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  2. Chinese alchemy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinese_alchemy

    Chinese alchemy (煉丹術 liàndānshù "method for refining cinnabar") is a historical Chinese approach to alchemy. According to original texts such as the Cantong qi , the body is understood as the focus of cosmological processes summarized in the five agents of change, or Wuxing , the observation and cultivation of which leads the ...

  3. Cantong qi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cantong_qi

    The full title of the text is Zhouyi cantong qi, which can be translated as, for example, The Kinship of the Three, in Accordance with the Book of Changes. According to the well-established view in China, the text was composed by Wei Boyang in the mid-second century CE, and deals entirely with alchemy, in particular with Neidan (or Internal ...

  4. Obed Simon Johnson - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Obed_Simon_Johnson

    Obed Simon Johnson (May 5, 1881 [1] – October 12, 1970) was an American academic, chaplain, congregational missionary and student of Chinese culture and history, known for A Study of Chinese Alchemy, which attributes the origin of alchemy to ancient China, rather than Greco-Egyptians 500 years later. [2]

  5. Category:Chinese alchemists - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Chinese_alchemists

    View history; General ... Permanent link; Page information; Get shortened URL; Download QR code; Print/export Download as PDF; ... Pages in category "Chinese alchemists"

  6. Wei Boyang - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wei_Boyang

    Wei Boyang (traditional Chinese: 魏伯陽; simplified Chinese: 魏伯阳; pinyin: Wèi bóyáng) was a Chinese writer and Taoist alchemist of the Eastern Han dynasty.He is the author of The Kinship of the Three (also known as Cantong Qi), and is noted as the first person to have documented the chemical composition of gunpowder in 142 AD.

  7. History of science and technology in China - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_science_and...

    Chinese alchemists searched for ways to make cinnabar, gold and other minerals water soluble so they could be ingested, such as using a solution of potassium nitrate in vinegar . Solubilzation of cinnabar was found to occur only if an impurity ( chloride ion ) was present.

  8. Xu Fu - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Xu_Fu

    Xu Fu (Hsu Fu; Chinese: 徐福 or 徐巿 [1]; pinyin: Xú Fú; Wade–Giles: Hsu 2 Fu 2; Japanese: 徐福 Jofuku or 徐巿 Jofutsu; Korean: 서복 Seo Bok or 서불 Seo Bul) was a Chinese alchemist and explorer. He was born in 255 BC in Qi, an ancient Chinese state, and disappeared at sea in 210

  9. Liexian Zhuan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liexian_Zhuan

    The Liexian Zhuan, sometimes translated as Biographies of Immortals, is the oldest extant Chinese hagiography of Daoist xian "transcendents; immortals; saints; alchemists". ". The text, which compiles the life stories of about 70 mythological and historical xian, was traditionally attributed to the Western Han dynasty editor and imperial librarian Liu Xiang (77–8 BCE), but internal evidence ...