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This is a list of New Thought writers, who have written significant primary works related to New Thought. New Thought is also commonly referred to by such names as the " Law of Attraction " or "Higher Thought".
For a longer list of writers in the New Thought Movement, some of whom do not have Wikipedia pages, see List of New Thought writers. Pages in category "New Thought writers" The following 99 pages are in this category, out of 99 total.
The list starts in order with the first ten books: the I Ching (an ancient Chinese divination text), the Hebrew Bible (a version of which serves as the "Old Testament" of the Christian Bible), the Iliad and Odyssey, the Upanishads (a collection of ancient Indian philosophical texts), the Tao Te Ching, the Avesta, the Analects, the History of ...
She also operated the Elizabeth Towne Company, which published an extensive list of New Thought, metaphysical, self-help, and self-improvement books by herself and writers such as William Walker Atkinson, Kate Atkinson Boehme, Paul Ellsworth, Orison Swett Marden, Edwin Markham, Clara Chamberlain McLean, Helen Rhodes-Wallace, William Towne, and ...
Ernest Shurtleff Holmes (January 21, 1887 – April 7, 1960) was an American New Thought writer, teacher, and leader. He was the founder of a spiritual movement known as Religious Science, part of the greater New Thought movement, whose spiritual philosophy is known as "The Science of Mind."
Many of the founding figures of existentialism represent its diverse background (clockwise from top left): Dane Søren Kierkegaard was a theologian, German Friedrich Nietzsche an anti-establishment wandering academic, Czech Franz Kafka a short-story writer and insurance assessor, and Russian Fyodor Dostoyevsky a novelist
First author of the New Thought movement [1] Warren Felt Evans (December 23, 1817 – September 4, 1889) was an American author of the New Thought movement. He was the founder of a mind-cure sanitarium in Salisbury, Massachusetts , and has been referred to as "the recording angel of metaphysics".
He was credited by Horatio Dresser as being a founder in the New Thought movement. [2] Many of Larson's books remain in print today, more than 100 years after they were first published, and his writings influenced notable New Thought authors and leaders, including Religious Science founder Ernest Holmes. [3]