CRADSmU CAC10 O Co this final stage we attribute the possibility of alchemical transmutation as it is commonly understood; the transmutation of metals.
If you have followed our explanations up to this point, we trust you will have no need for specific arguments to be convinced that alchemy cannot be reduced merely to chemistry in its infancy—unsystematic, superstitious, and overshadowed by modern chemistry When alchemy is understood in the entire context of Western history, it surely has more than one aspect. In its essence, however, it remains a traditional science of a cosmological and initiatic character.
Given the synthetic nature of this type of science, alchemy must of course include a chemical side, particularly as a basis for symbolic transpositions. In the same way that the art of construction, or masonry could be used to express aspects of a spiritual, ritualistic, and initiatory process (an echo of this has been preserved in Freemasonry), so the physical understanding of the elements and certain operations involving rhe metals can be said to have a similar function.478 Secondly, some hermetists were also practical chemists, and were able to make certain precursory discoveries as, for example, the different compounds of mercury, silver sulfide, various kinds of ether, quicklime, aqua regia, and various dyes
what was missing was the understanding, in the first place, of the mystery of inner transmutation.
Thus, in what can be regarded as the specific argument of this chapter, it can be said chat hermetism may also contemplate the transmutation of metals, but not as a purely material operation. Among others, Artephius and Morienus say, and in the clearest terms, chat "the work that the magiscer does is not a work done by the hands" and that it depends, on the contrary, on artifice: "subtle plans and procedures";483 and everyone else repeats that the substances and elements of which they speak are not the same as those of the common man.
Yet even when chemistry had begun to take shape as a "science," there were still alchemists who went on talking exactly like their Arab, Syrian, and Alexandrian predecessors. An example given by Pernety shows us the difference between hermetic and vulgar chemistry. "The first," he says, "takes Principles as its material, and acts on them following the ways of nature itself; vulgar chemistry, on the other hand, takes the "mixtures” after they have reached their goal, and works on them with extrinsic decompositions, which destroy their natures, and its results are monstrous."484 By these words he wishes to convey to us that profane chemistry acts on that which the physical form has already taken, on the "corpses” of processes already used up, without considering these same processes in their supra- and presensible aspect. Hermetic chemistry, however, starts on the contrary, from the spiritual understanding of the Principles (char is, from the primordial powers of elemental qualification), and acts on the formation processes that precede ontologically that state in which the substances belong to the nature of this or that metal and obey the laws that chemistry and physics have discovered in the realm of simple phenomena.
Alchemy then, is differentiated from profane chemistry by a "metaphysic,” that is to say by an order of consciousness beyond the senses, which ultimately presupposes the initiatic transmutation of human consciousness. Between this transmutation (the latter) and the transmutation of metals no longer in the symbolic sense, but now real, there are analogical correspondences. So certain teachings and principles that first of all have a cosmological and metaphysical sense, can be applied not only to one but to the other transmutation—to that of man and metals "because the furnace, the path to be followed and the YVBrk are all one.”
