Personal Development·5 min read·1937

Think and Grow Rich

par Napoleon Hill

Think and Grow Rich is the result of Napoleon Hill studying over 500 wealthy individuals — including Andrew Carnegie, Henry Ford, and Thomas Edison — over 20 years. Published in 1937, it has sold over 100 million copies and is considered the grandfather of all self-help books. Hill's central thesis: all achievement begins with a definite thought. Your mind is everything. If you can conceive it and believe it, you can achieve it. While some chapters feel dated, the core psychological principles are as relevant as ever.

Points Clés

  • Desire: every achievement starts with a burning, obsessive desire — not a wish
  • Faith: you must believe in your ability to achieve your goal before it happens
  • Autosuggestion: repetition of positive affirmations programs the subconscious mind
  • Specialized knowledge: general knowledge has no power — focused expertise does
  • The Mastermind: surround yourself with people smarter than you in their domain
  • The subconscious mind: your dominant thoughts become your reality over time

Résumé Chapitre par Chapitre

Partie 1

Desire: The Starting Point of All Achievement

Hill distinguishes between wishing for something and burning desire. He uses the story of a man who burned his boats upon landing — there was no retreat, only success or death. Your goal must be specific (not 'I want to be rich' but 'I will have $X by [date] and here is what I will give in return'). Write it down. Read it twice daily. Believe it as though it's already true.

Partie 2

Faith and Autosuggestion

Faith is a state of mind that can be induced through repetition. Autosuggestion is the vehicle through which faith is developed. You must communicate your desires to your subconscious mind through repeated affirmations, spoken with emotion. The subconscious doesn't distinguish between real and imagined experiences — it responds to what you feed it. Most people feed it doubt and fear, which is why they get more of the same.

Partie 3

Specialized Knowledge and Imagination

General knowledge is nearly worthless for wealth creation. Henry Ford had very little formal education, but he surrounded himself with people who had specialized knowledge. The key is knowing how to acquire and apply knowledge, not storing it in your head. Imagination takes two forms: synthetic (rearranging old concepts) and creative (new ideas from hunches and intuition). Both are essential.

Partie 4

The Mastermind Principle

No great achievement was ever accomplished alone. Hill defines a mastermind as a coordination of knowledge and effort between two or more people toward a definite purpose. When two or more minds combine with purpose, they create a third, invisible mind — greater than the sum of its parts. Every powerful figure in history had a mastermind group. Success requires other people.

Verdict Final

Think and Grow Rich is more philosophy than strategy, but its psychological principles underpin nearly every modern success book. Read it once to absorb the philosophy, then revisit specific chapters. Have the book as PDF or EPUB? Let BriFy extract the 13 principles in a concise, structured summary.

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