Alchemical Operation

alchemical operations

Alchemical operation names a discrete procedural stage within the opus alchymicum — the systematic transformation of base matter into the Philosophers' Stone — and functions in the depth-psychological literature as both hermeneutic category and analogical mirror for psychic process. The corpus does not speak with a single voice on how many operations exist or in what sequence they unfold: Edinger selects seven principal operations (calcinatio, solutio, coagulatio, sublimatio, mortificatio, separatio, coniunctio) as the architectonic frame for his entire reading of alchemical symbolism in psychotherapy, while Hall acknowledges that the literature fixes neither number nor sequence. Hillman insists on the multiplicity of operations — some texts enumerate forty-eight — and resists systematization, arguing instead that the very differentiation of techniques belongs to the craft logic of any serious work. Von Franz and Abraham trace individual operations into their textual genealogies, recovering the chemical substrates from which symbolic meanings emerge. Jung provides the animating premise: the operations are projections of an intrapsychic drama, and therefore every operation — dissolve and congeal, calcine, sublime, mortify — is simultaneously a description of what happens to matter and to the soul. The central tension in the corpus runs between Edinger's systematic, ego-therapeutic reading and Hillman's imaginal, polytheistic insistence that operations name qualities of psychic life rather than stages in a progressive cure.

In the library

My method of ordering the chaos of alchemy is to focus on the major alchemical operations. After the prima materia has been found, it has to submit to a series of chemical procedures in order to be transformed into the Philosophers' Stone.

Edinger establishes the alchemical operation as the primary organizing principle for interpreting the entire symbolic corpus of alchemy, arguing that all alchemical and much mythological imagery can be ordered around these procedural stages.

Edinger, Edward F., Anatomy of the Psyche: Alchemical Symbolism in Psychotherapy, 1985thesis

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The processes of alchemy are several, although as described in the literature they are by no means standard in number or in sequence, and each has a 'penumbra' of lesser images and operations that, when seen in diagrammatic form, look like a complicated road map.

Hall surveys the principal alchemical operations — solution, coagulation, sublimation, calcination, putrefaction, mortification, conjunction — and correlates each to a psychological parallel, while emphasizing that the tradition itself imposes no fixed canon.

Hall, James A., Jungian Dream Interpretation: A Handbook of Theory and Practice, 1983thesis

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Some texts have as many as forty-eight, all lined up in an order, from first to last. The differentiation of techniques and tools, methods and processes, and giving each particular bit of hand-work its instrument, its intensity, and its own name belongs essentially to the craft of any work.

Hillman resists reduction to a canonical set of operations, arguing that the proliferation and naming of procedures is intrinsic to the craft logic of psychological work itself.

Hillman, James, Alchemical Psychology, 2010thesis

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The opus alchymicum consists of a repeated series of dissolutions and coagulations — the dissolution of the old metal or matter of the Stone into the prima materia and the coagulation of that pure materia into a new and more beautiful form.

Abraham identifies solve et coagula as the master operation underlying the entire opus, showing how each cycle of dissolution and coagulation progressively purifies and potentiates the matter.

Abraham, Lyndy, A Dictionary of Alchemical Imagery, 1998thesis

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Most lists of alchemical operations begin with calcinatio. A few authors say solutio comes first. However, the sequence of operations (with one or two exceptions) does not seem to be psychologically significant. Any operation may be the initiating one, and the others may follow in any order.

Edinger argues that while calcinatio conventionally opens the series, the psychological significance lies not in sequential order but in the distinctive character of each individual operation.

Edinger, Edward F., Anatomy of the Psyche: Alchemical Symbolism in Psychotherapy, 1985thesis

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Alchemy represents the projection of a drama both cosmic and spiritual in laboratory terms. The opus magnum had two aims: the rescue of the human soul and the salvation of the cosmos.

Through Jung's formulation, Edinger frames alchemical operations collectively as stages in a drama of psychic rescue, wherein each procedure — including the dangerous encounter with the nigredo — serves individuation.

