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Cockren, Archibald

Cockren, Archibald. Alchemy rediscovered and restored. Ihttp //www.sacred-texts. com/alc/arr/index.html. [Pg.49]

Cockren, Archibald. Alchemy rediscovered and restored. Philadelphia, David McKay 1941. With an account of the extraction of the seed of metals and the preparation of the medicinal elixir according to the practice of the hermetic Art and of the Alkahest of the Philosopher. [Richardson (TX)] R.A.M.S., n.d. 115p. [Pg.49]

Cockren, Archibald. Alchemy rediscovered and restored foreword by Sir Dudley Borron Myers. London Rider, [1940] reprint, Kila (MT) Kessinger, 1992. 158p. ISBN 1- 56459-148-4... [Pg.50]

Cockren, Archibald. Archibald Cockren s alchemical discoveries. rhttp //www. 1 evitv. com/al chem v/cockren, html 1. [Pg.50]

Cockren, Archibald. Some more thoughts on physiology. Occult Rev 70, no. 2 (Apr 1943) 48-50. [Pg.50]

Cockren, Archibald. Paracelsus. rhttp //www alchemvlab.com/paracelsus.htm1. From his Alchemy Rediscovered and Restored... [Pg.294]

Cockren, Archibald. Whither medicine Occult Rev 71, no. 3 (Jul 1944) 75-77. the advantages of homeopathy, and its founders inspiration from Paracelsus. Suggests that alchemical and radiesthetic methods could be combined. Photocopy transcription held... [Pg.625]

Cockren, Archibald, Alchemy Rediscovered and Restored, Massachussetts Kessinger Publishing, 1995 Comenius, JA, The Labyrinth of the World and the Paradise of the Heart, Massachussetts Kessinger Publishing, 1990 Fulcanelli, The Mystery oj the Cathedrals, Albuquerque ... [Pg.150]

There is an interesting account of Archibald Cockren s discovery of various transmuting tinctures in his Alchemy rediscovered and restored, 1940"... [Pg.50]

Paracelsus. "The book of the revelation of Hermes, interpreted by Theophrastus Paracelsus, concerning the supreme secret of the world." In Alchemy rediscvered and restored, ed. Archibald Cockren, 149-158., 1939 or 1940. [Pg.140]

Tahil, Patricia. Archibald Cockren - modern alchemist. Hermetic J, no. 13 (Autumn 1981) 35-39. [Pg.258]

There is also a medical side to alchemy. The great Swiss physician and reformer Paracelsus (1493—1541) worked largely in medicine, and in his alchemy can be seen the origins of modern homeopathy. This tradition claimed its modern disciples in Archibald Cockren and Armand Barbault, both of whom saw it as a valuable complementary medicine. The popularity of alternative... [Pg.16]

His name was Archibald Cockren. He had qualified as an osteopath in London in 1904. During World War I he had been in charge of the department of electrical massage and remedial treatment, first at the Russian Hospital in London, and then at the Prisoners of War Hospital. Later he had been attached to the Australian Army, and served on the staff of the Australian prime minister at the peace conference. He was clearly a respected and responsible practitioner. [Pg.134]

Archibald Cockren believed fidly that behind alchemy s transmutation of metals lay the transmutation of the baser elements in the human. But he also believed that the work in the laboratory could be accomplished. Using the texts of the alchemists and putting aside his own knowledge of more orthodox chemistry, Cockren set about the Great Work in his 20th-century London laboratory. [Pg.135]

Having been intimately associated with Archibald Cockren during the past ten years, and having long since learnt to place implicit confidence in his efficiency and reliability in all matters to which he has devoted his many remarkable gifts and talents, it affords me real pleasure to write a few words by way of introduction to Alchemy Rediscovered and Restored. ... [Pg.4]


See other pages where Cockren, Archibald is mentioned: [Pg.49]    [Pg.50]    [Pg.50]    [Pg.50]    [Pg.50]    [Pg.49]    [Pg.50]    [Pg.50]    [Pg.50]    [Pg.50]    [Pg.187]    [Pg.101]    [Pg.146]    [Pg.1]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.187 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.16 , Pg.101 , Pg.146 ]




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