol. 257r–260v: fol. 257v: ‘hic femina estanti am viri prefert in scripturam’.Google Scholar

20. Crowther, Karen, ‘“Be Fruitful and Multiply”: Genesis and Generation in Reformation Germany’, Renaissance Quarterly, 55 (2002), 905934.Google Scholar

21. ‘Exterior homo’, op. cit. (note 19), fol. 257r: ‘Exterior homo apud Hippocrateni dividitur integraliter in Continens, Contentum et impetum faciens. Id est spiritum’.Google Scholar

22. Claudius Galen, De differentiis febrium libri duo(Lyon: Guillaume Rouille, 1550), I, ch. 2; see also Roger K. French, Ancient Natural History: Histories of Nature (London: Routledge, 1994), 153 and Walter Pagel, New Light on William Harvey (Basel: Karger, 1976), 64.Google Scholar

23. Walter Pagel, Joan Baptista Van Helmont: Reformer of Science and Medicine(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1982), 99; Antonio Clericuzio, ‘Spiritus Vitalis: Studia sulle teorie fisiologiche da Fernel a Boyle’, Nouvelles de la Republique des Lettres, 2 (1988), 33–84: 37; Jean Fernel, On the Hidden Nature of Things, John M. Forrester and John Henry (eds) (Leiden: Brill, 2005), I, 216. Pagel argued that the specific terms insitus–influens were not widely adopted before Van Helmont except by Dominico Bertacchi and Johann Heinrich Alsted: Walter Pagel, Smiling Spleen: Paracelsianism in Storm and Stress (Basel: Karger, 1984), 132. While the exact terminology may have originated during this late period, it is worth noting that Petrus Severinus had used the expression essentia insita to reflect a similar notion; see Idea medicinae philosophicae (Basel: Henricpetri, 1571), 92; moreover, Daniel Sennert pointed out in his critique of Severinus that the spiritus insitus was the same as the vital balsam, mummial spirit and vital sulphur of the Paracelsians; De chymicorum cum Aristotelicis et Galenicis consensus ac dissensu liber (Wittenberg: Zacharias Schurer, 1619), 237.Google Scholar

24. For the Paracelsian school of medicine and alchemical philosophy, Allen Debus’s The Chemical Philosophy: Paracelsian Science and Medicine in the 16th and 17th Centuries, 2nd edn (Mineola, NY: Dover Publications, 2002) is still the best introduction. On Petrus Severinus, see Jole Shackelford, A Philosophical Path for Paracelsian Medicine The Ideas, Intellectual Context, and Influence of Petrus Severinus, 1540–1602(Copenhagen: Museum Tusculanum Press, 2004), Ole Grell, ‘The acceptable face of Paracelsianism: the legacy of Idea medicinae and the introduction of Paracelsianism in early modern Denmark’ in Ole Grell (ed.), Paracelsus: The Man and his Reputation, His Ideas and their Transformation (Leiden: Brill, 1998), 245–69, as well as Hiro Hirai, Le concept de semence dans les théories de matière à la Renaissance (Brussels: Brepols, 2005), 217–67.Google Scholar

25. Severinus, op. cit. (note 23), I, 2. 44. As Owsei Temkin has shown, Galen himself believed that investigation was only warranted where geometrical proofs could be found; Owsei Temkin, Galenism: Rise and Decline of a Medical Philosophy(Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1973). For Severinus’s criticism of Galen see op. cit. (note 23), I, 2; Shackelford, idem., 63; Grell, idem., 251–3.Google Scholar

26. Grell, op. cit. (note 24), 245–9.Google Scholar

27. On the powers of the soul in St Augustine, see Philip Cary, Augustine’s Invention of the Inner Self: the Legacy of a Christian Platonist(Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2000), particularly 132–4.Google Scholar

28. ‘Exterior homo’, op. cit. (note 19), fol. 257r: ‘Potestates dico, Radices, Dona, Rationes, Characteres, sive Sculpturas, Verbi absconditi, ac celati in condo creaturarum’.Google Scholar

