Al Kimya — Kitab
| Level | Target | Transformation | |-------|--------|----------------| | Physical | Base metals (Cu, Fe, Pb) | Gold (Au) | | Physiological | Diseased body | Long life / health | | Spiritual | Ignorant soul | Gnosis ( ma‘rifa ) |
This paper asks: Drawing on the work of Paul Kraus, Syed Nomanul Haq, and Pierre Lory, we argue that Jābir’s alchemy is a hermeneutics of nature, where transmutation of metals mirrors the soul’s purification and the cosmic cycle of generation and corruption. 2. Authorship and Historical Context The attribution of the Jābirian corpus is contested. While traditional Islamic bio-bibliographers (e.g., Ibn al-Nadīm, al-Fihrist ) accept Jābir as a historical figure, modern scholars like Kraus (1942) suggest that many texts, including Kitāb al-Kīmiyā , were redacted by the Ismā‘īlī “Ikhwān al-Ṣafā’” (Brethren of Purity) in the 9th–10th centuries. Regardless of authorship, the text emerges from the Abbasid translation movement in Baghdad, where Greek, Syriac, Persian, and Indian sources converged. Kitab Al Kimya
The Kitāb al-Kīmiyā explicitly cites pseudo-Democritus (the Physica et Mystica ), Zosimos of Panopolis, and Hermes Trismegistus, showing deep engagement with Hellenistic alchemy. Yet it systematically reorganizes Greek materia medica through an Islamic lens: the mīzān (balance) theory replaces chance operations with a metaphysical law of proportionality derived from the Qur’anic concept of mīzān (Q. 55:7-9). 3.1 The Theory of the Mīzān (Universal Balance) Jābir rejects the Empedoclean four-element model (earth, water, air, fire) in favor of a sulfur-mercury theory of metal composition. All metals are composed of sulfur (hot and dry) and mercury (cold and wet) in specific proportions. The mīzān provides a quantitative, numerological measure of these proportions, often linked to the 28 letters of the Arabic alphabet and the 17 basic natures ( ṭabā’i‘ ). For example, gold’s perfect balance (1:1 sulfur to mercury) represents not just material purity but cosmic equilibrium. “Know that the elixir is nothing but the restoration of balance… As the mīzān in the heavens, so the mīzān in the athanor.” — Kitāb al-Kīmiyā , Bk. 3, ch. 7 (paraphrased) 3.2 The Elixir ( al-Iksīr ) as Polysemic Catalyst The al-iksīr (from Greek xerion ) is the agent that perfects base metals into gold. However, in Kitāb al-Kīmiyā , the elixir functions on three levels: While traditional Islamic bio-bibliographers (e
