Mel Schwartz draws breathtaking parallels between the quantum reality and our human experience, revealing powerful lessons for living to our greatest potential...The implications for human welfare are profound.
Larry Dossey, MD, author of One Mind: How Our Individual Mind is Part of a Greater Consciousness and Why it Matters
What if it were possible to harness the discoveries of quantum physics and formulate new ways of thinking about ourselves, our capabilities, and our challenges?Though science has vastly expanded our knowledge, it has also led us to adopt a worldview where we see ourselves as insignificant specks living in a mechanical universe.Now, insights from quantum physics reveal that our universe is, in fact, a vibrantly intelligent reality and that each of us plays a vital role in shaping it. In this groundbreaking book, Schwartz shows us how to integrate this new quantum worldview into our everyday lives, allowing us to transcend our limitations and open to infinite possibilities.The Possibility Principle reveals how we can apply the three core tenets of quantum physics—inseparability, uncertainty, and potentiality—to live the life we choose, free from the wounds of our past and the constraints of our old beliefs.
A psychotherapist and marriage counselor in private practice for more than two decades, Mel seeks to live the example of the self-actualization techniques he espouses.In mid-life, he envisioned a life with much deeper purpose. In one of his defining moments, Mel decided to make a move in a entirely different direction, one filled with uncertainty: He made the determination to return to graduate school with the spirit of inquiry to serve others. At the time, Mel, who had been enjoying a successful career in business, was raising two young sons.
Mel earned his L.C.S.W. from Columbia University and Masters of Philosophy from Lancaster University, in England. Following his calling, he assists individuals, couples, and families to become the masters of their thinking, relationships, communication skills, and, ultimately, their own lives.21.95