Alchemy and Alchemists
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Often alchemy is seen as an example of medieval gullibility and the alchemists as a collection of eccentrics and superstitious fools. Sean Martin shows that nothing could be further from the truth. It is important to see the search for the philosopher’s stone and the attempts to turn base metal into gold as metaphors for the relation of man to nature and man to God as much as seriously held beliefs. Sir Isaac Newton devoted as much time to his alchemical studies as he did to his mathematical ones. This book traces the history of alchemy from ancient times to the 20th century, highlighting the interest of modern thinkers like Jung in the subject. It covers a major, if neglected area of Western thought.
The History of an Error, or the Mightiest Secret that a Man can Possess?
Alchemy has been with us since the beginning of recorded history. It has been present in almost every culture, from Old Kingdom Egypt and the China of Lao Tzu; from the Greece of Alexander the Great to the era of Islamic conquest; from the islands of the Indonesian archipelago to the twilight world of Victorian occultism. It has been called “the mightiest secret that a man [or woman] can possess”, yet it has also been derided as ” the history of an error” . It has often been portrayed as a fraudulent, delusional quest for wealth and worldly power through the attempt to transmute base metals into gold, but has also been regarded as a Divine art, the highest gift of God, one that should only be practiced by the sincere seeker and the pure of heart.
It is estimated that 100,000 books have been written on alchemy - possibly more than any other subject in history. Ben Jonson famously satirized it in his play The Alchemist (1610), while the Brazilian writer Paolo Coelho\u2019s fable-like book of the same title, which seems to be much more sympathetic to alchemy than Jonson, was one of the best-selling novels of the 1990s. Then of course, we have seen the foibles and failures of alchemy brilliantly sent up by Ben Elton and Richard Curtis in Blackadder the Second, where Percy, much to Edmund’s withering disappointment, creates not a lump of gold, but a lump of green.
Alchemists have not surprisingly been seen as charlatans out to dupe wealthy potential backers, as Subtle and Face do so brilliantly in Jonson’s play. Frequently, rulers have had to outlaw the art, as Pope John XXII did in his bull of 1317:
Poor themselves, the alchemists promise riches which are not forthcoming; wise also in their own conceit,Pope John was not the only one.As early as 144 BCE, the Chinese Emperor issued an edict forbidding the manufacture of gold. Similar decrees were issued periodically throughout history: China banned it again in 60 BCE; the Roman Emperor Diocletian in 296 CE; while Henry IV made it illegal in England in 1403.
Yet behind the litany of charlatans, or the hopelessly misguided, is a tradition that claims to give one access to the deepest mysteries of both nature and the self. For every king and emperor who outlawed the art, there are numerous examples of kings, popes and nobles who either practised alchemy or at the very least encouraged it, no doubt attracted by the rumours that alchemists had the secret of infinite wealth, longevity and other strange powers such as being able to create life in the laboratory, and the ability to manipulate time. Sylvester II, the first French pope (999-1003), was alleged to have made a talking head through magical means and seven or eight years before his election to the pontificate had to swear before a council at Amiens that he wasn’t a sorcerer. King James IV of Scotland (1473-1513) carried out experiments at Stirling Castle; Queen Christina of Sweden (1626-1689) abdicated in order to study alchemy; Charles II of England had his own private laboratory built beneath the royal bedchamber; and, perhaps most famously of all, the Holy Roman Emperor Rudolph II (1576-1611) was so obsessed by the art that he is supposed to have neglected affairs of state in his quest for transmutation.