29. Severinus, op. cit. (note 23), 20, 22, 79. The ‘Gifts’ and ‘Reasons’ are drawn by Severinus from Paracelsus; Hirai, op. cit. (note 23), 251–3. ‘Characters’ may have been drawn on Paracelsus’s treatise ‘Astronomia Magna’: Theophrastus Paracelsus, ‘Astronomia magna sive Tota philosophia sagax, Maioris et Minoris Mundi’, in Operum medico-chimicorum sive paradoxorum, 12 vols (Frankfurt: Collegio Musarum Palthenianarum, 1605), X, I, 170. The ‘hidden Words’ are more likely an influence of another Paracelsian, the German physician Oswald Croll; see Hirai, op. cit. (note 23), 316–20. On Croll, the best available work is still Owen Hannaway’s The Chemists and the Word(Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins Press, 1975).Google Scholar

30. Severinus, op. cit. (note 23), 15, 84, 91, 251, 283. On Severinus’ semina theory, see Hirai, op. cit. (note 24), 237–44.Google Scholar

31. ‘Exterior homo’, op. cit. (note 19), fol. 257r: ‘(…) corporis umbra (…)’.Google Scholar

32. Walker, D.P., ‘The Astral Body in Renaissance Medicine’, Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes, 21 (1958), 119133 , 124–6.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

33. ‘Exterior homo’, op. cit. (note 19), fol. 257r: ‘Anima itaque est substantia luminosa, procedens et dependens à Patre luminum creata ad eius simulacrum’. The expression ‘Father of Lights’ originates from James 1:17. I have used the King James Bible edition for English quotations and the Biblia Sacra Vulgatafor Latin ones.Google Scholar

34. ‘Exterior homo’, op. cit. (note 19), fol. 257r–257v: ‘Profecto uti anima, quedam sui Archetypi exemplaris, derivata lux est’.Google Scholar

35. For the tradition of Man as imago Dei in the Western Middle Ages, see Bernard McGinn, ‘The Human Person as Image of God: II, Western Christianity’, in Jean Leclercq et al. (eds.), Christian Spirituality I: Origins to the Fifth Century(New York, NY: Crossroad, 1985), 312–30.Google Scholar

36. In this, Paracelsian followers were following the tradition of Paracelsus himself; on the Swiss physician’s understanding of the soul, see also Dane T. Daniel, ‘Invisible Wombs: Rethinking Paracelsus’s Concept of Body and Matter’, Ambix, 53 (2006), 129–42: 140–1.Google Scholar

37. In the Republic, Plato referred to the rational, irrational and passionate soul (to logistikon, thymos and to epithemetikon). For Galen, see Temkin, op. cit. (note 25), 44. Aristotle inclined toward an account of one soul in three parts, but in practice called each a ‘soul’, eg. the rational, sensitive and vegetative souls; see Denis Des Chene, Life’s Form: Late Aristotelian Conceptions of the Soul(London: Cornell University Press, 2000), 153–5.Google Scholar

38. Heinrich Cornelius Agrippa, De occulta philosophia libri tres(Lyon: Beringos Fratres, 1550), XLIIII, 309: ‘Quae igitur meti unita est anima, haec dicitur anima stans & non cadens’.Google Scholar

39. ‘Exterior homo’, op. cit. (note 19), fol. 257v: ‘Siquidem Anima Stans, duntaxat contemplatur que supra se sunt, et essentie vitalem luminis sui conceptum radium, reflectit in abyssale initium. Idque, non alibi, quam in cerebri, id est, Lune arce (…) Ideo enim anima stans, plerumque orationibus nocturnis (vigilate, orate et sobry estate), lumen superne haurit affatim’.Google Scholar

40. Ibid.: ‘Ast Anima sedens, que in sole, sive corde, tabernaculum possuit, Potestatum corporalium qui deinceps sunt, dispensatrix’.Google Scholar

41. J. Finamore, ‘The Tripartite Soul in Plato’s Republic and Phaedrus’, in J. Finamore and R. Berchman, History of Platonism: Plato Redivivus(New Orleans, LA: University Press of the South, 2005), 35–52; Temkin, op. cit. (note 25), 121.Google Scholar

42. Psalms, 19:2.Google Scholar

43. In Robert Burton’s Anatomy of Melancholy, speech is connected with the lungs which are ‘annexed to the heart’, Burton, Anatomy of Melancholy(Oxford: Henry Cripps, 1638), 19.Google Scholar

