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The Alchemy of Love
F. David Peat
Talk given at the conference "Works of Love: Scientific
and Religious Perspectives on Altruism" Villanove University,
June 2003.
In this talk I would like to employ the metaphor of the alchemical
vessel in which transformation takes place so that gold is born
out of base metal. An essential feature of all alchemical processes
is the necessity for heat. It is heat that converts a solid into
a vapor by means of the process of sublimation. Heat releases
the spirit from the gross. Heat brings about change and is the
animating principle that produces birth. To further this metaphor
I would like to suggest that the name we give to this creative
heat is love.
During the middle ages the alchemist, artisan and artist considered
themselves as midwives who assisted nature in her striving for
perfection. Artistic creation was not thought in terms of bringing
about novelty, or an expression of the ego, but rather the artist
was someone who assisted at a birth, or one who acted as a catalyst
within a natural process of transformation and purification. Even
at a time when alchemy was being replaced by chemistry this thread
continued in the arts. Durer, for example, portrayed himself as
if he were Christ the Redeemer. But this was not an act of megalomania
but rather of modesty for, following in the image of Christ, the
artist and artisan sought to efface themselves in assisting nature
in here climb to perfection. His etching entitled Melancholia
I contains many references to the nigrido state, or first stage
in the alchemical working in which matter lies under the dark
sun. It can be thought of as the manifestation of Primal Matter,
or alternatively as the stage of death that follows the mystical
marriage or union of opposites. Where the nigrido may be linked
in some ways to a psychological depression it is also the first
essential stage out of which all creation is born.
Carl Jung was deeply aware that the language of the alchemist
contains profound insights on the nature of the process he termed
individuation, for just as matter strives for perfection so each
one of us strives for the realization of the true Self. For Jung,
the alchemical working, the heating, crystallization, sublimation,
distillation and refining were outward manifestations of deep
inner transformations.
Reference to the alchemical stages can also be found in Michelangelo's
sculptures for the Medici tomb in Florence. While all the figures
are finely worked and polished, the face of Girno is roughed out
and partly obscured by his arm - again a reference to the "dark
sun" of the nigrido". Aurora, a male torso with female
breasts appears to relate to the androgyny state in which male
and female principles have married. This thread of alchemical
continues through Marcel Duchamp and on to Jackson Pollock, one
of whose paintings is specifically titled "Alchemy".
The poet Arthur Rimbaud in his "A noir" equates the
vowels with the various colors associated with each stage of an
alchemical working :
"A noir", with the nigrido, " E blanc" with
the white albido and "I rouge" the red, gold, Chemical
wedding of King and Queen.
The contemporary British sculptor, Anish Kapoor, considers that
in the greatest of artistic works some alchemical transformation
has taken place so that in a certain sense the material existence
of the work has been changed. Likewise, the American artist, Janine
Antoni often deals with bridging that gap between inner and outer,
between our own interior existence and the world of matter which
we all inhabit. Again we could suggest that the power to bridge
that gap, that embracing of the world, is the power of love. Love
transcends, love creates a new space in which the artist, the
viewer and the world of art all co-exist and move beyond boundaries.
The greatest acts of creation therefore exist in a space where
there is "no-self". In love one moves beyond the distinction
of self and other, inner and outer, matter and spirit and enters
a new unity.
To view creativity, both scientific and in the arts, the metaphor
of alchemy allows us to perceive the creative act through a new
lens. Certainly Erza Pound gave us the maxim "Make it New",
but the idea that creativity must necessarily imply novelty is
somewhat of a modem concept. The icon maker worked to breathe
life into a preexisting archetypal form. Likewise, painters of
the middle ages were given commissions in which figures, gestures
and symbolic colors were clearly defined in their contract. Novelty
would have been out of the question. Indeed Varsari in his "Lives"
lavishes the greatest praise not for innovation but for those
who could produce works like "the ancients".
In this light we can characterize creativity as involving one
or more of the following characteristics:
1. Making something new and original
2. Renewing and making fresh an existing form
3. Healing, unifying and bringing together.
To focus on this third characteristic for a moment. Earlier we
had referred to love as the ability to transcend boundaries, to
move beyond the distinction between self and other. Something
similar happens during psychotherapy. For much of the time it
is the patient who is speaking while the therapist generally exercises
what Freud called "non-judgmental listening". As the
sessions continue, the therapist may give prompts, reflect back
to the patient what has been said, or at times throw out a little
suggestion or even advice. In more intense cases, the processes
of transference begin in which intense feelings are invoked within
the patient. In those cases where projective identification occurs
the therapist may even become directly aware of contents from
the patient's mind. But in all these cases the therapist still
attempts to bracket his or her own feelings, thoughts and reactions
in order not to contaminate the therapeutic process. Nevertheless
several skilled therapists have told me of those magical moments
in which all boundaries disappear, moments in which it is not
possible to say "where is the healing", or who is the
patient and who is the therapist. On those occasions patient and
therapist enter the alchemical vessel together and are warmed
by unconditional love. It is in those moments that the miracle
of healing takes place. (The Jungian therapist Beverly Zabriskie
has referred to this as the healing of "frozen accidents",
that is, the melting away of those "accidents" from
childhood that have remained frozen within us. Therapy and insight
may go some way towards the process of thawing, but in the last
analysis it requires the heat of love.
