Four hundred years ago, Belgian physician Johann Baptist Van Helmont was persecuted by the Roman Catholic Church for promoting the use of the “Powder of Sympathy.” The idea had been originally introduced by “natural philosopher” Sir Kenelm Digby who claimed that a powder produced with the help of astrological guidance could heal injuries by being applied not to the injured part of the body but on whatever had caused the injury. Digby’s book on this mythical salve went through 29 editions! Van Helmont furthered the notion by suggesting the best treatment was to apply the powder to the dressing that had previously covered the wound. The exact nature of the substance varied, but iron or copper sulfate seem to have been common ingredients. Somehow the effect of the powder on the bloody dressing was to be communicated to the blood still in the body. Why these metal sulfates were supposed to have an effect on the blood at all isn’t clear.
The Catholic Church interpreted the Powder of Sympathy idea as the promotion of superstition and persecuted Van Helmont for his beliefs. Actually, Van Helmont did not believe the practice to be supernatural, he thought it was a natural phenomenon. Such curious views were not unusual at the time. In fact, Paracelsus, who was one of the first physicians to use specific drugs for specific diseases, also believed that treating a sword that had caused a wound would help the wound heal. He described an ointment consisting essentially of the moss on the skull of a man who had died a violent death, combined with boar's and bear's fat, burnt worms, dried boar's brain, red sandalwood and mummy, which was to be applied to the weapon that had inflicted the wound.Â
The Royal Navy in 1687 actually tested the notion of sympathetic powder. A dog was wounded and sent off to sea while its bandage remained in London. At a prescribed time, the bandage would be treated with the powder and the dog was to feel the effect. Apparently, it did not, because the navy did not pursue the practice. Although the belief in the Powder of Sympathy tarnishes Van Helmont’s scientific reputation, he did make some valuable contributions to science.
He was the first to systematically study the production of gases in chemical reactions. Van Helmont realized that when charcoal burns it released what he called “a wild spirit.” This of course was carbon dioxide. He even introduced the word “gas” into the English language, apparently deriving it from the Greek term for chaos. He studied other gases as well. A red gas, which we know as nitrogen dioxide, was released when nitric acid, then known as “aqua fortis,” was poured onto silver. Burning sulphur released sulphur dioxide. Van Helmont even found that intestinal gas was flammable and also showed that burning gunpowder in a closed vessel causes an explosion because of the production of gases.Â
In spite of these important findings, we best remember Van Helmont for the classic misinterpretation of his famous “tree experiment.” Believing that trees were composed of water, he designed an experiment to test the hypothesis. After weighing out exactly 200 pounds of earth, he moistened it with water and planted a small willow tree weighing five pounds. For five years he judiciously watered it and watched the tree grow. Then Van Helmont weighed the soil, which still weighed the original 200 pounds, and weighed the tree to be 169 pounds. Mistakenly he concluded that the extra 164 pounds must have come from the weight of water added. Amazingly, the man who spent much of his life studying gases, did not realize that the tree was taking up carbon dioxide from the air! Van Helmont had made an interesting observation but came to the wrong conclusion.
Kenelm Digby, who hatched the nonsensical idea of the “Powder of Sympathy” was also known for publishing one of the first cookbooks, “the Closet of the Eminently Learned Sir Kenelm Digby” in which one of the recipes required the use of capons fed on the flesh of vipers. Where the vipers were to be acquired was not described. Beside the folly of the vipers and the sympathetic magic, Sir Digby did leave one lasting legacy. He had developed a process for making stronger glass by using a higher ration of sand to potash and lime than traditional and including a wind tunnel in the glass furnace to achieve a higher temperature. In 1662, the British parliament recognized his claim to have invented an improved wine bottle that had a long, tapered neck and a punt at the bottom to ensure the bottle could stand upright. There is no record of any suggestion of applying a Powder of Sympathy to the glass in case some unfortunate person was cut by a broken bottle.