Exitwound wrote:Hi and welcome!
I would love to hear more about different effects from 'alchemical' methods. How different are they?
Thank you, nice to meet you Exitwound.
The alchemical philosophy starts form the knowledge of the immaterial dimension, but for obtaining this the interested person must understand the material dimension.
The mineral world (combinations of elementary entities, atoms, or like in the handbook: immobile entities) represents the start for obtaining the keys. A manuscript conserved also in the library of my city is called 'Clavis Artis', the art of how to make keys.
For keys is intended mineral keys and after the keys of our mind.
Every alchemical picture has many levels of reading. At first, the material level (where we are), after this we can understand the parallel data. My friend call this parallel data 'cosmic database' , a database of all the intelligent beigns.
The individuation of a key is subjective and everyone can forge his key.
For example:
https://commons.m.wikime.../File:Aurora_alchimy.jpg illustrates two entities (really 4 or 5). The combination of two elements (atoms or chemical compounds) requires 'three moons for the sun' and 'one sun for the moon'. These numbers can be understood differently from everyone, but the introduction can be: 'when you try to understand three nights what does this picture means, the first sun after the three nights brings you answers'. Under this point of view, every time you repeat this operation, the answers become more complete.
To the question 'how many different effects' can we have obtain with p.e. dmt i can answer: infinite.
Quote:And did ancient manuscripts really contain receipes for DMT extration?
Yes, the dmt extraction and formation can be discovered in many ancient manuscripts and also in icons, objects, philosophies, religions etc...
Think about the Ark of the Covenant: was built with Acacia wood...
There are a lot of encrypted recipes, also for obtaining mind keys.
For example the gunpowder recipe written by Roger Bacon contains a recipe for obtaining phenetylamines or amines from Foeniculum Vulgare:
Sed tamen 7 Partes Salpetrae, 5 Partes Coruli et 5 Partes Sulphuris et sic facies tonitrum et coruscationem, sic scias artificium.
Translated: Take 7 parts of saltpeter, 5 parts of hazelnut (-charcoal) and 5 parts sulfur and that makes thunder and flash if you know the art. The decryption of this sentence gives the name of the plant or of the compound (anisole or anethole). The combination between anisole and KNO3 can produce an -NO2 compound.
The hazelnut wood can reduce the -NO2 to amine.