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Brown Bag Lecture: Alexis Smets, “Studying Chemical Imagery: The Case of Jean Béguin’s Diagram, a Visual Hapax in Early Modern Chemistry”
Date: 13 October 2009
Time: 12:00 p.m. to 1:00 p.m.
Location: Chemical Heritage Foundation
6th Floor Conference Room
315 Chestnut Street
Free and open to the public.

RSVP Requested
Description:
BBLs are a series of weekly, informal talks by CHF fellows on their current research, and members of the academic and business communities on topics involving the history of chemistry, political and social issues of importance to chemists and chemical engineers, and issues affecting the future of chemical research.

Alexis Smets, “Studying Chemical Imagery: The Case of Jean Béguin’s Diagram, a Visual Hapax in Early Modern Chemistry”

What is a drawing about in a publication of chemistry? In researching early-17th-century chemistry, when allegories were still fashionable in the field and when the first diagram of chemistry was invented, this question can be raised. In this period Jean Béguin published a textbook, The Elements of Chemistry, and in one of the numerous editions was printed what is often regarded as the first chemical diagram ever. This diagram, which efficiently renders Béguin’s chemical theory, was not reprinted in the following editions. In this talk I will examine the circumstances around this inaugural chemical diagram.

Alexis Smets is a Ph.D. candidate at the Faculty of Philosophy at Radboud University Nijmegen (Netherlands). In his dissertation he researches the role played by imagery in the theory of matter in 17th-century chemistry. Before becoming interested in the relation between iconography and chemical theories of matter, Smets studied the relation between chemistry and other disciplines at the dawn of the 18th century, in particular in the works of the chemist and physician Georg Ernst Stahl.

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Contact Information:
For more information, please call 215-873-8289, or e-mail bbl@chemheritage.org

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