44. ‘Exterior homo’, op. cit. (note 19), fol. 257v: ‘Ideo enim anima stans, plerumque orationibus nocturnis (vigilate, orate et sobry estate) lumen superne haurit affatim. Ubi interim anima sedens, solaris lucis concentricitate fulgens (…) rectius tamen cuncta ad motum mundane facis administrat’.Google Scholar

45. Ibid.: ‘Sunt nimirum in Microcosmo haec duo luminaria magna, quorum prius, ceu dies, diei eructat verbum, alterum vero, ceu nox, noci indicat scientiam’.Google Scholar

46. Walter Pagel, ‘Medieval and Renaissance Contributions to the Knowledge and Philosophy of the Brain’, in F.N.L. Poynter (ed.) The History of the Brain and its Functions(Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1958), 108; this also appears in Agrippa, op. cit. (note 38), II, ch. 5, and in Paracelsus: Walter Pagel, Paracelsus (Basel: Karger, 1982), 120; Pagel, Smiling Spleen, op. cit. (note 23), 108.Google Scholar

47. ‘Exterior homo’, op. cit. (note 19), fol. 257v: ‘semper prona ac deorsum’.Google Scholar

48. Ibid.: ‘Semper nanque sui ordinis peccatum anime casum comitatur’.Google Scholar

49. For the standard Galenic doctrine see also Burton, op. cit. (note 43), 16.Google Scholar

50. The introduction of ‘ideas’ into medicine is due to Marsilio Ficino, Commentary on Plato’s Symposium on Love, trans. by Sears Jayne (Dallas, TX: Spring Publications, 1985), 51, and adopted by Fernel; see Hirai, op. cit. (note 24), 35, 99.Google Scholar

51. ‘Exterior homo’, op. cit. (note 19), fol. 257v: ‘Etenim cadens anima (…) nil prorsus agit citra imagines et ideas’.Google Scholar

52. ‘Exterior homo’, op. cit. (note 19), fol. 257v: ‘(…) Que demum ibidem imagines (tanquam phantasmata quarumcunque pregnantium) in vera entia, et Potestatum prosapiam adolescunt’.Google Scholar

53. The idea of the active power of imagination as transforming matter was supported by Pietro Pomponazzi, Marsilio Ficino and others. For a summary of the debate, see Guido Giglioni, Immaginazione e malattia: Saggio su Jan Baptista Van Helmont(Milan: Francoangeli, 2000), 58–67.Google Scholar

54. Op. cit.(note 52). The power of imagination within the human body was a rather commonplace belief in the period; see Giglioni, op. cit. (note 53), 62–3.Google Scholar

55. ‘Exterior homo’, op. cit. (note 19), fol. 257r.Google Scholar

56. Ibid., fol. 257r: ‘(…) Helias namque a furore Jesabel aufugiens, antro reclusus, ventum fortem, item commotionem, dein et ignem, sensit quibus Dominus non inervat (…) sed aure suavi’. This is drawn from 1 Kings 19:10–12.Google Scholar

57. ‘Exterior homo’, op. cit. (note 19), fol. 257r: ‘(…) Etenim ut erant de stirpe celica (…)’. The treatise does not seem too concerned in differentiating divine from heavenly action.Google Scholar

58. The concept of radical humour (humidity or moisture) was popular with physicians since the Middle Ages; see T.S. Hall, ‘Life, Death and the Radical Moisture’, Clio Medica, 6 (1971), 3–23; Michael McVaugh, ‘The “humidum radicale” in Thirteenth-Century Medicine’, Traditio, 30 (1974), 259–83.Google Scholar

59. On radical balsam and humour in the work of the Danish physician, see Hirai, op. cit. (note 24), 223–32.Google Scholar

60. ‘Exterior homo’, op. cit. (note 19), fol. 257r: ‘(…) praefatium balsamum: in quo facultates sane non segnes, non inertes, non fatuas, ignobiles et otiosas: sed rerum agendarum scientys instructas’.Google Scholar

61. ‘Exterior homo’, op. cit. (note 19), fol. 258r: ‘Sanguines autem sunt, materiale extractum limi Macrocosmi, continentis utriusque sphere itemque animantium essentias omnes’.Google Scholar

62. Genesis 2:7, in Biblia Sacra Vulgata: ‘formavit igitur Dominus Deus hominem de limo terrae’.Google Scholar

63. Paracelsus, op. cit. (note 29), I, 108–12. More generally on Paracelsus’s macrocosm and microcosm, Pagel, Paracelsus, op. cit. (note 46), 65.Google Scholar

