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Practical alchemy archives - Philosophic MercuryBack to alchemy forum page . Back to Practical alchemy archive.Date: Thu, 28 Aug 1997 From: Johann Plattner Dear experienced members of the alchemy-group ! I decided to recapitulate my practical knowledge about philosophic mercury here. I would like to initiate more discussion to practical alchemical experiences. Of course, I`m so fair to say, that I`ll expect to get also some valuable informations, if possible. It should be well known, Philosophic Mercury is the most concealed, but in the other way, the most important subject in alchemy. Some claim, it`s the very first beginning of the royal work. I cannot imagine, only by blank meditation respectively practising Inner Alchemy, to get the desired goal. I don`t agree with Lapidus, who reduces Alchemy to pure Chemistry, but I`m impressed to hear, which possibilities there are too, without any mystifications. Although, he concealed the most important things very closely (at least for me). For me, Philosophic Mercury is: 1. a uniform (single) substance, when it is rectified, viz. cleaned. 2. a liquid. (which does not wet the hand) 3. a highly inflammble substance. 4. a substance wich has quite a strong scent. 5. a extremely volatile substance. 6. a substance with a boiling point between 20 to 25 degrees (sic!) 7. a substance, which requires great care in handling. 8. a substance, dissolving fine gold. 9. a substance, which production is not very difficult, but very well concealed. 10. a substance, which production is described unrecognized in the Encyclopedia Brittanica edited in 1781. 11. a substance, which have to be produced from metalls only. etc. etc. I think, for the beginning, it`s quite enough. With best wishes Johann Plattner Date: Thu Aug 28 22:46:47 1997 From: Art Kunkin Dear Johann Plattner, It's quite possible that some of the more "experienced" members of the forum might prefer to carry on a discussion about the mercury in a smaller arena for the time being. There might even be some who are not too eager to discuss at all for the time being but would like to know for future reference how to contact those who have identified themselves in the forum as serious practical workers. With that in mind I would like to make my email address available to you ([email protected]). Personally, I am even interested in knowing geographical locations as well as electronic addresses because such snail mail addresses have proven useful to me when I have travelled abroad. (My own location is Los Angeles, California). Meanwhile I applaud the fact that you obviously have done much of the required study. However, a significant clue that you overlook in your listing is the reiterated statement that there is a joining of two and possibly three elements (including a secret fire) in the "rebis" at an early stage of the process but that these distinct elements are nevertheless one. Just about all of the "recipes" that have been tried and publicized are far from conforming to this condition despite the unanimous agreement of the ancients on this point. It is certainly one of the most baffling aspects of this greatest of all human puzzles and one that has blocked many serious seekers from even attempting laboratory work. Even the recipe from the 1771 Encyclopedia (not 1781!) that has often been identified as the process for producing the philosophical mercury does not really conform to this condition even though it definitely produces the strange substance seen by Casanova in St. Germaine's laboratory which boils in one's hand (your number six). Cordially, Art Kunkin Art Kunkin Date: Thu, 28 Aug 1997 15:55:54 -0700 From: "A.M.W. House" Dear Johann, Please find information regarding Philosophic Mercury at this site: focussing specifically on making Regulus of iron and antimony to further produce a philosophic double mercury that was animated by several distillations and subsequently caused swelling and putrefaction in gold. http://www.levity.com/alchemy/markhouse1.html Many species of so-called philosophic mercuries may come from more than the metallic kingdom, for instance: vegetable - acidic acid made philosophical by a radical vinegar production, see these former postings all under the heading Practical: Acetates Theory, Acetone, Distillation of Vinegar, on the Alchemy Forum dated 8/19/97. These are fairly recent if you didn't see them. Please note that the vegetable realm gives it's carbon atom to the metallic kingdom for this transfer of it's life energy to the metallic kingdom. To find more details on this path (acetates) read Russ House's articles on acetates made with vinegar in Ora et Labora issues from LPON-USA vol. 1, issues 3 & 4. What follows are some theoretic and practical references to P. Mercury. Note these quotes come from collections of mine on P. Mercury from many recent publications from contemporary alchemical schools as well as ancient to modern texts: "The Agent (P. Mercury) of the work is the invisible Mercury, which is the gas, spirit, or air of antimony, excited in a steady sand heat as warm as blood. 98.6F." "P. Mercury is derived from Antimony through the catalytic action of iron." Albertus Spagyricus Three fires = to: 1. natural (ordinary heat) masculine 2. unnatural ("Our Mercury") feminine 3. contra natural ("Argentum Vivum") has the power to unbind metals etc.= Secret Fire. Three Mercury's = to: 1st mercury is called: vulgar mercury 2nd mercury is called: common volatile mercury or conceptual mercury 3rd mercury is philosophic "The three essentials unified are the Triplex Mercury of Philosophers." Artofferus quotes: "That which is Philosophical is not visible. But may become visible by condensation." Example Teaching: 1. Man is a magnet. He/she circulates air in and out. Christ turned water to wine. 1st miracle. (see here the beginning of the Great Work for P. Stone). AMWH 2. Rain water is a neutral chaos; plants absorb it, it becomes their blood. (grapes are the best example).... 