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Hermetic Philosophy and Creative Alchemy

The Emerald Tablet, the Corpus Hermeticum, and the Journey through the Seven Spheres

Published by Inner Traditions
Distributed by Simon & Schuster

About The Book

• Examines the foundational texts and principles of Hermeticism and alchemy, showing how they offer a foundation for a psycho-spiritual creative practice

• Takes the reader on a Hermetic journey through each of the seven traditional planets, offering meditative discourses that speak directly to the intuitive soul

• Provides examples from traditional alchemical art and the author’s own intricate esoteric paintings

Drawing on ancient Egyptian and Greek cosmogonies and essential Hermetic texts, such as the Corpus Hermeticum, the Emerald Tablet (Tabula Smaragdina), and the Nag Hammadi codices, Marlene Seven Bremner offers a detailed understanding of Hermetic philosophy and the art of alchemy as a foundation for a psycho-spiritual creative practice. Offering examples from traditional alchemical art and her own intricate esoteric paintings, Bremner examines the foundational principles of Hermeticism and alchemy and shows how these traditions are a direct means for accessing higher consciousness and true self-knowledge, or gnosis, as well as a way to extract the essence of one’s own creative gifts.

The author takes the reader on a Hermetic journey through each of the seven traditional planets--Saturn, Jupiter, Mars, the Sun, Venus, Mercury, and the Moon--exploring their mythological, philosophical, alchemical, Qabalistic, magical, astrological, and energetic natures and offering meditative discourses that reach past the rational mind to speak directly to the intuitive soul. She relates the seven planets to the esoteric anatomy of the human body, specifically the seven chakras, and shows how the planets can offer understanding and experience of archetypal energies and patterns in the body, in one’s life, and in the creative process.

A profound synthesis of magical and occult teachings as well as an initiation into the alchemical opus, this book reveals how to integrate and apply Hermetic and alchemical principles to awaken inner knowing, liberate the imagination, and live a mystical, creative, and truly inspired life.

Excerpt

From Chapter 9, “Wandering with the Archetypes”

Within the microcosm of the human body, seven stars illuminate the inner pathway to our truest self. They are the seven inner planets of traditional astrology, the planets visible to the naked eye that have influenced human thought and imagination from time immemorial. The planets are called stars, or the Wanderers because of their movement against the backdrop of the fixed stars, which are the “Non-wandering Ones” (CH 16.17).1 The following discourses will provide a comprehensive exploration of these seven stars, to include the symbolism that can be derived from simple observation, as it was in the beginning, and from mythological significance rooted in ancient Mesopotamia and Egypt, and as seen through various cultural lenses. We will encounter on this journey the qualities of the planets that are invoked or called upon in ritual or ceremonial magic and prayer, as well as the alchemical significance of the planets, both internally and externally, and finally their placement and roles in the esoteric anatomy of the human being.

Through a deep investigation of all of the various angles of a planet’s qualities, we can glimpse the overall archetype that it embodies. Because Hermetic Cosmogony and Alchemy archetypes, like people, are complex networks of associated ideas, behaviors, characteristics, values, and processes, they must be approached like a person that you wish to know on an intimate level. They cannot be summed up in a word or understood on a surface level. To truly encounter them requires a devotional longing to merge with them in the imagination, and thus to know their experience from within, to empathize with it, to take it on as a role in order to grasp the subtle causes and reasoning behind the archetypal expression.

We must allow the archetypes to penetrate to the soul and truly change us from the inside out, engendering within us a deep connection with the eternal. Through this experiential embracing of each archetype, we come to understand the Self as a whole, and how the players relate to one another in the play of an individual life, which is a holographic version, a unique angle, of the collective drama. Looking deeply enough into the Self, one attains gnosis of the All. Yet the point is not to remain identified with the archetypes, but to integrate them within the psyche and to make the unconscious conscious.

From Chapter 12, “Mars: The Flames of Transformation”

Every alchemist has a need for fire in the execution of their art. The element of transformation, activation, and change, fire lives inside of us to heat the athanor of our being, facilitating growth, catalyzing movement, and purifying the body, mind, and soul. It illuminates the darkness and provides warmth, it brings us together and gives us life. Fire is the element of Mars, and alchemically it facilitates separations that help us to purify and refine our substance into a sublime form, providing the necessary heat for the digestion of the philosopher’s stone. Yet fire must be well respected and contained, lest it be the source of conflagration and great destruction. When applied with intention and care, fire is an indispensable ally. Likewise, the sword of Mars cuts through illusions and Gordian knots, but it may also be used in rage and violence, severing bonds, shedding blood, and causing great suffering.

