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Published in 1910, 'The Science of Getting Rich' was the first book to use the Law of Attraction as a means to achieve personal prosperity. According to this law, all phenomena of similar frequency are drawn together. Sustained thought (together with emotion) on a single desire will invariably attract the circumstances and individuals that will manifest that desire. In essence, you can make your own 'luck'. This astonishing work was the inspiration for the best-selling book and film 'The Secret'. In 17 short, non-nonsense chapters, the author reveals how to embrace the idea of wealth, to…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Published in 1910, 'The Science of Getting Rich' was the first book to use the Law of Attraction as a means to achieve personal prosperity. According to this law, all phenomena of similar frequency are drawn together. Sustained thought (together with emotion) on a single desire will invariably attract the circumstances and individuals that will manifest that desire. In essence, you can make your own 'luck'. This astonishing work was the inspiration for the best-selling book and film 'The Secret'. In 17 short, non-nonsense chapters, the author reveals how to embrace the idea of wealth, to visualise success, to overcome mental barriers, and how to understand that "creation, not competition, is the hidden key to wealth attraction."
Autorenporträt
Wallace Delois Wattles was an American who wrote about New Thought. He lived from 1860 to 1911. He isn't very well known as a person, but his writing is still used in the New Thought and self-help groups and is still in print. Wattles's most well-known work is a book he wrote in 1910 called The Science of Getting Rich. In it, he talks about how to get rich. Florence wrote that in the three years before he died, "he made a lot of money and was healthy, except that he was very weak." Wattles died in Ruskin, Tennessee, on February 7, 1911. His body was taken home to be buried in Elwood, Indiana. As a sign of respect, all of the companies in the town closed for two hours in the afternoon of the day of his funeral. His daughter thought it was "untimely" that he died at age 51, because in the year before, he had written two books (The Science of Being Well and The Science of Getting Rich) and ran for public office.