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Book Details
Book Details
A Suggestive Inquiry into the Hermetic Mystery and Alchemy:
with a dissertation on the more celebrated of the alchemical philosophers being an attempt towards the recovery of the ancient experiment of nature.
Author: Mary Anne Atwood
Formats: Paperback, Hardcover
Pages: 449
Condition: Brand New
Mary Anne Atwood was a noted and influential writer on Hermeticism and spiritual Alchemy. A Suggestive Inquiry is considered to be one of three books which started the influence of the spiritual interpretation of alchemy in early modern Europe. This work offers substantial quotes from a wealth of sources (edition fully annotated with over 680 footnotes). This book is well worth reading for all those who wish to study the Hermetic Mystery and Alchemy in its entirety. This complete edition contains all the four parts in one book.
Complete Edition (4 parts) fully annotated.
A Suggestive Inquiry into the Hermetic Mystery was written in 1850 by Atwood at her father's request, and in parallel with his own composition of a lengthy poem on the same subject. Thomas South paid for the book to be published anonymously in 1850, but without having read it, trusting his daughter's judgment. Reading it after publication, he believed Mary Anne had revealed many hermetic secrets that were better left unpublished, and therefore bought up the remaining stock and, with his daughter, burnt them, along with the unfinished manuscript of his poem. Only a few copies of the book survived, and she published nothing afterwards, but did have private correspondence with several influential Theosophists until her death in 1910.
A Suggestive Inquiry was reissued in 1918 under Mary Anne's married name, with an appendix containing her table talk and memorabilia, and with an extensive biographical and philosophical introduction by Walter Leslie Wilmshurst. Scientific historians Lawrence M. Principe and William R. Newman considered A Suggestive Inquiry to be one of three books which started the influence of the spiritual interpretation of alchemy in early modern Europe.
Complete Edition (4 parts) fully annotated.
- Part I An exoteric view of the Progress and Theory of Alchemy.
- Part II A more esoteric consideration of the Hermetic Art and its Mysteries.
- Part III Concerning The Laws and Vital Conditions of the Hermetic Experiment.
- Part IV The Hermetic Practice.
A Suggestive Inquiry into the Hermetic Mystery was written in 1850 by Atwood at her father's request, and in parallel with his own composition of a lengthy poem on the same subject. Thomas South paid for the book to be published anonymously in 1850, but without having read it, trusting his daughter's judgment. Reading it after publication, he believed Mary Anne had revealed many hermetic secrets that were better left unpublished, and therefore bought up the remaining stock and, with his daughter, burnt them, along with the unfinished manuscript of his poem. Only a few copies of the book survived, and she published nothing afterwards, but did have private correspondence with several influential Theosophists until her death in 1910.
A Suggestive Inquiry was reissued in 1918 under Mary Anne's married name, with an appendix containing her table talk and memorabilia, and with an extensive biographical and philosophical introduction by Walter Leslie Wilmshurst. Scientific historians Lawrence M. Principe and William R. Newman considered A Suggestive Inquiry to be one of three books which started the influence of the spiritual interpretation of alchemy in early modern Europe.
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