Napoleon Hill's "Think and Grow Rich" is examined, questioning how a con man wrote a self-help book beloved by millions. The podcast explores Hill's history of fraud and abuse, contrasting it with the book's principles. While some advice like goal setting, persistence, and masterminds aligns with modern research, other concepts, such as sex transmutation and cosmic intelligence, are deemed pseudo-scientific. The discussion introduces the placebo effect and pragmatism, suggesting self-help's value lies in inspiring useful beliefs, regardless of their objective truth. However, the podcast questions the ethics of Hill's fabrications, particularly his false claims about Andrew Carnegie, which underpin the book's authority.
Part 1: Origins, Fraud, and Fabrications
Part 2: Core Principles and Controversial Advice
Part 3: Psychology of Belief and Placebo Effects
Part 4: Ethics and Final Verdict
Sign in to continue reading, translating and more.
Open full episode in Podwise