64. See for instance Joannes Bickerus, Hermes Redivivus, in Lynn Thorndike, History of Magic and Experimental Science, 8 vols (New York, NY: Columbia University Press, 1958), VII, 135–7. Another supporter of this idea was Oswald Croll, ‘The admonitory preface of Oswald Crollie, Physician: to the Most Illustrious Prince Christian Anhaltin, in Philosophy Reformed & Improved in Four Profound Tractates, trans. H. Pinnell (London: Lodowick Lloyd, 1657), 1–226: 55, 57: ‘As an Oration is made up of letters and syllables, so the Microcosm or Limus Terrae, Man is compacted of all bodies and created things’.Google Scholar

65. ‘Exterior homo’, op. cit. (note 19), fol. 258r–258v: ‘Quorum universorum, Microcosmus particeps (…) revera contineret’.Google Scholar

66. The physician Michael Servetus (ca. 1511–53) discovered the lesser circulation of blood through his focus on the assimilation of the vital spirit through respiration; Allen Debus, The French Paracelsians(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1991), 3.Google Scholar

67. For the Paracelsian focus on blood, see Pagel, William Harvey’s Biological Ideas(Basel: Karger, 1967), 245–7 and Pagel, Smiling Spleen, op. cit. (note 23), 20–1. Harvey’s spiritualisation of blood was also perceptively discussed in Walker, op. cit. (note 32), 131.Google Scholar

68. ‘Exterior homo’, op. cit. (note 19), fol. 258r: ‘Acqui sanguines item carnis et viri voluntates’; John 1:13.Google Scholar

69. Rist, John M., Augustine: Ancient Thought Baptized (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1995), 317–20, 326.Google Scholar

70. Weeks, Andrew, Paracelsus: Speculative Theory and the Crisis of the Early Reformation (Albany, NY: SUNY Press, 1997), 91.Google Scholar

71. See, for instance, Benedictus Figulus who signed himself as ‘Eremita’ (hermit) as Paracelsus himself was often portrayed to be; Benedictus Figulus, ‘Prolocutrix sermo dedicatorius’, in Pandora magnalium naturalium aurea et benedicta, De benedicto lapidis philosoph, mysterio(Strasbourg: Lazarus Zetzner, 1608). Van Helmont’s son, Francis Mercury, who also shied marriage, also described himself as ‘eremita peregrinans’ (‘a wandring hermite’), see introduction to Ortus medicinae, ‘To the Friendly Reader’, 1.Google Scholar

72. ‘Exterior homo’, op. cit. (note 19), fol. 258v: ‘In qua nimirum, palmites de vite, corporis ex virgine hausti, regeneramur, si per Baptismi lavarum, rite nostri insitio facta sit’.Google Scholar

73. Ibid.: ‘Acqui sanguines (…) generationem Adamicam saltem proferunt, celo proscriptam’; ‘Sed iterum Adamicam generationem respiciamus’.Google Scholar

74. The expression ‘prison of the body’ (corporis ergastulo) ultimately originates in Plato’s Phaedoand Cratylus; it was assimilated by Christian literature through association with Psalms 152:7 ‘Bring my soul out of prison, that I may praise Your name’; see St Augustine, Expositions of the Psalms 121–50 (New York, NY: Augustinian Heritage Institute, 2004), 341. More generally, see Pierre Courcelle, ‘Tradition platonicienne et traditions chrétiennes du corps-prison (Phédon 62b; Crayle 400c)’, Revue d’Etudes Latines, 43 (1965), 406–43. The expression was used rather extensively during the early modern period across denominational boundaries; see for instance John Calvin, Institutio christianae religionis (Geneva: Eustathius Vignon and Ioannis le Preux, 1585), 151; Luis de Molina, Liberi arbitri concordia (Antwerp: Joachim Trognaesius, 1595), 10; or in the correspondence of René Descartes: Susan Bordo, The Flight to Objectivity: Essays on Cartesianism and Culture (New York, NY: SUNY Press, 1987), 89.Google Scholar

