Working with the Elements
The
Four Elements
According to the ancients, the
First Matter has a fourfold structure which they attributed to the existence of
four archetypal forces or elements of creation which they named Earth, Water,
Air, and Fire. Obviously, the Four Elements of the alchemists are not our
everyday ideas of earth, water, air, and fire, which are only the physical
expressions of their respective archetypes. “There are four common elements,”
wrote Polish alchemist Michael Sendivogius (1566-1636), “and each has at its
center another deeper element [the archetype] which makes it what it is. These
are the four pillars of the world. They were in the beginning evolved and molded
out of chaos [First Matter] by the hand of the Creator; and it is their contrary
action which keeps up the harmony and equilibrium of the mundane machinery of
the universe; it is they, which through the virtue of celestial influences,
produce all things above and beneath the earth.”
Thus, the Four Elements are named
for those fundamental archetypes within matter and are symbolic of their
metaphysical qualities. As archetypes, the elements are beyond any rational
explanation and must be experienced to be understood. French philosopher Gaston
Bachelard (1884-1962) concluded that the Four Elements resulted from “material
image-making” or “the materialization of imagery” within the One Mind of the
universe. He looked at the interaction of the elements from the point of view of
what each sought. “Earthly joy is riches and impediment,” he said. “Aquatic joy
is softness and repose; fiery pleasure is desire and love; airy delight is
liberty and movement.”
In
Answers from the Elements, Sufi
alchemist Rumi describes the elements as expressions of the love of the
universal soul for the divine spirit: “Last night I asked the moon about the
Moon, my one question for the visible world, Where is God? The moon says, I am
dust stirred up when he passed by. The sun: My face is pale yellow from just now
seeing him. Water: I slide on my head and face, like a snake, from a spell he
cast. Fire: His lightning – I want to be that restless. Wind: Why so light? I
would burn too if I had a choice. Earth, quiet, impregnated: Inside me I have a
garden and a bubbling spring.”
The ancient Greeks did a lot of
philosophizing about the nature of the First Matter (which they called
hyle), and it from that thought the
doctrine of the Four Elements emerged. The first philosopher to formalize these
principles was Empedocles, a Greek philosopher and healer who lived around 450
BC. In his Tetrasomia ("Doctrine of
the Four Elements"), he stated that all matter is comprised of four roots (or
elements): Earth, Water, Air, and Fire.
According to Empedocles, Fire and
Air are “outwardly reaching” elements, reaching up and out, whereas Earth and
Water turn inward and downward. In his view, and that of later alchemists, the
elements are not only material substances but also spiritual essences. To show
their archetypal power, Empedocles associated each element with a god. “Hera
rules the fruitful earth,” he wrote. “Hades the central fire, Zeus the
luminescent air, and Persephone the mollifying water.”
The elements were animated through
the interaction of two great living energies Empedocles called Love and Strife (Eros
and Eris). Love he associated with
the goddess Aphrodite, and Strife with the god of war, Ares. This simple view
explained nearly every aspect of the world of the Greeks. Love and Strife were
primordial gods who predated the gods of Olympus. This idea is very much like
the Eastern tradition Yin and Yang, with Yin being the passive feminine energy
of Love and Yang being the aggressive masculine energy of Strife. Egyptian
alchemists associated the feminine (Love) energy with the Moon and masculine
(Strife) energy with the Sun, while European alchemists associated the feminine
energy with the Queen and the masculine energy with the King.
Aristotle (350 BC) further
developed the theories of Empedocles by explaining them in terms of their
qualities. In his view, the elements arose from the interplay of the ideal (or
archetypal) properties of hotness and coldness, and dryness and wetness. Fire
(dry and hot) and Water (wet and cold) are polar opposites, as are Earth (dry
and cold) and Air (wet and hot). Wet and dry are the primary qualities. Wet
(moistness) is the quality of fluidity or flexibility, which allows a thing to
adapt to its external conditions, whereas Dry (dryness) is the quality of
rigidity, which allows a thing to define its own shape and bounds. As a
consequence Wet things tend to be volatile and expansive, since they can fill
spaces in their surroundings, whereas Dry things are fixed and structured, since
they define their own form. Aristotle predicted that one material could be
transformed into another by altering the mix of its archetypal elements and
their qualities.
