Uell Stanley Andersen

[4] He had a number of careers, including running an advertising agency, wild-catting for oil, and logging at the Columbia Sawmill.

According to Andersen, the "Universal Mind is a vast and all-encompassing mental and spiritual being in whom all things and events exist.

"[7] According to Andersen, the Universal Mind, or God, manifests – or literally reflects – the dominant belief system of all living things.

[10] Andersen argued that it was possible to prove his theory by conducting a few mental experiments, aided by means of meditation.

After running these experiments, with complete faith in the outcome, it is possible to demonstrate – at least on a subjective basis – that there is a relationship between thought and physical reality.

That notion had been expressed by earlier New Thought writers, in particular, Ernest Holmes, whom Andersen cites in his writing.

"[13] Prior to Holmes, the Christian Science community argued that illness was a false belief, which manifested in the patient's body.

Holmes and Andersen expanded on this idea by generalizing it to all evil, which they argued also did not exist, and was a product of false beliefs.

He argues that all living creatures share the same universal mind – and accompanying power to create – with human beings.

This leads to the observed effects of evolution, as living creatures aspire for greater physical abilities to ensure their survivability.

Behold the process of evolution and you will see desire being projected into the Universal Mind and returning in physical reality.

[14]Andersen argued that this power, often described as the "law of attraction", can be directed at will by controlling the sustained, believed images in our mind.

Andersen recognized that humans are constrained by existing beliefs about themselves and the world, fixed in their subconscious by past experience.

Andersen argued that it was possible to break the lock of negative past experiences by means of meditation, and steadfastly creating mental images of the desired outcome.

People interviewed in the film include Neale Donald Walsch, Gary Renard, Debbie Ford, Jasmuheen, and others.