75. The concept of interior and exterior man was prominent in the thought of St Paul and taken up by St Augustine, from whom it spread into the Middle Ages; see Geert Van Kooten, Paul’s Anthropology in Context: the Image of God, Assimilation to God, and Tripartite Anthropology in Ancient Judaism, Ancient Philosophy and Early Christianity(Tübingen: Mohr Siebeck, 2008), 366–75; St Augustine, On John’s Epistle 99:4, The City of God 13.24.2, Confessions 10.6.9; Bernard McGinn, The Harvest of Mysticism in Medieval Germany (New York, NY: Crossroads Publishing, 2005), 123, 251–2.Google Scholar

76. See Pagel, Smiling Spleen, op. cit. (note 23), 98–102 for a review of such ideas in Paracelsus, Oswald Croll, Valentin Weigel, Jacob Franck and Van Helmont.Google Scholar

77. ‘Exterior homo’, op. cit. (note 19), fol. 257v: ‘(…) destinate in prolificam multitudinem, imperium vitalis Verbis, magna prerogativa fecunditatis (…)’.Google Scholar

78. Kathleen Crowther, Adam and Eve in the Protestant Reformation(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2010), 140–84, Mary E. Fissell, Vernacular Bodies: The Politics of Reproduction in Early Modern England (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2004), 31; Ulinka Rublack, ‘Pregnancy, Childbirth and the Female Body in Early Modern Germany’, Past and Present, 150 (1996), 84–110.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

79. Arlene Miller-Guinsburg, ‘The Counterthrust to Sixteenth Century Misogyny: The Work of Agrippa and Paracelsus’, Historical Reflections, 8, 1 (1981), 3–28. On Paracelsus’s views of women, see also Cislo, op. cit. (note 14). In the sixteenth century, moderately positive views of women were expounded in several religious tracts; see Crowther, ibid., 104–8; Fissell, ibid., 31–5. However, Fissell notes that women and their bodies were viewed more negatively in the seventeenth century, at least in an English context; Fissell, ibid., 53–89.Google Scholar

80. ‘Exterior homo’, op. cit. (note 19), fol. 258r: ‘Sic nanque uteri Sare, Rachel, Elisabeth etc divinitus aperti, quod non idem legitur viris prestitum: quin potius Ecclesia mysteriorum Synmista unica, eatenus in matrimonio, prolificam fecunditatem, mulieris benedictione, inaugurat: non autem sponsi;’ fol. 258v: ‘Acqui sanguines item carnis et viri voluntates, generationem Adamicam saltem proferunt, celo proscriptam. Quod de mulieris sanguinibus non ita legitur’.Google Scholar

81. This is the part that worried the prosecution so much, fol. 258r: ‘Sane virilis anima, omni evo, facilis in casum fuit: ideoque antiquus serpens, vix in parte mascula defectum iri detegens feminam priorem, utque validius resistentem, nec irrito adoritur’.Google Scholar

82. Genesis 3:15: ‘And I will put enmity between you (the serpent) and the woman, and between your offspring and hers; he will crush your head, and you will strike his heel.’ ‘Exterior homo’, op. cit. (note 20), fol. 258v: ‘Patet itaque mulierem suo in semine benedictam, adeo ut eius, et non viri proles, caput serpentis conterat’.Google Scholar

83. Ibid.: ‘Quippe sola et omnis propago Deo nata, in sanguine muliebri id est virgineo, beanda’.Google Scholar

84. Jacques Roger, The Life-Sciences in Eighteenth-Century French Thought, Keith R. Benson (ed.) and Robert Ellrich 9 (trans.) (Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 1997), 44–9.Google Scholar

85. Op. cit.(note 80). The author refers to the opening of Sarah’s womb by God, Genesis 17:15–17:19; similarly Rachel’s, Genesis 30:22; on Elizabeth, see Luke 1:41.Google Scholar

86. On this subject, see Cislo, op. cit. (note 14), particularly 21–76.Google Scholar

87. ‘Exterior homo’, op. cit. (note 19), fol. 258v: ‘nulla [masculus] contribuat pro materia seminis: sed quedam duntaxat inspiretur, ex parte paterna, concitatrix vis’. The part in brackets was added by Van Helmont himself.Google Scholar

