The Doré Lectures: Being Sunday Addresses at the Doré Gallery, London, Given in Connection with the Higher Thought Centre
1909
The Doré Lectures: Being Sunday Addresses at the Doré Gallery, London, Given in Connection with the Higher Thought Centre
1909
These Sunday addresses, delivered at London's legendary Doré Gallery in 1909, represent the foundation of Troward's influential New Thought philosophy. In them, Troward articulates a radical proposition: that thought itself possesses creative power, and that understanding the relationship between individual consciousness and universal spirit can fundamentally transform one's experience of reality. The lectures were delivered in connection with the Higher Thought Centre, making them accessible explorations of profound metaphysical questions. What emerges is both a spiritual philosophy and a practical guide to personal transformation, urging readers to recognize their own inherent creative potential. The setting itself resonates: the Doré Gallery, home to Gustave Doré's magnificent illustrations of Dante's Inferno and Milton's Paradise Lost, represents the boundary between visible and invisible worlds. A century later, these lectures remain essential reading for anyone interested in the roots of New Thought and the power of consciousness.