Mars receives its name from the Roman god of war and battle, and also of fertility, vegetation, agriculture, and protector of cattle. He is usually depicted with helmet, shield, and sword, spear or dagger, and frequently accompanied by his lover, Venus. The virtue of Mars is courage, transmitted to us through the ætherial spirit (Stob. 24).1 On the other hand, the vice of Mars is anger, or wrath. In “The Virgin of the World” (1.17), when the gods of Heaven spoke of what they would each provide to humanity, “Ares declared he had become already sire of Struggle, Wrath, and Strife.”2

We see the energy of Mars in the fury, freedom, and power of a wild stallion rearing on its hind legs stamping cactus in the desert; a raging boar in a field of thistle; the devouring wolf; and the prowling jaguar. His ferocious intensity can be both transformational and destructive, depending on how it is applied. Of the winged ones Mars is the vulture, a scavenger picking at the bones of the slain; the cock that harkens the rising Sun; the fiery dragon, like the one that guards his sacred spring; the magpie; woodpecker (Picus); and finally the owl by association with Athena and as a harbinger of death. In the plant world he is the stinging of nettles, the fire of tobacco, the prick of the cactus, thistle, and hawthorn, the yellow of the buttercup, and the might of the oak. He is also associated with the harvest of the crops, a reflection of his separating function.

Self-assured and driven, Mars is the part of us that fights--for good intent or for the desire for power, to protect ourselves and others or to overcome by fiery strength the enemies and obstacles in our path. His irascible nature seeks to pull things apart, causing estrangement and alienation, exile, and wars. He is the patron god of military forces, police, and athletes, thieves, warriors, violent villains, and heroes alike. The month of March, named after him, is the “season when kings go out to war,”3 and Macrobius writes that the soul develops a bold spirit (thymikon) in the sphere of Mars.4 Impetuous and reactive, Mars is quick, acting with thoughtless courage, bravado, propulsion, and force. He is the essence of maleness, testosterone, strength, and muscles.

Mars rules over Tuesdays, from the Old English tiwesdæg, from Tiwes, related to Tiu, the ancient English/Germanic war god, also corresponding to the Norse Tyr. In Latin Tuesday is called dies Martis, “day of Mars,” or in Greek, hemera Areos, “day of Ares.”5 Traditionally considered a masculine energy, Mars relates to qualities like physical strength, domination, aggression, bravado, courage--essentially, the warrior spirit. In a positive sense the warrior is a protector and defender against injustice. The fight for personal freedom and sovereignty, the fight for the rights of the disadvantaged, and the fight against corruption and injustice are all led by the energy of Mars. The metal corresponding to Mars is iron, and as a warrior Mars is present with himself, a fiery authority with an iron will that is ready to dismantle the old paradigm and set to work transforming the world.

Mars rules the sign of Aries, the traditional time of year for beginning the alchemical opus. Pressing forth from the damp earth in an explosion of new life and awakening libido, Aries is the spark of regenerative energy of the springtime, the enthusiasm of rebirth and the striving toward the light after the long dark winter. His energy is cardinal fire, pure impulse ready for action, creativity, and renewal by purification. This is the fire of calcination that breaks us down so that we can come to terms with the things we need to let go of, and see ourselves at our most basic level, freed from our identifications. The spring crocus (Crocus sativas) rises up from the earth, from which we get the spice saffron, associated with Mars on account of its deep red color and season. Crocus also refers to the oxide of a metal, and in this case the oxide of iron (colcothar), as the salts of iron are calcined to a red or deep yellow color. It was a crocus that Zeus, in the form of a bull, breathed from his mouth to attract Europa when he abducted her to Crete.6 Her brother Cadmus, in his quest to save Europa, killed Ares’s (Mars’s) sacred dragon--a transgression that earned him an eternal year (eight earthly years) of service to Ares.7 In Ovid’s Metamorphoses (4:563-603) Cadmus is given Harmonia, daughter of Ares and Aphrodite, as a wife, but after a life of misfortune both of them are transformed into snakes.8

Just as the metals exist in the caverns of the earth, to be extracted by the alchemist and improved upon by the Great Work, dragons also dwell in the depths, guarding the gold of consciousness, or as Michael Maier writes in Atalanta Fugiens, “the Mansion of Dragons is in Caverns of the Earth.”9 The chaos of the prima materia, sea of disorganized potentiality, is sometimes represented by the basilisk, a vitriolic and mythical beast with the body of a lion or dragon and the head of a cock--all animals associated with Mars. Basilisk derives from the Greek basiliskos, meaning “little king.”10 Crowley writes that the basilisk is symbolic of Geburah, the sephirah of Mars, “on account of its power of slaying with the flame of its glance.”11

Mars also rules the fixed water sign Scorpio, evoking his dark side. In this autumnal expression, the water element takes on a destructive, corrosive quality, heating up through the process of decomposition and putrefaction. Hence the association between Scorpio and the thirteenth arcanum, Death, and the destructive powers of Typhon. Yet the primeval waters of regression hold within them the fish of renewal and rebirth, symbolized by the Hebrew letter Nun (“fish”) assigned to the Death card. In the face of the terrifying powers of Typhon, who arose from the union of Gaia and Tartarus to take the place of Zeus, the Olympian gods fled to Egypt, where Ares took the form of a fish.12 As ruler of Scorpio and Aries, Mars is a planet of death and putrefaction, marking the onset of winter, and the rebirth and renewal of life of the spring with Aries.

