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Ceration is a chemical process, a common practice in alchemy. It is performed by continuously adding a liquid by imbibition to a hard, dry substance while it is heated. Typically, this treatment makes the substance softer, more like molten wax (cera in Latin). [1] Pseudo-Geber's Summa Perfectionis explains that ceration is "the mollification of an hard thing, not fusible unto liquefaction", and stresses the importance of correct humidity in the process. [2]

Antoine-Joseph Pernety's 1787 mytho-Hermetic dictionary defines it somewhat differently as the time when matter passes from black to gray, and then to white. Continuous cooking effects this change. [3] Ceration may be synonymous with similar terms for alchemical burning processes. Incineration, for example is listed by Manly P. Hall. [4]

See also

References

  1. ^ Rulandus, Martinus (1612). "ceration". Lexicon of Alchemy.
  2. ^ Linden, Stanton J. (2003). The alchemy reader: from Hermes Trismegistus to Isaac Newton. Cambridge University Press. p. 93. ISBN  978-0-521-79662-0.
  3. ^ Pernety, Antoine-Joseph (1787). Dictionnaire mytho-hermétique, dans lequel on trouvre les allégories fabuleuses des poètes, les métaphores, les énigmes et les termes barbares des philosophes hermétiques expliqués (in French). p.  70.
  4. ^ Hall, Manly P. (1928). The Secret Teachings of All Ages. Los Angeles: Philosophical Research Society. p. 507. OCLC  1358719.