This book is about the way the world really works. Certain unseen principles control the translation of our desires to reality. These lie in the power of YOUR mind. They are laid out here clearly and straightforwardly: follow the process - success will be yours.
Dale Carnegie
Dale Carnegie was an American writer, lecturer, and pioneer in self-improvement and interpersonal skills. Born in Missouri, Carnegie initially pursued a career in sales and acting before discovering his passion for teaching public speaking and communication. His most famous book, How to Win Friends and Influence People, published in 1936, became an instant success and remains a foundational work in personal development. Carnegie’s teachings emphasise empathy, positivity, and effective communication, influencing generations in both personal and professional spheres.
Napoleon Hill
Napoleon Hill (1883–1970) was an influential American author and pioneer in personal development and self-help literature. His groundbreaking work, The Law of Success in Sixteen Lessons (1928), is a comprehensive guide to achieving success through principles like goal setting, persistence, and self-confidence. Hill spent decades studying successful individuals, including Andrew Carnegie, to craft his philosophy. This book laid the foundation for his later classic, Think and Grow Rich, inspiring millions to pursue their dreams with purpose.
Dr. Joseph Murphy
Joseph Murphy was a divine science minister and author. Murphy was born in Ireland, the son of a private boy's school headmaster and raised a Roman Catholic. He studied for the priesthood and joined the Jesuits. In his twenties, an experience with healing prayer led him to leave the Jesuits and move to the United States, where he became a pharmacist in New York (having a degree in chemistry by that time). Here he attended the church of the healing Christ (part of the church of divine science), where Emmet Fox had become minister in 1931. In the mid 1940s, he moved to Los Angeles, where he met religious science founder Ernest Holmes and was ordained into religious science by Holmes in 1946, thereafter teaching at the Institute of Religious Science. A meeting with Divine Science Association president Erwin Gregg led to him being re-ordained into divine science and he became the minister of the Los Angeles Divine Science church in 1949, which he built into one of the largest new thought congregations in the country. In the next decade, Murphy married, earned a Ph.D in psychology from the University of southern California and started writing. After his first wife died in 1976, he remarried to a fellow divine science minister who was his longstanding secretary. He died in 1981
Dale Carnegie
,Napoleon Hill
,Dr. Joseph Murphy
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