88. For Harvey’s views, see Pagel, op. cit. (note 67), 43–5.Google Scholar

89. Roger, op. cit. (note 84), 49–50.Google Scholar

90. Ibid., 43–4.Google Scholar

91. ‘Exterior homo’, op. cit. (note 19), fol. 258r.Google Scholar

92. This concept is Ficinian in essence; according to Ficino, op. cit. (note 50), 51, there is a hierarchy of divine hypostases emanating from God who sends His animating ray to the world below.Google Scholar

93. ‘Exterior homo’, op. cit. (note 19), fol. 258r: ‘Est nimirum cadens libidine anima, duntaxat que spumoso geniture corpori, agendorum ideas sive Potestates imprimit: sine cuius lumine (iterum dicam) semen omne siliqua inanis est’.Google Scholar

94. Ibid., fol. 257v: ‘Adeoque constat, sui luminis nutum sigillatur, nec alias, imprimi, quam per conceptas imagines, effluentes in dicatam generatione massam’.Google Scholar

95. See above on Paracelsus’ high view of the womb. This can be contrasted with the inherited medieval view, which described the womb as a ‘sewer’ of impurities; see Crowther, op. cit. (note 78), 165–6, Rublack, op. cit. (note 78), 94.Google Scholar

96. ‘Exterior homo’, op. cit. (note 19), fol. 258v.Google Scholar

97. For more on Paracelsus’s concepts of Vulcan and Archeus, see Pagel, Paracelsus, op. cit. (note 46), 105–11; for Van Helmont, see Pagel, Joan Baptista Van Helmont, op. cit. (note 23), 96–102.Google Scholar

98. ‘Exterior homo’, op. cit. (note 19), fol. 258v: ‘uteri magneticum Architectum’.Google Scholar

99. Ibid., fol. 258v: ‘(…) ac hactenus potestatibus vitalibus, seu seminalibus donasse (…)’ On the notion of formative or plastic power, see Hiro Hirai, Medical Humanism and Natural Philosophy: Renaissance Debates on Matter, Life, and the Soul(Leiden: Brill, 2011), particularly chapters 3 and 6.Google Scholar

100. ‘Exterior homo’, op. cit. (note 19), fol. 258v: ‘(…) non illo quidem materiali, sed plane spirituali (…)’.Google Scholar

101. Weeks, op. cit. (note 70), ft e, 310.Google Scholar

102. ‘Exterior homo’, op. cit. (note 19), fol. 258v: ‘magneticum Architectum (…) cuius manu, motus attractivus retentio, abditarum virtutum et scientiarum enucleatio, contingunt’.Google Scholar

103. On the meaning of entelecheia in Aristotle, see Daniel Graham, ‘The Etymology of Entelecheia’, The American Journal of Philology, 110 (1989), 73–80 and George A. Blair, ‘Aristotle on Entelexeia: A Reply to Daniel Graham’, The American Journal of Philology, 114, 1 (1993), 91–7.Google Scholar

104. ‘Exterior homo’, op. cit. (note 19), fol. 258v: ‘At ille prefatum magnetem (…) recondite ad sui destinatam entelechiam, ac solus velut futuri effectus, ac superbe sculpture presagus, occurrit ceu anhelans nove structure architecturam’.Google Scholar

105. Paracelsus, op. cit. (note 14), 262.Google Scholar

106. ‘Exterior homo’, op. cit. (note 19), fol. 260r: ‘Hactenus itaque docuimus pro scopo impregnationis, in sanis alioqui mulieribus, nullatenus spectandum corporis Continens, ut neque Contentum, sive humores, vanumque esse, circa (…) omnem Medicorum conatum: quinimo neque impetum facientem spiritum, considerari debere’.Google Scholar

107. Ibid., fol. 260r.Google Scholar

108. Ibid., fol. 260r: ‘Juxta illud Domini apud Jheremiam (cap 15): Si separaveris pretiosum a vili, tanquam os meum eris’. In the Latin Vulgate, this reads ‘si separaveris pretiosum a vili quasi os meum eris’; the King James Bible renders this as ‘if thou take forth the precious from the vile, thou shalt be as my mouth’.Google Scholar

109. On the topic of the alchemical quintessence, see F. Sherwood Taylor, ‘The Idea of the Quintessence’, in E. Ashworth Underwood (ed.), Science, Medicine and History, 2 vols (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1953), I, 247–65.Google Scholar