For the operations of physical alchemy "different spiritual and corporeal forces are necessary," says an Arab text,485 "These forces musr be converging and not moving apart . . . the .spiritual and physical forces must be similar... so that they can mutually help each other.” "It is necessary that the operator be immersed in the work [oporccc openuorem interessc open).” Petrus Bonus says that the work is completed "by the adjunction of the Occult Stone, which one acquires not by the senses, but only by intelligence, inspiration, or divine revelation, or by the teaching of one who already knows [per sc lend am scicnds)."486 The intellectual principle that is the form of man (in the Aristotelian sense), ”is the beginning and end of the preparations.” Wirh the saffron color it appears precisely that "man is the principal and greatest force in the spagyric Work. "487488 "Our Work is interior and exterior,” confirms another text.11 It is not a question then of processes that are exhausted in a mass of external determinisms. In alchemical processes the psychic energy and the "dignity” of the operator play an essential role. They exercise an efficacious influence on the mineral forces, thanks to an inner relation with them that is absolutely beyond the reach of normal consciousness.489 As for technology, it is necessary only to recall and apply certain principles already known to us in connection with human palingenesis. The first teaching is: "Change the nature of the body on which you wanr to act.” Equivalent sayings include: "Extract the nature hidden within”; "Make the hidden manifest and the manifest hidden”; "Remove the darkness”; "Unclothe it”; "Make the visible invisible and the invisible visible”; and one of the most ancient renditions of this idea: "If you embody the incorporeal substances without making the corporeal substances incorporeal, nolle of the expected results will take place.”490 It is evident that this mutation in the substances on which you must act does not refer to making them pass from one physical state to another, but to make them pass from a physical state to a nonphysical state. And this is equivalent to saying that the true preliminary operation concerns the operator more than the substances themselves. An alchemical mantram goes: cransrnucamini in vivos lapides philosophicos—Be ye transmuted into living philosopher's stones—and consists in reaching that condition of the consciousness by virtue of which is precisely realized the psychic aspect of physical things, the "subtle soul” hidden by their exterior. This is the hidden that is made manifest, while the manifest—that is, the sensory and corporeal aspect—is made hidden; this is the appearance of the "hidden nature within," the "underneath” that is brought "up,” etc. Only after this condition is realized does it become possible to act hermetically on substances. "Life,”says Basil Valentine "is nothing more than a Spirit; for, all that which the. ignorant considers to be dead must live (for thee) with an incomprehensible life, visible all the same, and spiritual, and in that must he be saved."491 In the same sense other authors speak of "the vision in the Light of Nature," and the Novum lumen chemicum relates the operation "of removing the shadow from hidden things” to an act that must be at once intellectual and imaginative.492We find in the texts frequent and quite explicit allusions to the "magical imagination," which is opposed to simple fantasy. Sendivogius, in Dc sulphure, says that it is the key that the ancients have not revealed, and we must remember that Albert us Magnus teaches that all the magical techniques, which alchemy comprises, act only when man is in a sort of ecstasy or active trance.493 So we can understand the. relation of "Transform the natures and thou wilt obtain what thou seekest," to the injunction to "mix" the substances with our Mercury, or Divine Water: it is a question of referring the perception of the substances to the consciousness transported to the state that corresponds to the symbols of Water and Mercury (the White Work), which we have seen in the initiatic work.
Comarius teaches that in the vapors of the Divine Water the spirits (of the substances) are revealed as divine mysteries— Beta pvGzfjpia—and celestial bodies— ovpavia ad)para. It is this, the appearance of the "rootsabout whose equivalence to the resolution in Mercury we are told in the Seven Chapters of Hermes (chap. 1). "Tine water changes the Bodies into Spirits, stripping them of their gross corporeality" says Artephius,494 you have need only of the released and subtle nature of the dissolved bodies, which you will obtain by means of our Water.”
Clearly, Zosimos tells us that the "tincture'’ of Gold (the metallic transmutation) cannot be obtained in the solid state (that is, the material state) of the bodies: "they must first be subtilized and spiritualized," until "the spiritual forces, which cannot be perceived by the (physical) senses,have been made effective." It is necessary to "dissolve the substances and what then muse be transmuted to obtain the physical transmutation are the celestial natures.’’495496 Moreover, for what makes the conversion of the incorporeal into the corporeal (apart from the corporeal into the incorporeal prescribed in the formula), it is necessary to understand, by analogy with everything that pertains to the purely initiatory experience, that the consciousness must not be the pure "spirit" aspect of the substances bur, after being elevated to that aspect, it must be put back in rapport wirh rhe same substance as the body in such a way that "rhe two are made one.” Otherwise, the results would be but a step to other forms of consciousness without direct relationship to the physical plane, which is necessary for the alchemical operation. It is necessary then to form "intermediate substances” or "androgynous" substances both "spiritual and corporeal" (perception of the substance and perception of its "psychic” dimension, the one in function of rhe other):497 and thus has been established the first condition for the operations of physical alchemy,498 Also important, in this regard, is the reference to a "true and not fantastic imagination" and to an "intellectual vision,” the first being accomplished in the "Light of Nature."499 ,