If I am relying so much on the terminology of alchemy in this
talk it is because I have in mind that period in the history that
we are all sensitive to, that period the contemporary composer
John Tavener calls the "one simple memory". This was
the time when life, spirit, art and the seeds of science were
one and unified. It was a period when the individual, social and
spiritual dimensions of human beings were one.
Today we have tended to fragment knowledge, learning and teaching,
yet this sense of unity has always been present in the greatest
representatives of art, science and the spiritual quest. Science
could perhaps be called a loving, seeing, passionate search for
"what is". It is an act of perception that is so penetrating
that it moves beyond surface appearances. It is the desire for
truth, no matter where that search leads. It is truth to observation.
And when we speak of truth of observation, or respect for experimental
results, we must bear in mind Einstein's advice to the young Heisenberg,
that positivism has its limits for it is the theory which suggests
where we should look and what is of importance in the phenomenological
world.
In this sense to suggest that science deals with objective facts
and constructs theories out of these facts is something of an
over-simplification. History, culture and even language suggest
ways in which we look at the world, experience it, and communicate
these insights to others. It is out of this fertile soil that
scientific theories are born. In turn these theories suggest to
us what is of significance in the world. A very obvious example
is the way the first half of the twentieth century was dominated
by scientific theories and experiments that dealt with systems
very close to equilibrium and perturbed by only small impulses,
vibrations or flows of energy. What was known as perturbation
theory worked well for such systems, allowing accurate calculations
to be made and compared with careful experiments. And so the scientific
world concerned itself with only one area of experience. But then
Prigogine's "far from equilibrium" thermodynamics came
along, as did the approach known as chaos theory and the theory
of non-linear systems. Suddenly everyone was looking a bifurcation
points, chaos, strange attractors, shock waves, fractal structures
and large or sudden changes. Armed with new mathematical and theoretical
tools, science now busied itself with an area of experience that
had hitherto been dismissed as irrelevant, monstrous or unimportant.
Nevertheless, even if we admit that the way we look at the world,
and what we consider to be of significance is to some extent determined
by cultural frameworks and scientific fashions, we still assume
that the facts are "out there" and that they reside
in an objective world. But closer examination of the lives of
individual scientists demonstrates that this may again be an oversimplification.
Barbara McLintock spent her life working with maize and discovered
the so-called "jumping genes". Like a Mayan medicine
person, she seemed to have made a deep identification with the
interior life of maize and is reported to have said that "truth
has a mystical origin both inside and outside myself." The
biologist, Brian Goodwin, has drawn attention to Goethe's views
on science, in that rather than confining nature to the artificial
situation of the laboratory one should seek ways in which nature
is allowed to speak to us and so provide us with "the example
worth a thousand". In this light Goodwin has referred to
the possibility of developing an "objective intuition"
within biology.
In the case of the physics, David Bohm argued that his body was
created out of the same matter as the rest of universe. In one
way, the laws of physics could be discovered outside, though laboratory
experiments. Yet in another, they were also accessible inside,
within the body itself. In this respect Bohm referred to an interior
sense of movement, to subtle tensions of the body, which would
reveal to him insights directly translatable into mathematical
formulae. I recall that Bohm once told me he had spoken to Einstein
about this and the latter related how he would squeeze a rubber
ball while thinking about the equations of space-time and that
these muscular movements and tensions became translated into mathematical
insights.
I find in this a remarkable parallel to the artist Cezanne who
was also deeply concerned about the truth of perception and of
discovering facts in the world. Cezanne described the act of painting
as of sitting and observing his "little sensations".
In this he would sometimes move his head to the left and sometimes
to the right, his sensations would change and the painter, with
a truly passionate eye, would constantly cast doubt on what he
was seeing. "Cézanne's doubt" , as Merleau-Ponty
described it, can be seen on the canvas as tentative brush strokes,
one in parallel to another, as he questions the position of a
tree branch, or asks how far in the middle distance should be
placed a piece of vegetation. In this the passionate quest of
the artist, inspired by a dispassionate love, becomes unified
with the scientist in their mutual search for truth.
Again, this pursuit of truth is motivated by a form of love.
Every scientist begins life as one who experiences awe, wonder
and respect for the natural world. Love is the motivating force
for the scientific quest and when it is absent science becomes
sterile. It is even possible to say that when love and passion
are absent that science can become dangerous, for those who live
without love, are in danger of living without a deep ethical and
moral sense. Above all scientists must always be aware of their
responsibility towards science, nature and society.
Yet another dimension of this quest for truth comes in the form
of beauty, or "elegance" as the mathematician would
have it. Beauty may have gone out of fashion in contemporary art
criticism but it has always been present in science. It is not
sufficient to have a theory that explains the facts, or enables
elaborate calculations to be made. A good theory must have a sense
of inevitability about it. It must evoke that same sense of wonder
we have in looking at nature herself. In the presence of a great
theory we stand in awe at the universe it represents. If Galileo
was the first to declare that God had written the book of nature
in the language of mathematics, then those who have followed him
declare that this mathematics must also be beautiful.
