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قراءة كتاب Dynamic Thought; Or, The Law of Vibrant Energy

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Dynamic Thought; Or, The Law of Vibrant Energy

Dynamic Thought; Or, The Law of Vibrant Energy

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
الصفحة رقم: 2

may come the recognition of a beauty that is beyond "prettiness."

WILLIAM WALKER ATKINSON.

Los Angeles, California,
February 16, 1906.


CONTENTS

CHAPTER. PAGE.
I. "In the Beginning" 11
II. Things as They Are 20
III. The Universality of Life and Mind 30
IV. Life and Mind Among the Atoms 41
V. The Story of Substance 61
VI. Substance and Beyond 75
VII. The Paradox of Science 96
VIII. The Forces of Nature 109
IX. Radiant Energy 121
X. The Law of Attraction 135
XI. The Theory of Dynamic Thought 154
XII. The Law of Vibrant Energy 171
XIII. The Riddle of the Sphinx 182
XIV. The Mystery of Mind 200
XV. The Finer Forces of the Mind 206
XVI. Thought in Action 219


"A fire-mist and a planet,
A crystal and a cell,
A jelly-fish and a saurian,
And caves where the cave-men dwell;
Then a sense of law and beauty,
And a face turned from the clod,—
Some call it Evolution,
And others call it God."
"Like tides on a crescent sea-beach,
When the moon is new and thin,
Into our hearts high yearnings
Come welling and surging in,—
Come from the mystic ocean
Whose rim no foot has trod,—
Some of us call it Longing,
And others call it God."

W.H. Carruth.


DYNAMIC THOUGHT

CHAPTER I
"IN THE BEGINNING"

THIS book will deal with Life. It holds that Life is Universal—that it is inherent in, and manifests (in different degrees) in every part, particle, phase, aspect, condition, place, or relationship, in the World of Things that we call the Universe.

It holds that Life manifests in two aspects or forms, which are generally found by us in connection and co-operation with each other, but which are both, probably, an expression of some One Thing higher than either. These two aspects or forms, which together go to make up or produce that which we know as "Life," are known as (1) Substance or Matter; and (2) Mind. In this book the term "Substance" is used in preference to "Matter," owing to the fact that the term "Matter" has become closely identified with certain ideas of the Materialistic school of thought, and has generally been regarded by the public in the light of "dead matter," whereas this book holds that all Substance is Alive. The term "Mind" is used in the sense of "Mind, as we know it," rather than as "Mind, as it is"—or, as "The Cosmic Mind." In some places the term "Mind-principle" is used to convey the idea of "a portion of the Great Principle of Mind, of which that which we call 'Mind' is but a small and but partially expressed portion." These terms are explained and illustrated as we proceed. The aspect of "Energy or Force" is not treated as a separate aspect or form of Life, in this book, for the reason that it is regarded as merely a manifestation of Mind, as will appear as we proceed. We have much to say regarding Motion, but the writer has tried to explain and prove that, at the last, all Motion results from Mental Action, and that all Force and Energy is Vital-Mental Force and Energy.

This book is not intended to run along metaphysical or theological lines—its field is different. And so, while it recognizes the importance of these branches of human thought, still, it finds that its own particular field is sufficient to engross its entire attention, for the moment, and, consequently the aforesaid subjects

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