110. ‘Exterior homo’, op. cit. (note 20), fol. 260r; Pagel, op. cit. (note 37), 70.Google Scholar

111. ‘Exterior homo’, op. cit. (note 20), fol. 260r: ‘Arcana scilicet in hoc expetimus, non quevis, sed illa duntaxat, que dotem refocillandi magnetis uterine imprimis nacta, partium Archeis sint amica, terrenis sordibus, et immaturitatibus liberat’.Google Scholar

112. Ibid., fol. 258v: ‘(…) firmamentali temperamento (…)’.Google Scholar

113. Ibid., fol. 260r.Google Scholar

114. Ibid., fol. 260v: ‘Potestatum igitur cum Potestatibus harmonica symphonia spectanda erit’.Google Scholar

115. Ibid., fol 260v: ‘(…) cum internis astris nostris sive Potestatibus confabulentur, id est, magnetem excitent’.Google Scholar

116. Ibid.: ‘solus Sapiens dominabitur astris malignis’. On this popular saying in the period, see also Jean Patrick Boudet, ‘Astrology’, in Thomas F. Glick et al (eds.), Medieval Science, Technology and Medicine: An Encyclopedia(Oxford: Routledge, 2005), 62.Google Scholar

117. On the subject of alchemical patronage, see Bruce Moran, The Alchemical World of the German Court: Occult Philosophy and Chemical Medicine in the Circle of Moritz of Hessen(1572–1632) (Stuttgart: Franz Steiner Verlag, 1991), Tara Nummedal, Alchemy and Authority in the Holy Roman Empire (Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press, 2007), 96–118.Google Scholar

118. Jan Baptist Van Helmont, Ortus medicinae id est, Initia physicae inaudita: Progressus medicinae novus in morborum ultionem ad vitam longam(Amsterdam: Ludovic Elzevir, 1652); Opuscula medica inaudita, ‘Tumulus Pestis’, chap. 1, 834. Van Helmont mentions that he was solicited for employment by Emperor Rudolf II and Prince-Archbishop Ernest of Bavaria (1554–1612), but he preferred to dedicate himself to helping the poor.Google Scholar

119. On Franciscus Mercurius thought and career see Allison Coudert, The Impact of the Kabbalah in The Seventeenth Century: The Life And Thought Of Francis Mercury Van Helmont (1614–98)(Leiden: Brill, 1999).Google Scholar

120. Hedesan, op. cit. (note 7), 89–99.Google Scholar

121. Antonio Clericuzio, ‘From van Helmont to Boyle: A Study of the Transmission of Helmontian Chemical and Medical Theories in Seventeenth-Century England’, British Journal for the History of Science, 26 (1993), 303–34: 307; Hirai, op. cit. (note 24), 443.Google Scholar

122. Hirai, op. cit. (note 24), 445–50.Google Scholar

123. Van Helmont, op. cit. (note 118), 546. This is the second improved edition of Van Helmont’s work.Google Scholar

124. Van Helmont, op. cit. (note 118), 157.Google Scholar

125. Van Helmont, op. cit. (note 118), 610: ‘Hunc spiritum propterea medici, in insitum sive mumialem, & influentem, cum vita scilicet priore, abeuntem, dividunt’.Google Scholar

126. Van Helmont, op. cit. (note 118), 609.Google Scholar

127. Van Helmont, op. cit. (note 118), 236: ‘Archeus localis, sive insitus’; idem, 339: ‘spiritus insitus vitalis’.Google Scholar

128. For a pertinent discussion of the Archeus insitus and influens in the mature work of Van Helmont, Ortus Medicinae, see also Giglioni, op. cit. (note 53), 52–3.Google Scholar

129. Van Helmont, op. cit. (note 118), 581: ‘Sed unicus insitus, sibi per partium rudimenta continuus, totam generationis repartitionem absolvebat’.Google Scholar

130. Ibid., 33: ‘In visceribus, nimirum planetarii spiritus elucent maxime’.Google Scholar

131. Jan Baptist Van Helmont, Aufgang der Arzney Kunst(Sulzbach: Johann Andreae Endters, 1683), 41.Google Scholar

132. Pagel, Joan Baptista Van Helmont, op. cit. (note 23), 99.Google Scholar

133. Van Helmont, op. cit. (note 118), 276.Google Scholar

134. Van Helmont, op. cit. (note 118), 608: ‘Dico itaque, hominem externum esse animal, ratione & voluntate sanguinis utens’.Google Scholar

