MORE than twenty years ago,
the author, working in conjunction with the late Dr.
Alexander Graham Bell, and Dr. Elmer R. Gates, observed that
every human brain is both a broadcasting and receiving
station for the vibration of thought.
Through the medium of the ether, in a fashion similar to
that employed by the radio broadcasting principle, every
human brain is capable of picking up vibrations of thought
which are being released by other brains.
In connection with the statement in the preceding paragraph,
compare, and consider the description of the Creative
Imagination, as outlined in the chapter on Imagination. The
Creative Imagination is the icreceiving set" of the brain,
which receives thoughts, released by the brains of others.
It is the agency of communication between one's conscious,
or reasoning mind, and the four sources from which one may
receive thought stimuli.
When stimulated, or "stepped up" to a high rate of
vibration, the mind becomes more receptive to the vibration
of thought which reaches it through the ether from outside
sources. This "stepping up" process takes place through the
positive emotions, or the negative emotions. Through the
emotions, the vibrations of thought may be increased.
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Vibrations of an exceedingly
high rate are the only vibrations picked up and carried, by
the ether, from one brain to another. Thought is energy
travelling at an exceedingly high rate of vibration.
Thought, which has been modified or "stepped up" by any of
the major emotions, vibrates at a much higher rate than
ordinary thought, and it is this type of thought which
passes from one brain to another, through the broadcasting
machinery of the human brain.
The emotion of sex stands at the head of the list of human
emotions, as far as intensity and driving force are
concerned. The brain which has been stimulated by the
emotion of sex, vibrates at a much more rapid rate than it
does when that emotion is quiescent or absent.
The result of sex transmutation, is the increase of the rate
of vibration of thoughts to such a pitch that the Creative
Imagination becomes highly receptive to ideas, which it
picks up from the ether. On the other hand, when the brain
is vibrating at a rapid rate, it not only attracts thoughts
and ideas released by other brains through the medium of the
ether, but it gives to one's own thoughts that "feeling"
which is essential before those thoughts will be picked up
and acted upon by one's subconscious mind.
Thus, you will see that the broadcasting principle is the
factor through which you mix feeling, or emotion with your
thoughts and pass them on to your subconscious mind.
The subconscious mind is the "sending station" of the brain,
through which vibrations of thought are broadcast. The
Creative Imagination is the "receiving set," through which
the vibrations of thought are picked up from the ether.
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Along with the important
factors of the subconscious mind, and the faculty of the
Creative Imagination ' which constitute the sending and
receiving sets of your mental broadcasting machinery,
consider now the principle of auto-suggestion, which is the
medium by which you may put into operation your
"broadcasting" station.
Through the instructions described in the chapter on
auto-suggestion, you were definitely informed of the method
by which DESIRE may be transmuted into its
monetary equivalent.
Operation of your mental "broadcasting" station is a
comparatively simple procedure. You have but three
principles to bear in mind, and to apply, when you wish to
use your broadcasting station the SUBCONSCIOUS MIND,
CREATIVE IMAGINATION, and AUTO-SUGGESTION.
The stimuli through which you put these three principles
into action have been described-the procedure begins with
DESIRE.
THE GREATEST FORCES ARE "INTANGIBLE,"
The depression brought the world to the very border line of
understanding of the forces which are intangible and unseen.
Through the ages which have passed, man has depended too
much upon his physical senses, and has limited his knowledge
to physical things, which he could see, touch, weigh, and
measure.
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We are now entering the most
marvelous of all age an age which will teach us something of
the intangible forces of the world about us. Perhaps we
shall learn, as we pass through this age, that the "other
self" is more powerful than the physical self 'we see when
we look into a mirror.
Sometimes men speak lightly of the intangibles the things
which they cannot perceive through any of their five senses,
and when we hear them, it would remind us that all of us are
controlled by forces which are unseen and
intangible.
The whole of mankind has not the power to cope 'With, nor to
control the intangible force wrapped up in the rolling waves
of the oceans. Man has not the capacity to understand the
intangible force of gravity, which keeps this little earth
suspended in mid-air, and keeps man from falling from it,
much less the power to control that force. Man is entirely
subservient to the intangible force which comes with a
thunder storm, and he is just as helpless in the presence of
the intangible force of electricity-nay, he does not even
know what electricity is, where it comes from or what is its
purpose!
Nor is this by any means the end of man's ignorance in
connection with things unseen and intangible. He does not
understand the intangible force .(and intelligence) wrapped
up in the soil of the earth the force which
provides him with every morsel of food he eats, every
article of clothing he wear, every dollar he carries in his
pockets.
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THE DRAMATIC STORY OF
THE BRAIN
Last, but not least, man, with all of his boasted culture
and education, understands little or nothing of the
intangible force (the greatest of all the intangibles) of
thought. He knows but little concerning the physical brain,
and its vast network of intricate machinery through which
the power of thought is translated into its material
equivalent, but he is now entering an age which shall yield
enlightenment on the subject. Already men of science have
begun to turn their attention to the study of this
stupendous thing called a brain, and, while they are still
in the kindergarten stage of their studies, they have
uncovered enough knowledge to know that the central
switchboard of the human brain, the number of lines which
connect the brain cells one with another, equal the figure
one, followed by fifteen million ciphers.
