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The Power (book)

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Country
  
Australia

Publication date
  
17 August 2010

Originally published
  
17 August 2010

ISBN
  
978-1439181782

Genres
  
Self-help, Spirituality

4.1/5
Goodreads

Publisher
  
Atria Books

Followed by
  
The Magic

Author
  
Rhonda Byrne

Preceded by
  
The Secret

The Power (book) t3gstaticcomimagesqtbnANd9GcTOr1T2MtTT76mk7o

Media type
  
Print (hardcover, paperback), audio cassette

Pages
  
272 (first edition, hardcover)

Page count
  
272 (first edition, hardcover)

Similar
  
Rhonda Byrne books, Spirituality books, Psychology books

The Power is a 2010 self-help and spirituality book written by Rhonda Byrne. It is a sequel to the 2006 book The Secret. The book was released on 17 August 2010 along with an audio-book based on it. The Power's mission statement is, "The philosophy and vision of the Secret is to bring joy to billions. To bring joy to the world, the Secret creates life-transforming tools in the mediums of books, films, and multi-media. With each creation from the Secret, we aim to share knowledge that is true, simple, and practical, and that will transform people's lives." The "Power" of the title is the power of love, the mainspring of the universe. A large portion of The Power describes how Byrne greets each blessed moment with overwhelming love and gratitude toward all creation. The book is based on the law of attraction and claims that positive thinking can create life-changing results such as increased happiness, health, and wealth. Byrne describes this as a fundamental universal law akin to gravity.

Contents

There are observations in The Power, such as the importance of being nice to your water. Researchers in several countries, she writes, "have discovered that when water is exposed to positive words and feelings such as love and gratitude, the energy level of the water not only increases, but the structure of the water changes, making it perfectly harmonious. … When water is exposed to negative emotions, such as hate, the energy level of the water decreases and chaotic changes occur." Since "the inside of your head is 80 percent water", the author believes this is very important.

The Law of Attraction

The law of attraction states that whatever someone experiences in life is a direct result of their thoughts. Byrne's states that it really is that simple. According to The Secret and The Power, one's thoughts and feelings have "magnetic properties" and "frequencies". They vibrate and resonate with the universe, somehow attracting events that share those frequencies. The three rules of the Law of Attraction, according to Byrne are the following: "Ask", "Believe", and "Receive". As Byrne says, it means that: "Like attracts like. What that means in simple terms for your life is: what you give out, you receive back. Whatever you give out in life is what you receive back in life. Whatever you give, by the law of attraction, is exactly what you attract back to yourself." In other words, if you want good things to happen, be a good person, think positive thoughts.

Criticisms

The claims made by the book are highly controversial, and have been criticized by reviewers and readers. The book has also been heavily criticized by former believers and practitioners, with some claiming that the concept of the "Secret" was conceived by the author and that the only people generating wealth and happiness from it are the author and the publishers.

Critics contend that the book is based on a pseudoscientific theory called the "law of attraction"—the principle that "like attracts like". In a harshly critical 2010 review, The New York Times stated: "The Power and The Secret are larded with references to magnets, energy and quantum mechanics. This last is a dead giveaway: whenever you hear someone appeal to impenetrable physics to explain the workings of the mind, run away—we already have disciplines called 'psychology' and 'neuroscience' to deal with those questions. Byrne's onslaught of pseudoscientific jargon serves mostly to establish an 'illusion of knowledge,' as social scientists call our tendency to believe we understand something much better than we really do."

Jerry Adler wrote in Newsweek that The Power offers false hope to those in true need of more conventional assistance in their lives.

References

The Power (book) Wikipedia