Puslapio vaizdai
PDF
„ePub“

same among them all though each would deny the assertion.

"All these modes of producing or removing disease have so thorough a prima facie resemblance that we may be reasonably confident of actual community between them in some underlying law of nature."-Prof. Coe.

I CAN

As for myself I do not rely upon the testimony of others, though much of a reliable nature can be cited, but upon my own experience. BUT BELIEVE WHAT MY EYES HAVE SEEN. Remarkable cures are daily wrought by psychic means: of this I have no doubt.

ner.

"If there ever was a day," says Prof. Coe in his "Spiritual Life," "when the evidence thus offered could properly be put aside with a sneer at human credulity, that day has gone. These things are not done in a corOn every hand we are invited to come and see, and any disposition which may be shown to ignore the facts thus open to observation, while at the same time wholly condemning the beliefs in the name of which they are wrought, leads to a just charge of prejudice and lack of scientific method. In fact, the evidence of most remarkable cures of healing under all these systems of belief is so abundant that I shall not hesitate to assume without argument that we are here dealing with one or more genuine curative agencies."

PART TWO.

THE

PRACTICE OF PSYCHO-THERAPY.

"To speak with authority from experience-not to argue, but to demonstrate-to do, and to be these are 'methods' that can be understood by the most skeptical."

Preliminary Observations

"We have to meet people on many and varied planes of development, and we should learn so to accommodate our methods to their individual needs that all who apply to us for aid may receive the very best that can be given to them in their particular environment."

"Thought is the most potent of all occult forces. When utilized in concentrated and persistent effort it becomes the world's most dangerous or most beneficial weapon. We should beware how we use it."

"Mental therapeutics may be applied (1) by indirect action of the unconscious mind through the influence of sanitary and cheerful surroundings, (2) by awakening faith in varieus means which appeal directly to the objective sense, (3) by direct action of the objective mind on the subjective through the use of reiterated affirmations, and (4) by the direct effect of the objective mind of the physician upon the subjective mind of the patient."-Leavitt.

« AnkstesnisTęsti »