Chymes

Chymes (Greek: Χύμης) was a Greco Roman alchemist who lived before the third century. He is known only through fragments of text in the works of Zosimos of Panopolis and Olympiodorus of Thebes.[1]

Some theorists state that Chymes is the eponymous founder of alchemy.[2] Zosimos associates him with Mary the Jewess. He may likely date from this earliest period of alchemy.[1]

Etymology

Chymes' name has also been recorded as Chemas, Cheimas, Chimes, Chemes, and Chimas. He was referred to by Ibn al-Nadim as both "Kimas" and "Shimas".[2] Jewish-Hellenistic traditions have equated Chymes with Cham, the biblical figure known as Ham (son of Noah).[3] Despite this, Chymes can not been identified with any known personage.[4]

Fragments

One is the All, and it is through it that the All is born. One is the All, and if the All does not contain all, the All will not be born.[5]

gollark: And they have some thing where the service's backend servers can also verify that the device is locked down and not user-controllable through some cryptographic thing, where SafetyNet throws data at Google's services and they say if the device is acceptable or not.
gollark: Meanwhile on Android Google has some awful SafetyNet thing which means apps can refuse to run if you have the bootloader unlocked, yes.
gollark: You can turn that off, and there's no feature where, say, a website can refuse to serve content to you if you do.
gollark: Or decrypt or whatever.
gollark: I think part of the idea of "trusted computing" is to put a secret key on a chip somewhere so it can attest that you're using your computer as Microsoft intended and refuse to sign stuff otherwise.

References

  1. Taylor, F. Sherwood. “A Survey of Greek Alchemy”. The Journal of Hellenic Studies 50 (1930): 109–139.
  2. Jamal J. Elias. Aisha's Cushion: Religious Art, Perception, and Practice in Islam. Harvard University Press. 2012. p. 177
  3. Raphael Patai. The Jewish Alchemists: A History and Source Book. Princeton University Press. 2014. p.21
  4. Allen G. Debus. Alchemy and Early Modern Chemistry: Papers from Ambix. Jeremy Mills Publishing, 2004. p.17
  5. Raphael Patai. The Jewish Alchemists: A History and Source Book. Princeton University Press. 2014. p.65
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