Not only kings and princes lent their time and money to the study of alchemy. Eminent mediaeval scholars such as Albertus Magnus, Moses Maimonides, Roger Bacon and Thomas Aquinas all shared an interest in the quest for transmutation. Perhaps more interestingly, so did most of the founders of modern science, men such as Jean Baptiste van Helmont, Robert Boyle and Sir Isaac Newton. Bacon discovered the properties of antimony, while the great Arab alchemist Alhazen invented the camera obscura. Alcoholic distillation, phosphorus, porcelain and sodium nitrate were all the products of the alchemist’s lab. Paracelsus spoke of the circulation of the blood one hundred years before it was “officially” recognised, while Michael Sendivogius discovered oxygen over a century and a half before Joseph Priestley\u2019s discovery in 1774.The French alchemist Tiphaigne de la Roche understood the process of fixing images, and may well have been taking photographs as early as the 1750s, a century ahead of Dageurre and Fox Talbot. Sir Isaac Newton, a lifelong practicing alchemist, spoke of the art as concealing secrets that would be dangerous should they fall into the wrong hands, which has led some to believe that he understood, or intuited, the secrets of nuclear power.
Alchemy has also been seen as a spiritual path, undertaken by students studying under an adept or master. From the earliest times, this is how alchemy was studied.With the beginnings of modern science in the seventeenth century, alchemy became more and more an inner discipline. Writers such as Jakob Boehme (1575-1624) and Thomas Vaughan (1621-1665) were almost certainly total strangers to the laboratory. These writers often equated the Philosopher’s Stone with Christ, and can be seen as mystics as much as alchemists. (It is no surprise to learn that Thomas Vaughan was the twin brother of the great metaphysical poet Henry Vaughan, who also employed alchemical imagery in his work on occasion.)
The mystical branch of alchemy produced countless allegories of spiritual development. Pre-dating John Bunyan by fifty years or so, is the remarkable The Labyrinth of the World and the Paradise of the Heart by JA Comenius. In this, the narrator is led through an endless city where he witnesses all forms of human folly. In the end, he is saved only by his faith in God. In addition to Comenius, there are countless shorter works, such as Thomas Vaughan’s House of Light and Tommasso de Campanella’s City of the Sun. Alchemical books were often profusely illustrated. Anyone familiar with the history of Western art will, however, find the images strangely timeless and possibly a little shocking. There are pictures of people tearing their own hearts out, or of bodies being dismembered. People are shown as cripples, as if to mirror their crippled or limited understanding of the art, or the world (if indeed there is ultimately a difference). Sexual imagery is strong, with the alchemical archetypes of the King and Queen frequently portrayed engaging in sexual intercourse. In others, a man has a tree growing out of his body where his penis should be. Men and women merge, not just in the sexual act, but to become hermaphrodites. It seems clear that these images were to be read or meditated upon, not merely looked at. The Swiss psychologist Carl Jung believed that, whatever sort of gold the alchemists were looking for, they had in fact discovered the unconscious, and that their frequently strong, challenging images were portraits of various states of consciousness that could lead us into a greater understanding of ourselves.
There is also a medical side to alchemy. The great Swiss physician and reformer Paracelsus (1493-1541) worked largely in medicine, and in his alchemy can be seen the origins of modern homeopathy. This tradition claimed its modern disciples in Archibald Cockren and Armand Barbault, both of whom saw it as a valuable complementary medicine.The popularity of alternative medicines is a testament to how powerful the ideas of Paracelsus have been. Anyone who has taken a homeopathic remedy has dipped a toe into the waters of alchemy without realising it.
In alchemy the idea of the unified worldview plays a central part: to the alchemists, even to the frauds or “puffers”, every part of the work was important. Not only was great care taken in all aspects of laboratory work, but attention was paid to the stars and phases of the moon; dreams were recorded, intuition listened to. To the alchemist, there was nothing that was unrelated or irrelevant. There was no such thing as “coincidence”. Everything was part of the work.This holistic view of the world has not been lost, and is still practiced by traditional societies the world over. Only in the West have we become cut off from this way of perceiving reality, and we are arguably the poorer for it. This is perhaps why alchemy is still relevant to us: it deals with a power that we need to rediscover and reclaim; a secret that each of us, unknowingly, already possess.
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