An aspect of the nigredo, the black phase or opening of the alchemical work, putrefactio is the necessary death from which new life may be regenerated. The philosophers of alchemy repeatedly tell us that nothing grows and increases unless there be putrefaction.13 An example is given in the Rosarium of an egg, “which first putrefies and then a chicken is engendered, which after it is wholly corrupted, it becomes a living creature.”14 Thus we are advised to study putrefaction, which is the means of generation. Like we encountered in our journey through the sphere of Saturn, there are times when it is necessary to sit with our own darkness. Though it may be rotten and challenging to endure, transformation is taking place through internal heat. Letting the putrefaction run its course, we will eventually see a film of iridescent colors spreading over the surface of our awareness as the dark matter gives way to new life.

About The Author

Marlene Seven Bremner is a self-taught oil painter, writer, and teacher who has spent more than 20 years exploring esoteric and spiritual traditions, including Hermeticism, alchemy, surrealism, symbolism, tarot, psychology, magic, astrology, shamanism, and mythology. She developed her career as an artist in the Pacific Northwest and now spends her time painting and writing in the New Mexico desert.

Product Details

  • Publisher: Inner Traditions (June 14, 2022)
  • Length: 376 pages
  • ISBN13: 9781644112892

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Raves and Reviews

“This life-changing book will take you on an amazing, enlightening, soul-filled journey into the wisdom and profound insights of Hermeticism, alchemy, and the occult arts. It gracefully reveals universal truths, cosmic secrets, and hidden mysteries through the author’s immense knowledge on the subject matter as well as her own brilliant creative process. I highly recommend this book to all those who would like to spark their own healing process and spiritual awakening.”

– PHILIP M. BERK, author of Mountain’s Stillness, River’s Wisdom and A Single Flower: Medi

“Marlene Seven Bremner has blessed contemporary readers with a comprehensive book on the history and practice of Hermeticism. Well-researched and approached from the experience of the creative process itself, Hermetic Philosophy and Creative Alchemy offers valuable insight into the transmutative path of the Great Work. As an artist and true daughter of Hermes, the author adeptly shows us why Hermeticism is referred to as the Royal Art. An absolutely pleasurable and edifying read.”

– WILLIAM KIESEL, author of Magic Circles in the Grimoire Tradition

“Bremner guides us on a transformative journey of the energetics of change that bridges ancient wisdom with new scholarship. She illuminates the alchemical arts brilliantly and unforgettably, both textually and visually. Her complex paintings reveal her vision and unfold their meaning only upon the reader’s resonant, meditative gaze. This book invites us to enter into the cauldron of our mystical transformation and awaken our creative forces.”

– LESLIE KORN, PH.D., MPH, author of Rhythms of Recovery: Trauma, Nature, and the Body

Hermetic Philosophy and Creative Alchemy is an important and necessary work, especially for anyone involved in art and art making who wishes to use their making as a spiritual practice. Alchemy is an art; in fact, it has been called ‘the Art’ of arts in that all creation, according to alchemical theory, flows from the same principles. Implied in this is that any art practice may be used in the alchemical work of making change. In Hermetic Philosophy and Creative Alchemy, firmly grounded in primary texts and enriched through her own practice, Bremner provides a remarkably varied and thorough foundation in Hermetic philosophy, cosmology, and practice with leads for deeper study. With this foundation established, Bremner then sets before us another rich feast in her word-portraits of each of the planetary spheres--each portrait an incredible array of myth, poetry, science, philosophy, and magic. Understanding these spheres is critical, as they are the stages of ‘the old, old path’ of the soul’s journey to the One. Hermetic Philosophy and Creative Alchemy provides the maps and tools for this journey. It is all here. The only thing missing is you.”

– BRIAN COTNOIR, author of Alchemy: The Poetry of Matter and Practical Alchemy: A Guide to the Great W

"Informatively illustrated, impressively informative, expertly written, and thoroughly 'reader friendly' in organization and presentation, Marlene Seven Bremner's Hermetic Philosophy and Creative Alchemy: The Emerald Tablet, the Corpus Hermeticum, and the Journey through the Seven Spheres is an extraordinary and unreservedly recommended addition to personal, professional, community, and academic library Metaphysical Studies collections. Of special relevance to readers with an interest in Hermetic Philosophy and Alchemy, it should be noted that Hermetic Philosophy and Creative Alchemy is also available in a digital book format (Kindle, $26.99)."

– Wisconsin Bookwatch

"This is a substantial text on a complicated topic. Hermeticism is a many-headed beast with a myriad of facets. Bremner does a fine job of taming the beast and presenting Hermeticism in a comprehensible manner. Excellent organization of material is the author’s friend here. Highly recommended as a source for understanding Hermeticism and as a reference book for the myriad of primary texts, history, philosophies and practices that branch outward from it."

– Elizabeth Hazel, FacingNorth.net

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