The symbols used by the alchemists
for the elements have a lot to say about their archetypal origins. The symbol
for Fire () is an upward-pointing triangle, since Fire with its hot and dry
qualities is the most volatile element and seeks to ascend. The symbol for Water
() is a downward-pointing triangle, since Water with its cold and moist
qualities seeks to descend or condense. Fire and Water are the two purest
elements, and the other two elements of Air and Earth are considered to be more
material versions of them. Thus, the symbol for Air () is the upward-pointing
triangle of Fire with a horizontal line through it. Air is hot and moist and
seeks to ascend, but its moist component blocks the full ascent of the Fire
principle, as indicated by the horizontal line in the triangle. Thus Air is
suspended in time and space, caught between the extremes of the Above and the
Below. The symbol for Earth () is the downward-pointing triangle of Water with a
horizontal line through it. Earth is cold and dry and seeks to descend, but its
dry component blocks the full descent of the Water principle, as indicated by
the horizontal line in the triangle. Thus Earth is suspended in time and space
and is what the alchemists would call the least volatile or most fixed of the
elements.
Another Greek philosopher,
Hippocrates (400 BC), added his own spin to the theory of the elements by
applying them to human psychology. He viewed the elements as bodily fluids he
called “humors” (see Figure 5). In Hippocrates’ system, Fire is associated with
the Choleric humor of yellow bile, which is carried in cholesterol as a
bi-product of digestion and energy transformation in the body. Aristotle would
say the Choleric force is hot and dry. Choleric people therefore tend to be
energetic, active, moving, “on-fire”, and enthusiastic.
Water is associated with the
Phlegmatic humor of phlegm, which represents the clear fluids of the body
carried by the lymphatic system and secreted by the mucus membranes. The
phlegmatic person is cold and wet in Aristotle’s terms and tends to in touch
with their feelings and can be moody and brooding. The Water Element is
associated with dissolution, diffusion, union, and transformation, and people in
whom the Phlegmatic humor is predominant tend to be flowing and flexible,
letting their feelings guide them, and oriented toward emotional harmony.
Air is associated with the
Sanguine humor of the blood, which distributes oxygen throughout the tissues of
the body. The word “sanguine” refers to a ruddy complexion in which the blood
flows close to the skin. Oddly, Hippocrates had no idea that the blood
distributes “air” through the body, yet he made the connection using ancient
esoteric doctrines and his own intuition. Sanguine people tend to be very
changeable and even flighty, perhaps a little irritable yet basically
optimistic, and full of personal integrity. According to Aristotle, such people
are hot and wet in their elemental qualities.
Earth is
associated with the Melancholic humor of black bile, which probably refers to
waste products associated with digestion such as the stools, from which useful
energy has been removed leaving only the dregs of matter behind. Melancholic
people tend to be apathetic, passive, stubborn, sluggish, rigid yet practical.
Since Earth is the principle of structure and materialization, the Melancholic
humor is dominant in the person who focuses on physical reality and tends to
exhibit the qualities of perseverance, inflexibility, realism, and
pragmatism. In Aristotle’s terms, such people are cool and dry.
Carl Jung’s theory of personality
types is clearly derived from the humors of Hippocrates. The four basic Jungian
types are each associated with a humor: feeling (Fire, Choleric), thinking
(Water, Phlegmatic), intuition (Air, Sanguine), and sensation (Earth,
Melancholic). By combining the polarities of introversion (a person focused on
inner feelings and thoughts) and extroversion (a person focused on outer
relationships and external objects), Jung developed eight personality types. In
psychology, we also find the four humors expressed as the personality variables
in the popular Meyers-Briggs test. In the Luscher Color personality profile, the
Fire color red is has the qualities of excitement, activity and self-
confidence. The Water color blue is associated with relaxation, satisfaction and
self-moderation. The Air color yellow has qualities of free-thinking, change,
and self-development. The Earth color green is associated with solidity,
persistence, and self-respect.
Jung saw the Four Elements as
archetypes existing in the collective unconscious and thus present in everyone.
Jung considered Fire and Air the active, masculine elements and Water and Earth
the passive, feminine elements. In Jungian psychology, it is the degree of
development of each of the Four Elements in our conscious mind balanced with the
unconscious retention of the remaining elements that determines our personality
and attitude. In other words, this indwelling fourfold structure of our
personality originates from the creation of ego out of the chaos of the
unconscious, just as the fourfold structure of the universe was created by the
action of the One Mind on the First Matter.
In alchemy, as in psychology, the
goal is to develop a balance of the elements within the individual.
Even Empedocles noted that those who have near equal proportions of the
Four Elements are more intelligent and have the truest perceptions of reality.
Personal transformation and individual integration are dependent upon balancing
the elements within the psyche, and the deeper relationships of the elements
(whether they oppose or complement one another) determine whether we are
basically happy and balanced or develop neuroses, phobias, and other
psychological disturbances. According to Jung, when two opposing elements
encounter each other in the personality or are brought to the surface in a
situation, there are three possibilities: 1) they may generate psychic energy;
2) they may neutralize each other; or 3) they may combine or unite. In alchemy
and psychology, the third case is the most profound, for the union of opposite
elements is the Conjunction of Opposites (Coniunctio
Oppositorum), the creation of a higher unity and transcendence of
conflicting polarities.
