Talk:Ladylee Tangleroad/@comment-203.87.162.66-20130907005852/@comment-11571396-20130907015024

sigh

You do know ambrosia was the food of the Greek gods right? Therefore, they can be illustrated as anything the author of a work of fiction wants.

And you get your knowledge of alchemy wrong because the Philosopher's Stone does not give immortality, or at least at first it wasn't its purpose. It was thought to be an unknown chemical substance capable of turning base metals such as lead into gold. The whole 'immortality' thing appeared much later, during the Renaissance, long after the Crusades, and the concept was rendered popular by the likes of Harry Potter and Fullmetal Alchemist.

And the fact that Aureolus introduced 'alchemy' (term to use very loosely, as even Kamachi amits he was more inspired by the works of Jung rather than actual alchemy for Ars Magna) doesn't mean anything.

Besides, in my opinion, Philosopher's stone is too cliché.