"The figure is so stupendous," said Dr. C. Judson Herrick,
of the University of Chicago, "that astronomic,al figures
dealing with hundreds of millions of light years, become
insignificant by comparison. . . . It has been determined
that there are from 10,000,000 to 14,000,000,000 nerve cells
in the human cerebral cortex, and we know that these are
arranged in definite patterns. These arrangements are not
haphazard. They are orderly. Recently developed methods of
Electro-physiology draw off action currents from very
precisely located cells, or fibers with micro-electrodes,
amplify them with radio tubes, and record potential
differences to a millionth of a volt."
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It is inconceivable that such
a network of intricate machinery should be in existence for
the sole purpose of carrying on the physical functions
incidental to growth and maintenance of the physical body.
Is it not likely that the same system, which gives billions
of brain cells the media for communication one with another,
provides, also the means of communication with other
intangible forces?
After this book had been written, just before the manuscript
went to the publisher, there appeared in the New York Times,
an editorial showing that at least one great University, and
one intelligent investigator in the field of mental
phenomena, are carrying on an organized research through
which conclusions have been reached that parallel many of
those described in this and the following chapter. The
editorial briefly analyzed the work carried on by Dr. Rhine,
and his associates at Duke University, viz:-
"What is 'Telepathy'?
"A month ago we cited on this page some of the remarkable
results achieved by Professor Rhine and his associates in
Duke University from more than a hundred thousand tests to
determine the existence of 'telepathy' and 'clairvoyance.'
These results were summarized in the first two articles in
Harper's Magazine. In the second which has now appeared, the
author, E. II. Wright, attempts to summarize what has been
learned or what it seems reasonable to infer, regarding the
exact nature of these 'extrasensory modes of perception.
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"The actual existence of
telepathy and clairvoyance now seems to some scientists
enormously probable as the result of Rhine's experiments.
Various percipients were asked to name as many cards in a
special pack as they could without looking at them and
without other sensory access to them. About a score of men
and women were discovered who could regularly name so many
of the cards correctly that 'there was not one chance in
many a million million of their having done their feats by
luck or accident.'
"But how did they do them? These powers, summing that they
exist, do not seem to be sensory. There is no known organ
for them. The experiments worked just as well at distances
of several hundred miles as they did in the same room. These
facts also dispose, in Mr. Wright's opinion, of the attempt
to explain telepathy or clairvoyance through any physical
theory of radiation. All known forms of radiant energy
decline inversely as the square of the distance traversed.
Telepathy and clairvoyance do not. But they do vary through
physical causes as our other mental powers do. Contrary to
widespread opinion, they do not improve when the percipient
is asleep or half-asleep, but, on the contrary, when he is
most wide awake and alert. Rhine discovered that a narcotic
will invariably lower a percipient's score, while a
stimulant will always send it higher. The most reliable
performer apparently cannot make a good score unless he
tries to do his best.
"One conclusion that Wright draws with some confidence is
that telepathy and clairvoyance are really one and the same
gift. That Is. the faculty that 'sees' a card face down on a
table seems to be exactly the same one that 'reads' a
thought residing only in another mind. There are several
grounds for believing this. So far, for example, the two
gifts have been found in every person who enjoys either of
them. In every one so far the two have been of equal vigor,
almost exactly.
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Screens, walls, distances,
have no effect at all on either. Wright advances from this
conclusion to express what he puts forward as no more than
the mere 'hunch' that other extra-sensory experiences,
prophetic dreams, premonitions of disaster, and the like,
may also prove to be part of the same faculty. The reader is
not asked to accept any of -these conclusions unless he
finds it necessary, but the evidence that Rhine has piled up
must remain impressive."
In view of Dr. Rhine's announcement in connection with the
conditions under which the mind responds to what he terms
"extra-sensory" modes of perception, I now feel privileged
to add to his testimony by stating that my associates and I
have discovered what we believe to be the ideal conditions
under which the mind can be stimulated so that the sixth
sense described in the next chapter, can be made to function
in a practical way.
The conditions to which I refer consist of a close working
alliance between myself and two members of my staff. Through
experimentation and practice, we have discovered how to
stimulate our minds (by applying the principle used in
connection with the "Invisible Counselors" described in the
next chapter) so that we can, by a process of blending our
three minds into one, find the solution to a great variety
of personal problems which are submitted by my clients.
The procedure is very simple. We sit down at a conference
table, clearly state the nature of the problem we have
under consideration, then begin discussing it.
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Each contributes whatever
thoughts that may occur. The strange thing about this method
of mind stimulation is that it places each participant in
communication with unknown sources of knowledge definitely
outside his own experience.
If you understand the principle described in the chapter on
the Master Mind, you of course recognize the round-table
procedure here described as being a practical application of
the Master Mind.
This method of mind stimulation, through harmonious
discussion of definite subjects, between three people,
illustrates the simplest and most practical use of the
Master Mind.
By adopting and following a similar plan any
student of this philosophy may come into possession of the
famous Carnegie formula briefly described in the
introduction. If it means nothing to you at
this time, mark this page and read it again after you have
finished the last chapter.
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