Experiment 2: Balancing the
Elements
As we have noted, Aristotle
considered the Four Elements as composed of the qualities of hot and cold, dry
and moist. All the elements originated by impressing these qualities on the
First Matter, and one element could be changed into another by altering these
qualities. For instance, when the qualities of moist and cold are imposed on the
First Matter, the element Water results, but if we boil Water, it is changed
into Air (steam) by substituting the quality of hot for that of cold. In the
following experiment in the inner laboratory of our mind, we will work to
transform the humors using a procedure the alchemists called the Rotation of the
Elements
In this experiment, first try to
determine which element (or humor) is predominant within you using the
descriptions in the preceding section. Try to be objective and pick only one
primary humor that seems to fit you. For help, you might want to take the
Meyers-Briggs test or quizzes contained in such popular books as The Four
Temperaments by Randy Rolfe (Marlowe & Co. 2002). You may also want to
consult a close friend or family member to find out how they would classify you.
Once you have determined your
dominant humor, use the ancient Rotation of the Elements procedure to create the
perfect balancing humor within you. This procedure is based on Aristotle’s
Square of Opposition (see Figure 6), which depicts all the relationships between
the qualities and the elements. The elements form a cross within the square, and
each element is composed of two qualities shown in the corners of the square.
Thus, Earth is dry and cold, Water is cold and moist, Air is moist and hot, Fire
is hot and dry.
The
qualities form a diagonal cross (or “X”) of opposition within the square.
Changes in the qualities of the elements causes movement through the square. You
could also say that the “strife between opposites'' is the motor of rotation.
Cold become hot, hot becomes cold, moist becomes dry, dry becomes moist.
Hot (or heat) in the upper left
hand corner is the primary quality, and Fire at the top of the square is the
most active element and the agent of transformation. Water at the bottom of the
square is the most passive element and represents the agent of coagulation or
the current situation. The “natural” circulation of the elements in the square
begins with the process of adaptation (Water), and continues through expansion
(Air), production (Fire), and retraction (Earth). The same pattern of movement
through the elements can be seen in many elemental rotations, including the
seasons (winter, spring, summer, fall), the ages of man (childhood, youth,
maturity, old age), and the cyclic rise and fall of nations and ideas.
There are four rules that
determine movement within the Square of Opposition. First, movement is in a
clockwise rotation starting at Fire. This is where the work of alchemical
transformation begins. You will notice that as you move through the square, each
element follows its dominant quality. Therefore Fire is predominantly hot, Earth
is predominantly dry, Water predominantly cold, Air predominantly moist. The
turning square is an elemental rotation driven by the qualities: hot on the top,
dry on the descending side, cold on the bottom, and moist on the rising side.
“It is clear that generation of the elements will be circular,” explained
Aristotle, “and this mode of change is very easy because corresponding qualities
are present in adjacent elements.''
Second, direct transformation of
opposed elements into one another is not impossible. We can move around the
square, but not across it. Thus Water cannot be transformed directly into Fire,
since they have no common quality, however, Water can be transformed by first
changing into Air or Earth. Then, the Air or Earth is transformed into Fire.
Third, the qualities are inversely
proportional to each other. That means that the higher the intensity of an
earlier quality in the rotation, the
greater the rate of increase in the following quality. Or alternatively, the
higher the intensity of a later
quality in the rotation, the more the preceding quality decreases. For instance,
increasing hot increases dry but decreases moist. Or looking at the elements,
heat causes Earth to lose its rigidity or dryness and melt (become more flexible
or moist), which makes it Water. Further heating decreases the cold of the Water
and increases its hot quality, which makes it boil and turn into Air (steam).
When Air is heated, its moisture is reduced, and it rises higher into Fire. When
Fire becomes cold, it loses its heat and becomes Earth (ashes) again.
Fourth, whenever there are two
elements with a common quality, the element in which it is not dominant is
"overcome" or "conquered" by the one in which it is dominant. This property is
known as the Cycle of Triumphs and was first noticed by alchemist Raymond Lully
(1229-1315). For example, when Water combines with Earth, the Earth is overcome,
because they are both cold, but cold dominates in Water. Therefore, Water
overcomes Earth and the result will be predominantly cold. According to this
scheme, Fire overcomes Air, Air overcomes Water, Water overcomes Earth, and
Earth overcomes Fire. Generally, the more subtle (or spiritual) element
overcomes the grosser (or more material) element.
To balance your dominant element
(or humor) find its opposite element on the cross within the square. You want to
increase the presence of this neglected element to balance your temperament,
however, since they are opposite, you must work through one of the adjacent
elements.
