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Islam Said It First: How Modern Self-Help Echoes the Timeless Teachings of Islam (A Friendly Showdown)

Par : Zachary Marco
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Disponible dans votre compte client Decitre ou Furet du Nord dès validation de votre commande. Le format ePub est :
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  • FormatePub
  • ISBN8233036262
  • EAN9798233036262
  • Date de parution08/01/2026
  • Protection num.pas de protection
  • Infos supplémentairesepub
  • ÉditeurLinda Balsamo

Résumé

This book invites readers into a thoughtful, friendly showdown between today's most popular self-help ideas and the wisdom found in the Quran more than 1, 400 years ago. Rather than framing the conversation as a debate with winners and losers, it approaches both sides with curiosity, respect, and intellectual honesty. Modern self-help books promise clarity, confidence, productivity, inner peace, and purpose-often presenting their ideas as groundbreaking discoveries for the human mind and soul.
This book asks a simple but powerful question: how much of this "new" wisdom echoes guidance that has already existed for centuries?Chapter by chapter, familiar self-help themes-such as mindset, gratitude, discipline, resilience, emotional control, relationships, purpose, and contentment-are placed alongside Quranic principles that addressed these same human struggles long before podcasts, planners, and productivity hacks existed.
The comparison is not meant to diminish modern authors, but to highlight how timeless truths resurface across generations, cultures, and languages. In many cases, readers may be surprised to discover that advice marketed today as revolutionary closely mirrors guidance revealed in a vastly different world, yet aimed at the same human heart. Written in an accessible and reflective tone, the book bridges ancient scripture and modern life without preaching or polemics.
It acknowledges the value of contemporary psychology and personal development while gently exploring how the Quran frames growth not only as personal success, but as moral balance, spiritual grounding, and responsibility toward others. Where self-help often focuses on optimizing the self, the Quran and the prophet's traditions expand the lens to include humility, accountability, and purpose beyond individual gain and beyond life itself.
This is a book for readers who enjoy self-improvement, those curious about faith, and anyone interested in how human wisdom evolves-or repeats itself-over time. Whether you come from a religious background, a secular one, or somewhere in between, the pages invite reflection rather than agreement, comparison rather than competition. By placing modern advice and ancient guidance side by side, the book encourages readers to rethink what progress really means, and to consider that some of the answers we search for today may have been articulated long ago, waiting to be rediscovered.