Dictionary Definition
touchstone n : a basis for comparison; a
reference point against which other things can be evaluated; "they
set the measure for all subsequent work" [syn: standard, criterion, measure]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
Translations
A stone used to test the quality of gold alloys
A standard of comparison or evaluation
Extensive Definition
A touchstone is a small tablet of dark stone such
as fieldstone,
slate or lydite, used for assaying precious
metal alloys. It has a
finely grained surface on which soft metals leave a visible
trace.
Probing with a touchstone
By rubbing a metal on a touchstone a small amount
of metal is ground off onto the stone, and forms a colored stripe.
This is typically compared to a stripe ground from an alloy of
known high-quality composition next to the sample (this is called
"priming" the stone).
The simplest, but crude, method of probing is
comparing the viscosity of rubbed stripes, which varies depending
on the amount of the base metal in the alloy. However, the standard
probing method involves subjecting the stripes to graded solutions
of acid which dissolve the
alloys with lower content of precious metal but don't affect the
alloys with higher content of it. Modern touchstone kits include
the touchstone tablet proper, flasks of acids graded for standard
alloys — e.g. 18K (karat)
(75%) gold, 14K (58%), etc. — and priming pencils made
from the standard alloys.
Use of the touchstone revolutionized the concept
of money. Use of the
touchstone in Ancient
Greece and Anatolia dates to
circa 500 BC. The fourth century philosopher Theophrastus
in the tract de lapidibus (On Stones) described the testing of gold
by fire or by the touchstone.
Prior to its introduction gold and silver were common currencies, but these could
easily be alloyed with a less expensive metal (tin and lead were common). These were less
valuable, but it was difficult to test for. The invention of
touchstone made it possible to test for such forgeries quickly and
efficiently, and also to determine the relative value of different
alloys. That paved the road for gold and silver to become standard
equivalents of value, and eventually to government-issued currency which began as coins
of pre-probed alloys and weights guaranteed by the mint.
That such a test was not always successful
however, is shown by the famous story about Archimedes and
the golden crown, where the philosopher developed a much more
accurate test involving the density of the suspect crown.
Touchstone metaphor
By extension, the metaphorical use of touchstone means any physical or intellectual measure by which the validity of a concept can be tested (see also Acid Test, Litmus Test, Shibboleth).The character of
Touchstone in Shakespeare's As You
Like It is described as "a wise fool who
acts as a kind of guide or point of reference throughout the play,
putting everyone, including himself, to the comic test".
A touchstone can be a short passage from the
great masters’ works of literature that is used in determining
other poetry and artist's works of literature literary value or
merit. This sense was first applied by Matthew Arnold, whose essay
“The Study of Poetry” gives Hamlet’s dying words to Horatio as an
example of a touchstone.
Notes
touchstone in German: Prüfstein
touchstone in French: Touchau
touchstone in Japanese: 試金石
touchstone in Samogitian: Glodė
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
acid test, assay, barometer, benchmark, blank
determination, brouillon, canon, check, criterion, crucial test,
crucible, degree, demonstration, determination, docimasy, essay, feeling out, first draft,
gauge, graduated scale,
kiteflying, measure, model, norm, ordeal, parameter, pattern, probation, proof, quantity, reading, readout, reference, rough draft, rough
sketch, rule, scale, sounding out, standard, test, test case, trial, try, type, value, verification, yardstick