For example,
if your dominant element is Water and you want to balance it with more Fire in
your personality, begin by working with the adjacent element (Air or Earth) for
which you feel you have the greatest affinity or with which you are the most
comfortable. If you choose the path of Air, you need to work to increase the
quality of moist, which means becoming more flowing and allowing emotional
energy to surface. If you choose the path of Earth, you need to do the opposite
and try to become less flowing and more controlling of emotional energy.
The process is really simple when
you work with it awhile. Meditate on the different expressions of the qualities
as the alchemists did. The archetypal relationships between the elements are so
plainly depicted in the Square of Opposition that it is an amazingly versatile
tool for all kinds of transformation. The alchemists used these same
relationships and progressed through the Square of Opposition whether they were
doing laboratory experiments, producing medicines, or working on their own
personal transformation.
It is even possible to work in
reverse (counterclockwise) rotation, which is known as the Death Rotation. The
alchemist and Byzantine emperor Heraclitus (600 AD) described the process thus:
“Fire lives in the death of Earth, and Air lives the death of Fire; Water lives
the death of Air, and Earth lives the death of Water.'' In his book
Purifications, Empedocles uses the reverse rotation to cleanse the soul of
broken promises, crimes against humanity, and other bad karma. The process must
be repeated in numerous rebirths and lasts for “thrice ten thousand years.”
The Quintessence
The Quintessence of the alchemists is often described as the Fifth
Element, not because it was considered one of the elements but because it was
beyond the elements in both form and function. It was seen as something new and
wonderful in creation that transcended the limitations imposed by the Four
Elements.
“The
Quintessence is a thing,” wrote Isaac Newton, “that is spiritual, penetrating,
tingeing, and incorruptible, which emerges anew from the Four Elements when they
are bound together.”
The Quintessence has been described as luminous but invisible to ordinary
sight. In medieval alchemy, the term Quintessence was synonymous with the elixir
and was thought to contain the same magical ingredient. Like Pythagoras before
him, Paracelsus believed the Quintessence is what the stars are made of and that
within every living thing there exists a hidden star that was that thing’s
Quintessence. Indeed, one of the symbols for the Quintessence is the star.
Another symbol is a pentagram inscribed in a circle, dividing it into five equal
sections. The pentagram symbol is thought to represent the body of man.
Alchemist Benedictus Figulus describes the Quintessence further in his book
The Golden Casket:
"For the elements and their
compounds, in addition to crass matter, are composed of a subtle substance or
intrinsic radical humidity, diffused through their elemental parts, simple and
wholly incorruptible, long preserving the things themselves in vigor. Called the
Spirit of the World, it proceeds from the Soul of the World [First Matter]. This
is the one certain Life filling and fathoming all things, so that from the
emanations of sentient beings, there is formed the One Living Machine of the
Whole World. This spirit by its virtue fecundates [fertilizes or brings to life]
all subjects natural and artificial, pouring into them those hidden properties
that we call the Fifth Essence or Quintessence. But this Fifth Essence is
created by the Almighty for the preservation of the Four Elements of the human
body, even as Heaven is for the preservation of the Universe. Therefore is this
Fifth Essence a Spiritual Medicine, which is of Nature and the Heart of Heaven
and never of a mortal and corrupt quality that makes all life possible. It is
the Fount of Medicine, the preservation of life, the restoration of health, and
in this may be the cherished renewal of lost youth and serene health be found."
Perhaps a picture of the true nature of the Quintessence is beginning to emerge.
Often, when one is stymied by the indirect terminology of Western alchemists, it
is fruitful to turn to the writings of their Eastern colleagues. In Chinese
alchemy, the Fifth Element is Wood, which is a product of the plant kingdom and
things that grow. In Taoist alchemy, the Quintessence is known as
chi, an unseen energy that flows
through the body and can be accumulated and directed in moving meditations such
as performed in Tai Chi and Chi Kung. In Tantric alchemy, the Quintessence is
the kundalini sexual energy coiled
like a sleeping serpent at the base of the spine. In Hindu alchemy, the
Quintessence is the spirit of breath known in Sanskrit as
prana. This is very similar to the
Western concepts of pneuma (Greek)
and rauch (Hebrew).
In all these traditions, both East and West, there is only one thing that the
Quintessence can be. It is the life force
itself. That explains why the
alchemists did not consider the
Quintessence to be a product of the Four Elements, but a separate principle
altogether though which all the elements could be tamed or controlled. Most
alchemists believed the Quintessence had nothing at all to do with the Four
Elements, but rather emerged from an even more primordial state known as the
sacred Trinity or the Three Essentials.