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Mental efficiency

  • Arnold Bennett

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The mind can only be conquered by regular meditation, by deciding beforehand what direction its activity ought to take, and insisting that its activity takes that direction; also by never leaving it idle, undirected, masterless, to play at random like a child in the streets after dark. This is extremely difficult, but it can be done, and it is marvellously well worth doing. The fault of the epoch is the absence of meditativeness. A sagacious man will strive to correct in himself the faults of his epoch. In some deep ways the twelfth century had advantages over the twentieth. It practised meditation. The twentieth does Sandow exercises. Meditation (I speak only for myself) is the least dispensable of the day's doings. What do I force my mind to meditate upon? Upon various things, but chiefly upon one.Namely, that Force, Energy, Life - the Incomprehensible has many names - is indestructible, and that, in the last analysis, there is only one single, unique Force, Energy, Life. Science is gradually reducing all elements to one element. Science is making it increasingly difficult to conceive matter apart from spirit. Everything lives. Even my razor gets "tired." And the fatigue of my razor is no more nor less explicable than my fatigue after a passage of arms with my mind. The Force in it, and in me, has been transformed, not lost. All Force is the same force. Science just now has a tendency to call it electricity; but I am indifferent to such baptisms. The same Force pervades my razor, my cow in my field, and the central me which dominates my mind: the same force in different stages of evolution. And that Force persists forever. In such paths do I compel my mind to walk daily. Daily it has to recognize that the mysterious Ego controlling it is a part of that divine Force which exists from everlasting to everlasting, and which, in its ultimate atoms, nothing can harm. By such a course of training, even the mind, the coarse, practical mind, at last perceives that worldly accidents don't count.

Genres

  • Conduct of life
  • Mental efficiency
  • Nonfiction
  • Self-Improvement
  • Efficience (Psychologie)
  • Morale pratique
  • Stupidity
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About the author

  • Arnold Bennett

    27 May 1867 - 27 March 1931

    3.91

    33 ratings · 1719 works

Editions

  • Edition cover

    Createspace Independent Publishing Platform, CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform

    Aug 12, 2016

  • Edition cover

    Createspace Independent Publishing Platform, CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform

    May 02, 2018

  • Edition cover

    Franklin Classics Trade Press

    Nov 10, 2018

  • Edition cover

Franklin Classics Trade Press

Oct 31, 2018

  • Edition cover

    Spastic Cat Press

    Jul 24, 2012

  • Edition cover

    Hodder and Stoughton

    1911

  • Edition cover

    George H. Doran Company

    1911

  • Edition cover

    Musson Book Co.

    1911

  • Edition cover

    Kessinger Publishing

    May 2003

  • Edition cover

    Musson

    1994

  • Edition cover

    George H. Doran

    1911

  • Edition cover

    Hodder & Stoughton

    1912

  • Edition cover

    Hodder & Stoughton

    1911

  • Edition cover

    Books for Libraries Press

    1975

  • Edition cover

    Hodder and Stoughton

  • Edition cover

    The Floating Press

    2009

  • Edition cover

    Husson

    1887