• @soulfirethewolf@lemdro.id
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    617 months ago

    Alchemy isn’t even a strictly occult thing. It was something done in the medieval era that was basically a very early form of science before most of the things they were trying to do were considered impossible

    • Encrypt-Keeper
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      237 months ago

      If Jesus really turned water into wine then what would you call that if not alchemy?

    • @neosheo@discuss.tchncs.de
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      147 months ago

      I mean alchemy is an occult practice. It’s just history only pays attention to the physical aspects (turning things into gold, etc). Often times the medium to turn a substance into gold is called the philosophers stone

      But this is only a portion of it. The philosophers stone in alchemy is actually spiritual enlightenment or becoming one with everything. Hence the concept of turning anything into gold, gold being enlightenment and the universe and the plain material before the transformation is preenlightened individuals. They all become the same (one, gold) after attaining it.

      Most alchemical philosophy is occult/spiritual and the chemistry aspects are a metaphor for the evolution of the soul.

      I think because modernity is mostly materialist in its philosophy that we ignore the underlying spirituality associated with alchemy

    • Malgas
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      77 months ago

      And, to the extent that it was occult, it was typically biblical occultism. There was a big emphasis on the wisdom of Solomon in particular.

    • @neptune@dmv.social
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      57 months ago

      The church did frown upon it at the time, if I recall. For example, Newton spent years on alchemy yet that’s forgotten