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Chinese Alchemy: Taoism, the Power of Gold, and the Quest for Immortality

(Paperback)

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Publishing Details

Full Title:

Chinese Alchemy: Taoism, the Power of Gold, and the Quest for Immortality

Contributors:

By (Author) Jean Cooper

ISBN:

9781473606340

Publisher:

Hodder & Stoughton

Imprint:

Coronet Books

Publication Date:

8th March 2016

Country:

United Kingdom

Classifications

Readership:

General

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Dewey:

540.112

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Paperback

Number of Pages:

160

Dimensions:

Width 135mm, Height 199mm, Spine 11mm

Weight:

122g

Description

Here in one slender volume are the essentials to a tradition that dates back to 3,000 B.C. Among the topics covered here are:

1. The origins of Chinese alchemy

2. The quest for gold and immortality

3. The role of minerals and plants, medicines, astrology, yoga, and magic in Chinese alchemy

4. Alchemy in the East and in the West

Chinese alchemy, largely associated with Taoism, has a recorded history of more than 2000 years, but traditionally it goes back even further, to the Yellow Emperor and his Three Immortal Ladies, some 3000 years BC.

While Western alchemy was concerned with the search for spiritual and material gold, classic Taoist alchemy was a mystical quest for immortality. But like Western alchemy, it was as spiritual quest, its aim being union with the Absolute.

J.C. Cooper describes the history and development of Taoist alchemy, compares it with similar traditions in India and Turkistan, and gives it context by contrasting it with the rationale of the Western hermetic tradition. As she writes in her concluding chapter:

"The whole work of alchemy is summed up in the phrase 'To make of the body a spirit and of the spirit a body'...The goal of the Taoist alchemist-mystic was transformation, or perhaps more correctly, transfiguration, of the whole body until it ceases to 'be' and is absorbed into and becomes the Tao."

Author Bio

Jean Cooper (1905-1999) was born in China and has traveled extensively. She read Philosophy at St. Andrews University and has had a lifelong interest in comparative religion, Taoism in particular.

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