Edinger, Edward F., Anatomy of the Psyche: Alchemical Symbolism in Psychotherapy, 1985supporting

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The alchemists not only viewed their creation as a duplication of God's creation, but they also perceived God's creation as an alchemical process, describing it as a divine chemical separation in the krater of the universe.

Abraham demonstrates that alchemical operations were conceived as cosmic in scope, with individual procedures mirroring divine acts of creation through separation, sublimation, and conjunction.

Abraham, Lyndy, A Dictionary of Alchemical Imagery, 1998supporting

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This alchemical operation can be understood psychologically to refer to a circumambulation of all aspects of one's being. If you go through the whole cycle, it's a process that brings about a separation or a manifestation of light.

Edinger interprets the operation of circulatio as a psychological model of total self-circumambulation, through which light (consciousness) is extracted from darkness in a manner analogous to Manichaean light-gathering.

Edinger, Edward F., The Mysterium Lectures: A Journey Through C.G. Jung's Mysterium Coniunctionis, 1995supporting

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Alchemical psychology recognized this need for work on the lion. Alchemical psychology considered the black and red sulfurs, and the green lion, in desperate need of subliming.

Hillman illustrates how specific alchemical operations — here sublimation applied to the sulfuric, desiring nature — constitute a psychological program for transforming instinctual and aesthetic energies of the heart.

Hillman, James, The Thought of the Heart and the Soul of the World, 1992supporting

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Calcinatio has a purging or purifying effect. The substance is purged of radical moisture... the energies of the archetypal psyche first appear in identification with the ego and express themselves as desires for ego-pleasure and ego-power.

Edinger reads calcinatio as the alchemical operation that psychologically corresponds to the purification of instinctual drives from ego-identification, leaving the archetypal content in its transpersonal, self-sustaining form.

Edinger, Edward F., Anatomy of the Psyche: Alchemical Symbolism in Psychotherapy, 1985supporting

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Separatio must precede coniunctio, and they also speak of it as a cleansing operation. This corresponds psychologically to the fact that attitudes contaminated by unconscious complexes give one the distinct impression of being soiled or dirty.

Edinger establishes the sequential and functional relationship between separatio and coniunctio, mapping the cleansing operation onto the psychological need to differentiate unconscious contaminations before genuine union can occur.

Edinger, Edward F., Anatomy of the Psyche: Alchemical Symbolism in Psychotherapy, 1985supporting

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The quotations from Calid and Senior show the operation of the Spirit as a balancing of opposites in the well-known image of the coniunctio of man (= active, warm) and woman (= passive, chthonic, cold).

Von Franz reads a specific alchemical operation — the warming of cold by heat — as encoding the coniunctio of opposites, locating the Spirit's work within the procedural logic of the opus.

von Franz, Marie-Louise, Aurora Consurgens: A Document Attributed to Thomas Aquinas on the Problem of Opposites in Alchemy, 1966supporting

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One aspect of sublimatio overlaps with separatio symbolism — namely, its use as an extraction procedure. For instance, mercury can be extracted from certain compounds by heating. It vaporizes, sublimates, and reappears on the cooler portion of the vessel.

Edinger shows how individual alchemical operations interpenetrate — sublimatio and separatio sharing the function of extraction — illustrating the overlapping, non-linear character of the operative system.

Edinger, Edward F., Anatomy of the Psyche: Alchemical Symbolism in Psychotherapy, 1985supporting

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Projection: the final operation of the opus alchymicum, when the philosopher's stone or tincture is thrown over the base metal to transmute it into silver or gold; the instant exaltation or augmentation of a substance by the medicine or philosopher's stone.

Abraham defines projection as the culminating alchemical operation, the moment when the perfected stone transmutes base matter — an image that in psychological reading corresponds to the moment the individuated Self transforms its environment.