The physicist, Paul Dirac, has spoken of the physical sensation
he receives when engaged in a beautiful theory. The mathematician
Roger Penrose points out that most mathematicians practice their
art because it brings them in the presence of beauty. Indeed when
a mathematician becomes stuck and is not clear about what to do
next the best advice is to do the most beautiful thing possible.
Thus, in mathematics, beauty is both an end in itself and a means
to that end.
So again we return to those three dimensions, the individual,
social and spiritual or mystical. These must always be in balance
within the life of the individual scientist, artist or religious
person. Reason and logic are powerful forces but we should never
forget Pascal's, "The heart has its reasons which reason
does not know". In this I am reminded of one of the greatest
scientists of the twentieth century, Wolfgang Pauli, who, following
his encounter with Carl Jung, was convinced that just as Jung
had discovered the objective side to consciousness - the collective
unconscious - so too physics must discover its subjective side.
Pauli also spoke of "the irrational in matter". That
is, the whole of nature can never be reduced to a rigid logic,
but must always allow for the irrational and unpredictable.
As Pauli's insights developed he began to speak of the unity
of matter and psyche, as being one of the goals of physics. Indeed,
he was to go even further and return to the alchemical dream of
an interior working of matter and spirit within the alchemical
vessel. Specifically he spoke of 'the resurrection of spirit in
matter", feeling that spirit had left our experience of the
material world with the rise of Cartesian and Newtonian science.
Now, he felt, the era had dawned in which spirit would return
to its proper place and the world would be unified - possibly
Tavener's "one simple memory" would return. While to
the scientific world Pauli was working on a unified field theory
- one aspect of this was a unification of symmetry and antisymmetry,
which Pauli spoke of in terms of Christ and the Devil - like an
alchemist of old the greater work was being carried out in silence.
Only Carl Jung and Pauli's closest assistants were aware of this
great task.
Yet in the end the story become dark for Pauli became deeply
dispirited with both his the inner journey and his desire for
a unified physics. A short time before his death from cancer Pauli
abruptly ended his scientific collaboration with Heisenberg, abandoned
his work and was haunted by dreams. A close associated commented
that the element of "eros" had been missing from Pauli's
life. The alchemical vessel had been sealed, matter and spirit
were present, yet the transforming heat of love could not be generated.
To some extent Pauli's quest was echoed by that of David Bohm.
Throughout his scientific career Bohm was inspired by a search
for wholeness. He found the scientific world to have become badly
fragmented, a fragmentation that extended into society itself,
education and the general way we experience the world. His desire
for a holistic world view led him to develop the notion of the
Implicate order, which he felt was the ground out of which the
Explicate Order emerges - the classical order of large scale objects,
well defined in space and time and interacting via forces. The
Implicate order, he believed was closer to the insights of "undivided
wholeness" revealed through quantum theory. But this Implicate
order did not embrace the world of matter and energy alone but
also mind and consciousness. Indeed, in the parallel development
of his Ontological Interpretation of Quantum Theory Bohm proposed
the notion of "active information" as a new component
in physics to form the triangle of matter-energy-information.
Moreover since the electron can, in a certain sense, "read"
the content of this active information then it could be said to
exhibit a proto-mind. Thus, for Bohm, mind had been present in
the cosmos from the beginning. Indeed mind and matter could be
thought of as the north and south poles of a magnet. These poles
can never be separated for when you cut the magnet in half you
simply generate new north and south poles.
Bohm's entire world-view was an embracing of wholeness and, if
one includes his many interactions with Jiddu Krishnamurti, then
there is also what could perhaps be called a spiritual dimension,
in the sense that he believed it would be possible for the physical
brain and human consciousness to be transformed by what was sometimes
termed "the intelligence" that transcended time and
space.
Nevertheless, by the end of his life Bohm had become discouraged
that he was unable to achieve a final synthesis. While I do not
want to make too much of this, could it be that there is something
perhaps missing in the scientific quest that compromises the final
move towards wholeness? Or rather, is it that only a few exceptional
figures, such as Pauli and Bohm, caught a glimpse of the direction
in which the science of the future could move?
And should this be termed failure or possibly something else?
To borrow yet again from the alchemical image, what maybe appeared
as deep disappointment and even melancholia was in fact but the
first stage of the alchemical working - the dark sun or nigrido
stage in which it is first necessary to rest. When opposites enter
in a mystical marriage they must first die if they are to be later
reborn and baptized into the albido stage. Interestingly this
stage is identified with the resurrection that follows the re-entry
of spirit into matter.
So rather than thinking in terms of failure and limitation, it
could be that science has already entered the first stage of a
new cycle in which it will pass into a period of the white moon,
white in which all colors are united. Then, as the alchemical
heat of love increases, through the yellow daybreak and on to
the final stage when the white moon is raised to the condition
of the golden sun and the King and Queen, spirit and matter, unite
in the final mystical marriage. Within this condition we do indeed
return to that "one simple memory" where spiritual,
scientific and artistic values become one and the same.
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