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Strange and varied are Infinite Intelligence is the term Hill uses to describe God or Divine Power or the Supreme Being at work in the universe and whose influence is felt everywhere within it. His conception of God, or Infinite Intelligence, is richly textured and multifaceted. God, to Hill, is more than a divinely spiritual, personal,
moral force. God
is a source of intelligence, direct communication, and exchange of information—between the Supreme Intelligence itself and the individual, and even between individuals. It is clear that Hill writes primarily from a Judeo-Christian perspective, but his view of Infinite
Intelligence is nonsectarian and widely encompassing.
As you read the book, notice how Hill sees Infinite Intelligence at work in the lives of
Jesus, Gandhi, and Mohammed, as well as in all individuals whose mental states are attuned to the power of Infinite Intelligence. Hill is never preachy about Infinite Intelligence and how one should respond to it, but to fully understand and utilize
The Think and GrowRich Philosophy, it is necessary to understand the part that Infinite
Intelligence—God—plays in it.
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Edison, the world’s Tramp here means itinerant roving or
“traveling.”
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That tragedy produced Two days
after Dickens twelfth birthday, his father was jailed in a London debtor’s prison. His mother sent Dickens) to work in a blacking factory, which manufactured black shoe polish. For four to six months, Dickens labored hour days in a dirty, rat-ridden warehouse, earning only six to seven shillings per week. It was the same sort of wretched experience which many of the successful people that Hill studied had undergone early in their lives.
Dickens never forgot it and drew upon
it many times in his novels, but he never revealed the story to anyone but his wife, and the story did not come out until after his death. The tragedy Dickens suffered involved a failed love relationship with one
Maria Beadwell, daughter of an English banker. In 1830, when Dickens was 18 and working as a low-paid shorthand reporter in the law courts, he fell madly,
hopelessly in love with Maria, who was 19. Her parents considered Dickens unworthy as a suitor and eventually packed Maria off to finishing school in Paris. Dickens loved her fora period of four years, but his
passion was unrequited, and Maria treated him with what amounted to heartless indifference. Critics and biographers have speculated that the intense passion and inspiration he felt, followed by such bitter suffering and disappointment, both sharpened his artistic sensibilities and rendered him thereafter immensely sympathetic to the luckless and the downtrodden. Maria Beadwell, it is believed, was the inspiration for the character of Dora in
David Copperfield.
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Once you have Hill originally added the following Let Emerson state
the thought in these words, Every proverb, every book, every byword that belongs to thee for aid and comfort shall surely come home through open or winding passages. Every friend whom not thy fantastic will, but the great and tender soul in thee craveth, shall lock thee in his embrace.’”
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