Abraham, Lyndy, A Dictionary of Alchemical Imagery, 1998supporting

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The congelation is synonymous with the alchemical processes of fixing, freezing and dyeing. It is the fixation of the volatile spirit, the hardening of that which is soft, the bringing of the dissolved matter of the Stone in the alembic to the dry white stage.

Abraham traces the operation of coagulation or congelation through multiple synonyms and textual sources, demonstrating how the fixation of volatile spirit constitutes a distinct operative moment within the solve et coagula cycle.

Abraham, Lyndy, A Dictionary of Alchemical Imagery, 1998supporting

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We shall be activating the image of salt (1) as a psychological substance, which appears in alchemy as the word sal; (2) as an operation, which yields a residue; (3) as any of many physical substances generically called 'salts'; and (4) as a property of other substances.

Hillman proposes a fourfold mode of engaging alchemical salt — substance, operation, material instance, and property — modeling a method for treating any alchemical term simultaneously as psychological and material phenomenon.

Hillman, James, Alchemical Psychology, 2010supporting

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As the planets revolve around the earth, they gradually spin their corresponding metals into the earth, which people can extract by their chemical operations.

Edinger situates alchemical operations within the macrocosmic-microcosmic worldview, presenting the chemical extraction of planetary metals as the material basis for understanding psychic operations upon archetypal constituents of the ego.

Edinger, Edward F., Anatomy of the Psyche: Alchemical Symbolism in Psychotherapy, 1985supporting

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Alchemy functions as an intermediary between the religious context of the imagery and its modern psychological context. Alchemy serves the function of plucking the image out of the religious context — positing it in the alchemical context — the context of working in the laboratory.

Edinger argues that alchemy itself performs a mediating operation between sacred image and psychological concept, making explicit the transposition from religious to laboratory to psychic register.

Edinger, Edward F., Transformation of the God-Image: An Elucidation of Jung's Answer to Job, 1992supporting

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I understand this rescue operation to apply to psychology itself... as the alchemical opus rescues the soul of the individual, so this opus can rescue the psyche of psychology conceived only in terms of the individual human.

Hillman extends the rescue function of alchemical operations from individual soul to the discipline of psychology itself, arguing that the yellowing operation restores psychology to its cosmological dimension.

Hillman, James, Alchemical Psychology, 2010supporting

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King, sun, and lion refer to the ruling principle of the conscious ego and to the power instinct. At a certain point these must be mortified in order for a new center to emerge.

Edinger reads mortificatio as the alchemical operation corresponding to the necessary psychological death of the ego's ruling principle, enabling transformation of the collective dominant.

Edinger, Edward F., Anatomy of the Psyche: Alchemical Symbolism in Psychotherapy, 1985supporting

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Fall on your knees before you undertake this operation. Let your eyes judge of it: for thus was the world created.

An alchemical text cited by Edinger presents the operation as a sacred, world-creating act demanding reverence, linking the individual practitioner's procedure to cosmogonic process.

Edinger, Edward F., Anatomy of the Psyche: Alchemical Symbolism in Psychotherapy, 1985aside

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Both fire and water cooperate to regulate the heat, though neither element touches the substance directly. An ingenious method of indirection, bringing together two notorious enemies, fire and water, to serve the opus.

Hillman uses the bain marie as an instance of the indirect, mediated character of alchemical operations, illustrating how the opus proceeds through careful management of opposing elements rather than direct application of force.

Hillman, James, Alchemical Psychology, 2010aside

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Dissolve then sol and luna in our dissolving water, which is familiar and friendly, and the next in nature unto them, and as it were a womb, a mother, an original, the beginning and the end of their life.

Edinger cites a primary alchemical recipe for solutio that frames the dissolving operation in maternal and generative terms, the prima materia receiving sun and moon back into its womb for regeneration.

Edinger, Edward F., Anatomy of the Psyche: Alchemical Symbolism in Psychotherapy, 1985aside

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