by Edward E. Beals (Author)
A New Thought study of prosperity, presenting financial success as the outward expression of disciplined thought, belief, and inward alignment.
In The Law of Financial Success, Edward E. Beals sets out a framework in which material conditions are understood to reflect mental and spiritual states. Writing within the early twentieth-century New Thought tradition, Beals argues that financial outcomes are not accidental but arise from patterns of belief, expectation, and sustained attention. The work examines the relationship between thought and circumstance, presenting prosperity as the result of inward order rather than external chance.
Beals's approach is practical in emphasis, outlining methods of mental discipline, constructive thinking, and the removal of limiting assumptions. His treatment reflects a broader body of metaphysical writing concerned with the application of spiritual principles to everyday life, particularly in matters of work, income, and personal advancement. Read alongside contemporaries such as James Allen and later writers influenced by the same tradition, the work forms part of a continuous lineage of thought connecting early New Thought teaching with modern discussions of mindset and success.
Number of Pages: 68
Dimensions: 0.16 x 9 x 6 IN
Publication Date: March 26, 2008