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THE LAW OF SUCCESS Lesson Sixteen - THE GOLDEN RULE
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THE LAW OF SUCCESS Lesson Sixteen - THE GOLDEN RULE
By None
Current price: $6.99


By None
THE LAW OF SUCCESS Lesson Sixteen - THE GOLDEN RULE
Current price: $6.99
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Size: Kobo eBook
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In the final lesson of his monumental course on the Law of Success , Napoleon Hill reveals the principle that overshadows and gives meaning to all the others: the Golden Rule . Not a simple moral precept, but a universal law of cause and effect , as immutable as gravity.
What we think, say, and do to others always comes back to us, amplified: “Whatever a man sows, that shall he also reap.”
Hill shows that the power accumulated through the previous lessons can become either creative or destructive, depending on one's inner attitude. The Golden Rule thus becomes the safety valve that prevents ambition, will, and influence from turning into selfishness, manipulation, and ruin.
Through concrete episodes—such as the story of the old man who prays to save his home and moves the lawyer who came to evict him—Hill illustrates how every thought released into the mind is a seed that returns in the form of circumstances, relationships, opportunities, or obstacles.
Every act toward others is first an act toward ourselves , because it shapes our character, and our character determines what we attract.
The lesson broadens the scope of the Golden Rule:
• in personal relationships, where it builds trust and influence;
• in business, where it becomes the foundation of leadership, cooperation, and reputation;
• in society, where it represents the only real solution to conflicts between capital and labor, between nations, and between individuals;
• in our inner lives, where it guides dialogue with the subconscious, self-suggestion, and the creative power of thought.
Hill concludes by showing that the Golden Rule is not a spiritual utopia, but a psychological and practical law : those who apply it build a magnetic character, solid relationships, and stable success; those who ignore it create their own destruction through negative thoughts, cynicism, and injustice.
The lesson, the culmination of the entire course, affirms that true success is impossible without integrity, kindness, and justice : what we do to others is what we do to ourselves.
In the final lesson of his monumental course on the Law of Success , Napoleon Hill reveals the principle that overshadows and gives meaning to all the others: the Golden Rule . Not a simple moral precept, but a universal law of cause and effect , as immutable as gravity.
What we think, say, and do to others always comes back to us, amplified: “Whatever a man sows, that shall he also reap.”
Hill shows that the power accumulated through the previous lessons can become either creative or destructive, depending on one's inner attitude. The Golden Rule thus becomes the safety valve that prevents ambition, will, and influence from turning into selfishness, manipulation, and ruin.
Through concrete episodes—such as the story of the old man who prays to save his home and moves the lawyer who came to evict him—Hill illustrates how every thought released into the mind is a seed that returns in the form of circumstances, relationships, opportunities, or obstacles.
Every act toward others is first an act toward ourselves , because it shapes our character, and our character determines what we attract.
The lesson broadens the scope of the Golden Rule:
• in personal relationships, where it builds trust and influence;
• in business, where it becomes the foundation of leadership, cooperation, and reputation;
• in society, where it represents the only real solution to conflicts between capital and labor, between nations, and between individuals;
• in our inner lives, where it guides dialogue with the subconscious, self-suggestion, and the creative power of thought.
Hill concludes by showing that the Golden Rule is not a spiritual utopia, but a psychological and practical law : those who apply it build a magnetic character, solid relationships, and stable success; those who ignore it create their own destruction through negative thoughts, cynicism, and injustice.
The lesson, the culmination of the entire course, affirms that true success is impossible without integrity, kindness, and justice : what we do to others is what we do to ourselves.


















