WHAT ALL THE WORLD'S A-SEEKING OR, THE VITAL LAW OF TRUE LIFE, TRUE GREATNESS POWER AND HAPPINESS
By:RALPH WALDO TRINE Published By:Double9 Books
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WHAT ALL THE WORLD'S A-SEEKING OR, THE VITAL LAW OF TRUE LIFE, TRUE GREATNESS POWER AND HAPPINESS
About the Book
The Ralph Waldo Trine painting "What All the World's A-Seeking" is a transformative and frightening work that looks at the standards of spiritual and private development. In Trine's book, she explores the concept that human beings can exchange their lives through thinking about matters and connecting with the religious forces of the sector. Trine attracts attention to the link between thoughts, and the way one's life turns out. He tells humans to apply the power of their brains to make lives that are whole of purpose, achievement, and happiness. The book enables the idea that our mind and feelings have an impact at the humans and activities we deliver into our lives. Trine uses spiritual and philosophical thoughts to get his issue across, combining mind from some of one-of-a-kind religious and philosophical systems. The essential idea is that people can connect with a higher intelligence that guides and permits them on their existence journey. Trine encourages readers to have a terrific mind-set and take fee in their lives via actual-life examples and thoughts. "What All the World's A-Seeking" is an undying guide for people trying private and religious success. It promotes an entire know-how of the mind's energy and the manner it shapes a useful and essential lifestyle.
The American author, philosopher, and animal rights fighter Ralph Waldo Trine was born on September 9, 1866, and died on February 22, 1958. He was a New Thought writer. Ellen E. Newcomer and Samuel G. Trine had a child named Trine in Mount Morris, Illinois. His education began at Knox College, where he earned an A.B. in 1891. He went to Johns Hopkins University to study history and political science and got his A.M. from Knox College in 1893. Trine married Grace Steele Hyde, and the two of them had a son. He worked as a reporter for the Boston Evening Transcript when he was younger. At this point in time, Ralph Waldo Emerson's lofty ideas began to affect him. Christian socialism by George Herron also had an effect on Trine. Some people have said that Trine's spiritual views are a mix of Buddhism, pantheism, spiritualism, transcendentalism, Christian socialism, and neo-Vedanta thought. In Tune with the Infinite, which Trine wrote, is still the most widely read book in the New Thought movement. It was made into 20 different languages. People have said that Trine was "one of the rare purists whose books were guileless optimism" because she didn't use mental money-making tips like most other New Thought writers.