The moment a person forms a theory, his imagination sees in every object only the traits which favor that theory.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
All ideas come about through some sort of observation. It sparks an attitude; some object or emotion causes a reaction in the other person.
Each pursues his own theory, little solicitous to correct or improve it by an attention to what is advanced by his opponents.
When an idea exclusively occupies the mind, it is transformed into an actual physical or mental state.
The three parts of the theory are analytical ability, the ability to analyze things to judge, to criticize. Creative, the ability to create, to invent and discover and practical, the ability to apply and use what you know.
Intuition comes very close to clairvoyance; it appears to be the extrasensory perception of reality.
Whichever theory we adopt to give a rational explanation of human existence, that theory must take into account and explain the mental nature we see at work in all modern communities.
Every suggested idea produces a corresponding physical reaction. Every idea constantly repeated ends by being engraved upon the brain, provoking the act which corresponds to that idea.
A theory is no more like a fact than a photograph is like a person.
An object is not first imagined or thought about and then expected or willed, but in being actively expected it is imagined as future and in being willed it is thought.
Theories are always very thin and insubstantial, experience only is tangible.