135. Ibid.Google Scholar

136. I have talked at length on this topic in my dissertation, Hedesan, op. cit.(note 7), 254–8.Google Scholar

137. Van Helmont, op. cit. (note 118), 608: ‘Igitur in sanguine est quaedam potestas ecstatica, quae si quando ardenti desiderio excita fuerit, etiam ad absens aliquod objectum, exterioris hominis spiritum, deducendo sit: ea autem potestas, in exterior homine latet, velut in potentia; nec ducitur ad actum, nisi excitetur, accensa imaginatio ferventi desiderio, vel arte aliqua pari’.Google Scholar

138. ‘Jean-Baptiste Van Helmont, à Bruxelles, à Mersenne, à Paris, 30 Janvier 1631’, op. cit. (note 10), 63.Google Scholar

139. Van Helmont, op. cit. (note 118), 614: ‘omnes omnium rerum spiritus, ac velut essentias, in nobis latere, & microcosmicatrice phantasia duntaxat nasci & educi’.Google Scholar

140. Ibid., 336; on the complexity of his views on this topic, see Hedesan, op. cit.(note 7), 238, 246–7, 252–3.Google Scholar

141. Van Helmont, op. cit. (note 118), 607: ‘(…) sic nempe carni & sanguine voluntas competit, quae non sit voluntas viri, nec voluntas Dei’.Google Scholar

142. Ibid., 610: ‘(…) dormit itaque scientia & potestas magica & solo nutu actrix in homine, postquam scientia pomi manducata fuit’.Google Scholar

143. Ibid., 145.Google Scholar

144. Hedesan, op. cit.(note 7), 156–9.Google Scholar

145. Van Helmont, op. cit. (note 118), 525. It must be noted that sixteenth-century art portrayed the Fall as an erotic event; Crowther, op. cit. (note 76), 120.Google Scholar

146. Van Helmont, op. cit. (note 118), 528: ‘Unde didici, Evam tenacioris pudicitiae, imo & perfectiorem fuisse creatam in suo corpore’.Google Scholar

147. Ibid., 535.Google Scholar

148. Ibid., 516–18.Google Scholar

149. Ibid., 514: ‘Erat autem homo immortalis, quatenus mens ejus immortalis, cuncta munia corporis immediate praestabat, dabatque vitam de se immortalem’.Google Scholar

150. Ibid., 580: ‘Inprimi vidi uterum plicis, inimitabili artificio contractum, seseque sub conceptum pandere, per proprium Blas magneticum’; ‘Quisquis ergo prolium exspectationem meditatur, non venerem salacem, non seminis abundantiam, imo nec sanitatem exspectet: sed omnino atque, primario praefatum uteri magnetismum’.Google Scholar

151. Ibid., 580: ‘(…) Quod in Sacris dicitur: Deus aperuit uterum Sarai’.Google Scholar

152. Ibid., 580: ‘Siquidem non est ulla uteri diductio voluntaria, ut neque artificiis subjecta. Quin potius quodammodo superans naturam, ostentat Deum humanae generationis Praesidem, continuatae in posterum juxta verbum benedictae propagationis, Crescite & multiplicamini’.Google Scholar

153. Ibid., 523, idem, 539.Google Scholar

154. Ibid., 287.Google Scholar

155. Hedesan, op. cit.(note 7), 249–59. The importance of the theme of the mind as imago Dei in Van Helmont’s thought has also been noticed by Giglioni, op. cit. (note 53), 169–75.Google Scholar

156. Van Helmont, op. cit. (note 118), 272, 335.Google Scholar

157. See, for instance, Pagel’s extended discussion of the principles of Helmontian medicine, Joan Baptista Van Helmont, op. cit. (note 23), 154–87 and 195–8; Debus, op. cit. (note 24), 371–6.Google Scholar

158. Giglioni, op. cit. (note 53), 135–42; Debus, op. cit. (note 24), 371–6.Google Scholar

159. There are several folios in the Van Helmont archives in Mechelen that are difficult to decipher and await the work of a professional graphologist.Google Scholar

160. For more on this, see Hedesan, op. cit. (note 7), 249–308.Google Scholar