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In Awakened Imagination, he expounds upon his belief that Christ is within each of us and can help us achieve our desires through imaginative effort. Using short quotations from the Bible and from Blake, Yeats, Emerson, Lawrence, Quintillian, Hermes, and the Hermetica, Neville reveals the Power that makes the achievement of aims, the attainment of desires, inevitable; showing that the Christ is the human imagination. ""I want this book to be the simplest, clearest, frankest work I have the power to make it. Truth depends upon the intensity of the imagination, not upon external facts. Facts are…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
In Awakened Imagination, he expounds upon his belief that Christ is within each of us and can help us achieve our desires through imaginative effort. Using short quotations from the Bible and from Blake, Yeats, Emerson, Lawrence, Quintillian, Hermes, and the Hermetica, Neville reveals the Power that makes the achievement of aims, the attainment of desires, inevitable; showing that the Christ is the human imagination. ""I want this book to be the simplest, clearest, frankest work I have the power to make it. Truth depends upon the intensity of the imagination, not upon external facts. Facts are the fruit bearing witness of the use or misuse of the imagination. Man becomes what he imagines. He has a self-determined history. Imagination is the way, the truth, the life revealed.""-Neville Goddard
Autorenporträt
Neville Lancelot Goddard, also known as Neville Goddard, was a Barbadian New Thought author and mystic who wrote on the Bible, esotericism, and other subjects. He is regarded as one of the founders of the "law of assumption" and lived from February 19, 1905, to October 1, 1972. Goddard was born to Joseph Nathaniel and Wilhelmina Goddard on February 19, 1905, in Barbados. Around 1922, he moved to New York City, where he started out as a ballet and ballroom dancer. He was a dancer who also dabbled in acting. "For ten years I was a dancer," he writes in "Consciousness is the Only Reality, "dancing in Broadway shows, in vaudeville, in nightclubs, and in Europe." Goddard gave a talk about religion at The Town Hall in the early 1950s. Goddard passed away from a brain aneurysm on October 1, 1972, at the age of 67. He had lived in Los Angeles for over twenty years.