A philosophical meditation on inner alignment, moral awareness, and the relation between human consciousness and the infinite order.
In In Tune with the Infinite, Ralph Waldo Trine articulates a vision of human life grounded in the disciplined ordering of thought and the quiet recognition of an underlying unity between mind and world. Rather than presenting a program of self-improvement, the work proceeds as a series of reflections on the conditions under which clarity, composure, and ethical steadiness become possible. Trine's concern is not with immediate results, but with the gradual formation of character through inward attention and sustained mental discipline.
Drawing on currents associated with New Thought while maintaining a more restrained and contemplative register, Trine considers the consequences of discordant thinking and the stabilising effect of what he terms harmony with the Infinite. The text engages questions of intention, responsibility, and the shaping influence of habitual thought, placing particular emphasis on the relationship between inward life and outward conduct.
Written in a calm and deliberate style, the work belongs to a tradition of reflective prose that intersects with philosophical and spiritual inquiry. It remains of interest to readers concerned with the history of New Thought, the development of mind-body philosophy, and the enduring question of how inward disposition informs lived experience.
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