According to scientific research, people can listen to a brain-fitness computer program to help rebuild brain matter that has turned flabby with age. Their findings indicate that the brain can reshape itself based upon the data it receives from a person’s thoughts. Taking action that lets the brain grow has appeared in our advertising for more than a decade, informing readers of the wrong data that “flabs” the brain, and leaves people out of touch with reality. The method for releasing the brain’s wrong data was explained by the late Richard W. Wetherill in his book, Tower of Babel, published in January 1952. He called the wrong data distortions of logic. He explained why and how distortions of logic are formed, how they affect the brain and subsequent behaveior, how they are released, and the resulting transformation of a person’s relationships, intellect, and health. It is commonly thought that the brain is the body’s computer, receiving data and acting on it accordingly. Wetherill defined the process as right thinking causes right results, whereas wrong thinking causes wrong results. People’s brains function that way because whoever or whatever is the creator provided natural laws to enable human beings eventually to evolve into the kind of beings intended by that creator. Today, natural laws are known as laws of physics, but there is also a behavioral law identified by Wetherill. He called it the law of absolute right. It states: Right action gets right results; wrong action gets wrong results, and it defines right action as rational and honest responses to whatever happens. As with all natural laws, our results tell us if we are conforming to the behavioral law or contradicting it.
Originally that was the most unpopular information ever presented to a society that, from the beginning, established the practice of blaming wrong results on other people, bad luck, and later on, life styles, faulty diets and inherited genes—almost never on self. It is widely known that laws of physics make mandatory people’s physical activities. Thus they learn not to touch live wires, not to speed across an oil slick, and that gravity keeps pedestrians tethered to the earth. But, lacking the knowledge of nature’s law of right behavior, society still believes that suffering and even death are the inevitable plight of mankind. There are well-meaning efforts being made to cope with those typical wrong results: charitable giving to help the needy, finding cures for diseases, and addressing famine and genocide overseas. As far back as the 1960s, behavioral experts declared this information too simplistic and unworkable while, at the same time, surreptitiously inserting parts of it into their own programs.
Do not be deterred by differing expert opinions. Learn about the behavioral law. Conform to it, not to benefit you (although it will) but to do what is right because that is what nature’s behavioral law calls for. If that is your approach, you will be astonished by the results. If you are not astonished, be sure you are conforming to creation’s law of absolute right with the same eagerness as you conform to creation’s law of gravity
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