Opus Alchymicum

The opus alchymicum occupies a privileged position in the depth-psychology corpus as the privileged analogue through which analysts — above all Jung, but also von Franz and Abraham — articulate the structure of psychological transformation. Jung's decisive contribution was to read the alchemical work not as proto-chemistry but as an unconscious projection of the individuation process: the successive operations of dissolution, putrefaction, whitening, and reddening map the psyche's passage through shadow, coniunctio, and self-realization. Abraham, working from a literary-historical rather than clinical vantage, treats the opus as a coherent symbolic system whose imagery permeates European literature from the medieval period onward, charting a reiterated cycle of solve et coagula that is simultaneously cosmological and spiritual. The central tension across the corpus lies between the exoteric and esoteric readings: is the opus a laboratory procedure whose symbolism accidentally mirrors psychic life, or is the psychological drama primary and the chemical language its disguise? Jung insists on the latter, finding in the alchemical corpus an alternative soteriology that contested, and complemented, the opus divinum of the Mass. Von Franz extends this reading into the patristic and Sophia traditions. Throughout, the opus alchymicum functions as the master-term that subsumes nigredo, albedo, rubedo, coniunctio, prima materia, and the philosopher's stone into a single teleological narrative of psychic wholeness.

In the library

If the opus alchymicum claimed equality with the opus divinum of the Mass, the reason for this

Jung identifies the opus alchymicum as a rival soteriology to Christian sacramental practice, asserting that alchemists consciously posed their work as an answer to questions left unresolved by theology alone.

Jung, Carl Gustav, Alchemical Studies, 1967thesis

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the alchemist projected what I have called the process of individuation into the phenomena of chemical change.

Jung's foundational claim that the opus alchymicum is not failed chemistry but a symbolic enactment of individuation, the centralizing processes of the unconscious that constitute personality.

Jung, Carl Gustav, Psychology and Alchemy, 1944thesis

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The opus alchymicum consists of a reiterated cycle of dissolutions and coagulations of the Stone's matter in the alembic, and this cycle is sometimes compared to the sun's continual rotation around the earth.

Abraham defines the structural logic of the opus alchymicum as a circular, rhythmically repeated process of solve et coagula, linking its cosmological metaphors to the stages of the nigredo.

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

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cock and hen the names given to Sol and Luna, the male and female aspects of matter, in the early stages of the opus alchymicum.

Abraham traces the symbolic vocabulary of gender opposition — cock and hen, sulphur and argent vive — as progressive representations of the chemical wedding that advances through the opus alchymicum toward the philosopher's stone.

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

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The image of the alchemical plant blooming with roses, and that of the philosophical tree with its ripened fruits of sun and moon, symbolize the completion of the opus alchymicum.

Abraham identifies the opus alchymicum's telos in the imagery of flowering and harvest, linking botanical symbolism to the rubedo and the production of the red and white tinctures.

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

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The uroboros or paradoxical serpent, which devours its own tail and begets itself, is a symbol of the circular process of the opus alchymicum.

Abraham establishes the uroboros as the emblematic figure of the opus alchymicum's self-referential, circular structure, connecting the serpent's self-consumption to the transformative goal of the work.

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

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Even if the peregrination up to this point was not an allegory of the opus alchymicum, from now on it certainly is.

Jung marks the moment in Maier's planetary peregrination when the narrative explicitly becomes an allegory of the opus alchymicum, illustrating how the work's structure maps onto mythological and cosmological journeys.

Jung, Carl Gustav, Mysterium Coniunctionis: An Inquiry into the Separation and Synthesis of Psychic Opposites in Alchemy, 1955supporting

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The alchemical operation consisted essentially in separating the prima materia, the so-called chaos, into the active principle, the soul, and the passive principle, the body, which were then reunited in personified form in the coniunctio or 'chymical marriage.'

Jung summarizes the core operation of the opus alchymicum as a separation and reunion of soul and body through the coniunctio, grounding its psychological interpretation in the archetypal drama of hierosgamos.

Jung, Carl Gustav, Alchemical Studies, 1967supporting

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The operation of purifying and refining the matter is accomplished through the solve et coagula process known as 'cooking', and through the ablution or washing.

Abraham details the practical-symbolic operations — cooking and ablution — that constitute the purificatory stages of the opus alchymicum, including the gendered allocation of labor within the work.

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

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The alchemists, with astonishing accuracy, called this barely understandable thing Mercurius, in which concept they included all the statements which mythology and natural philosophy had ever made about him.

Jung argues that Mercurius — the central figure of the opus alchymicum — symbolizes the unconscious itself in all its paradoxical duplex nature, making the alchemical work a precise, if unwitting, psychology.

Jung, Carl Gustav, Alchemical Studies, 1967supporting

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Mercurius has the circular nature of the uroboros, hence he is symbolized by the circulus simplex of which he is at the same time the centre.

Jung explicates Mercurius's circular, self-encompassing nature as constitutive of the opus alchymicum's logic, distinguishing the alchemical redemption myth from the linear descent-and-ascent of the Christian Redeemer.

Jung, Carl Gustav, Alchemical Studies, 1967supporting

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The fighting lion and griffin represent the simultaneous dissolution (separation) and coagulation (coniunctio) of the matter of the Stone at an early stage in the opus.

Abraham glosses the bestiary imagery of the early opus as emblems of the simultaneous solve et coagula dynamic, showing how literary and emblem sources encode the operative logic of the work.

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

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For the same reason the boy in Christian Rosencreutz's Chymical Wedding led the hero down to an underground chamber, on the door of which was a secret inscription graven in copper characters.

Jung reads the Chymical Wedding's underground descent as a displacement of Christian redemption imagery into alchemical and erotic symbolism, illustrating the cultural pressures that shaped the language of the opus.

Jung, Carl Gustav, Alchemical Studies, 1967aside

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