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Major Sources for New ThoughtThe New Times -- Monthly Resource for Authentic Living The New Thought Movement Home Page The Association for Global New Thought Ralph Waldo Emerson Selected Essays New Thought Movement Online Affliliated New Thought Network University of Virginia New Thought Page New Thought Network The Difference Between New Thought and New Age |
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Seek not to change the world, but change your
mind about the world. |
What is New Thought?A mind-healing movement that originated in the United States in the 19th century, based on religious and metaphysical (concerning the nature of ultimate reality) presuppositions. The diversity of views and styles of life represented in various New Thought groups are difficult to describe because of their variety, and the same reason makes it virtually impossible to determine either membership or adherents. The influence of the various New Thought groups has been spread by its leaders through lectures, journals, and books not only in the United States but also in the United Kingdom, Europe, Asia, Africa, and Australia. Many adherents of New Thought consider themselves to be Christian, though generalizations about their relations to Christianity have been questioned. |
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OriginsThe origins of New
Thought may be traced to a dissatisfaction on the part of many persons
with scientific empiricism and their reaction to the religious skepticism
of the 17th and 18th centuries. The romanticism and idealism of the 19th
century also influenced the New Thought movement, of which Phineas P.
Quimby (1802-66) is usually cited as the earliest proponent. A native of
Portland, Maine, Quimby practiced mesmerism (hypnotism) and developed his
concepts of mental and spiritual healing and health based on the view that
illness is a matter of the mind. Quimby's influence may be seen in the
writings of Mary Baker Eddy and in the development of Christian Science
(which she founded), although Mrs. Eddy retracted acknowledgment of
dependence on her teacher. Quimby's influence was readily acknowledged by
others. Warren F. Evans (1817-89), a Methodist and then a Swedenborgian
minister (leader of a theosophical movement based on the teachings of the
18th-century Swedish scientist and theologian Emanuel Swedenborg),
published a number of works exploring and systematizing the ideas of
Quimby. These included Mental Cure (1869), Mental Medicine (1872), and
Soul and Body (1876). New Thought teachings and practicesElements of New Thought may be traced to Platonism, based on the Idealism of the 5th-4th-century-bc Greek philosopher Plato, who held that the realm of ideas is more real than that of matter; to Swedenborgianism, especially Swedenborg's view that the material realm is one of effects whose causes are spiritual and whose purpose is divine; to Hegelianism, based on the views of the 18th-19th-century German philosopher G.W.F. Hegel, especially those concerning the external world, mental phenomena, and the nervous organism as the meeting ground of the body and the mind; to Orientalism, involving spiritual teachings of Eastern religions (e.g., Hinduism); and, particularly, to the Transcendentalism (a form of Idealism) of the 19th-century American philosopher and poet Ralph Waldo Emerson. Though it is difficult to summarize New Thought beliefs, since
they are so varied and to so large a degree individualistic, it is
possible to summarize some of the more prevalent views. As far as
Christian Science is concerned, New Thought adherents do not accept Mary
Baker Eddy's teaching or any other formulation as the final revelation.
Rather, truth is viewed as a matter of continuing revelation, and no one
leader or institution can declare with finality what is the nature of
truth. Source: Britannica |
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