3. Animals absorb moisture and nitre, subtle mercury above the earth in the sky, and a subtle sulfur below that above the earth=dew. This nitre is abundant about 6 feet above the ground level. Air=(AR) which = nitre or GUR. The breath of GOD, is Salt, sulfur, and Mercury. "JOB" is a purification process.... More later, Anthony Date: Fri, 29 Aug 1997 12:52:41 -0400 From: Beat Krummenacher Johann Plattner described some of the characteristics of the philosophical mercury. His description refers to the philosophical mercury, as it is prepared on the wet way. Furthermore he emphasizes, that he does not agree with the sight 'alchemy be pure chemistry'. That is right. Alchemy as whole is no pure chemistry. For alchemy also describes inner inherent laws, which are not exclusively bound to matter. However I maintain, that 'the laboratory alchemy is pure chemistry'. What materially is running down in the flasks of an alchemist is chemically describable. That the products of the practical work can exercise effects, which go beyond pure chemistry, does not alter it. It is very important for the practical alchemist to understand to what extent alchemy is pure chemistry. The sight of the most practitioners is, that only then a success can occur, if the alchemist himself engages in the practical process for instance by means of magic methods. An effective alchemical product can only be received, if the mental influence of the alchemist is part of the work. With all emphasis I would like to cling to it, that the mental impulse of the alchemist CAN support certain processes. However it is NOT a must! There are alchemical processes, which generate active matters out of themselves, without the necessity of the alchemist to utilize any magic practice. The processes to the philosophical mercury are lying in nature itself. The task of the alchemist at these processes is isolating, purifying and properly joining the right ingredients. The release and/or load with the concealed powers is accomplished by nature itself. It's no accident that in the alchemical literature again and again the practical work in the lab is compared with the hatching of a hen's egg. This comparison means - notwithstanding other interpretations - the independence of the alchemical processes of the mental influence of the alchemist. I would like to explain that somewhat more exactly. If we take a fertilized hen's egg, so a chick will hatch out, if we incubate the egg at the right temperature. Everything what the chick requires to its development is contained inherently in the egg. Let us hold the egg too cold or heat it too high, so the life in the egg will die out. We can use the egg at most still for nutritional purposes. A chick never will hatch. All birds hatch out, if they are properly incubated. And this happens without any help from man. Nature contains all chemical matter, which is required for the philosophical egg. However in nature this secret egg nowhere is found in a perfect state. Because the basis to the philosophical work cannot be found in perfect composition, a conscious being must produce this basis artificially. Therefore alchemy is called an art. The alchemist is an artist, because he creates through his understanding, his knowledge and his skill artificially the philosophical egg. The material basis for this work completely can be described by chemistry. Nothing is mystical at these processes. We may never forget: The whole world is found in an ocean of energies, which are responsible for the life and for the effectiveness of the philosopher's stone. The matter itself is more or less condensed vitality, according to the origin of a specific matter out of the three natural kingdoms. While the inner alchemist tries to lift his whole nature onto a higher energy level by means of a more mental and more emotional work, the practical alchemist helps nature to strengthen the energies bound in it, in that he prepares the necessary chemical carrier to attract and to store the same energies in supreme concentration. The material basis of the stone actually is a composition of pure chemical substances. The practical problem is, that only certain chemical substance classes are suitable to function as magnets in reference to the vitality. There are only certain organic and inorganic compounds, which own these characteristics. A comparison: If we want to produce a magnet, so several ways are available. But only certain matters have the necessary characteristics to exercise the magnetic effect. In this case there are natural sources, which have a certain magnetic power. Some minerals are magnetic. Through art - in this case through metallurgic and chemical processes - it is possible to change matter so that much stronger magnets are produced, than they can be found in nature. Today no man would have the idea laying down a piece of iron in front of him and magically trying to produce an effective magnet from it. Who knows the physical-chemical conditions, which make out a magnet, can manufacture a magnet, in that he processes suitable raw materials. The magnetism is a characteristic of matter. The necessary mental effort of man only is to rearrange matter in a way that the magnetic power in nature can appear. The practical alchemist can do exactly the same. If he knows the physical-chemical conditions, which make out the philosophical mercury, he can manufacture the philosophical mercury by only rearranging matter. The concealed powers are characteristics of matter, just as the magnetism. If the alchemist properly forms the material basis, the sought-after power legally appears. That is a concrete process nothing dealing with mysticism. Because alchemical substances are unusually high in energy, because such matters set up a tremendous energy field, they trigger effects in everything, which comes in touch with them. If man takes in such matters, so his whole nature will be transmuted. Beside bodily changes intense perceptions appear to him on other levels of existence. Such perceptions fundamentally are similar to experiences following the magic way. This homogeneity immediately will strike each alchemist. To disguise the enormous consequences of their practical work, the earlier alchemists have correlated practical processes often with the running parallel mental experiences, so that the beginner must assume, the practice require the magic influence of the alchemist. However this is not true. If the magic influence on the part of the alchemist would be a necessary condition for the practical great work, so never one reason would have consisted to pass over the secret practical processes with silence. Lapis |