The enigma of Newton's alchemy
Problems of authority and language in Newton's chymistry
Religion, ancient wisdom, and Newton's alchemy
Early modern alchemical theory: the cast of characters
Optics and matter: Newton, Boyle, and Scholastic Mixture Theory
Newton's early alchemical theoricae: preliminary considerations
Toward a general theory of vegetability and mechanism
The doves of Diana: first attempts
Flowers of lead: Newton and the alchemical florilegium
Johann de Monte-Snyders in Newton's alchemy
Attempts at a unified practice: Keynes 58
The fortunes of Raymundus: Newton's late florilegia
The shadow of a noble experiment: Newton's laboratory records to 1696
The quest for sophic sal ammoniac
Nicolas Fatio de Duillier, alchemical collaborator
Praxis: delusions of a disordered mind?
The warden of the mint and his alchemical associates
Public and private: Newton's chrysopoeia and the republic of chymistry
The ghost of Sendivogius: niter, sulfur, fermentation, and affinity
A final interlude: Newton and Boyle
Appendices: 1. The origin of Newton's chymical dictionaries
2. Newton's "key to Snyders"
3. "Three mysterious fires"
Newton's interview with William Yworth.