SMSPIRITUALITY—MEDIA
/
Power vs. Force: The Hidden Determinants of Human Behavior cover
❒ Book · 1995

Power vs. Force: The Hidden Determinants of Human Behavior

Power vs Force

By David R. Hawkins · Hay House

341 pagesEnglishFirst ed. 1995Consciousness / New Thought
ConsciousnessNew ThoughtEsoteric Consciousness ScaleKinesiologyHawkinsCalibrationMap of Consciousness

David Hawkins’s exposition of his “Map of Consciousness” — a logarithmic 1–1000 scale on which he claims to have calibrated emotions, behaviours, public figures and historical periods using applied kinesiology (muscle testing). The book argues that humanity collectively crossed the 200 “integrity” threshold in the 1980s and that this calibration is empirically falsifiable.

First published by Veritas in 1995 and adopted by Hay House from 2002, Power vs. Force became the founding text of the consciousness-scale subculture. The three parts — Tools, Work, Meaning — move from the kinesiology methodology through applications in politics, sport, the arts and health, and end with chapters on what Hawkins calls the database of consciousness. Mother Teresa’s endorsement and Wayne Dyer’s repeated promotion from the early 2000s onward established its long shelf life within Hay House’s catalogue.

Contents

01

Critical Advances in Knowledge

02

History and Methodology

03

Test Results and Interpretation

04

Levels of Human Consciousness

05

Social Distribution of Consciousness Levels

06

New Horizons in Research

07

Everyday Critical Point Analysis

08

The Source of Power

09

Power Patterns in Human Attitudes

10

Power in Politics

11

Power in the Marketplace

12

Power and Sports

13

Social Power and the Human Spirit

14

Power in the Arts

15

Genius and the Power of Creativity

16

Surviving Success

17

Physical Health and Power

18

Wellness and the Disease Process

19

The Database of Consciousness

20

The Evolution of Consciousness

21

The Study of Pure Consciousness

Reception

A foundational text of the "consciousness scale" subculture and a runaway bestseller within New Age and human-potential publishing. Wayne Dyer’s frequent endorsements during the 2000s drove a second wave of readers. Methodologically the book has been roundly dismissed: applied kinesiology has failed every blinded study it has been subjected to, and Hawkins’s calibration claims are unfalsifiable in practice. The book sits in an unusual category — central to a substantial reader community, treated as an embarrassment by adjacent science-leaning new-spirituality writers (notably Sam Harris).

Frequently asked

What is Power vs. Force about?

It is David R. Hawkins’s exposition of his "Map of Consciousness" — a logarithmic 1–1000 scale on which he claims to have calibrated emotions, behaviours, public figures and historical periods using applied kinesiology. The book argues humanity collectively crossed the 200 "integrity" threshold in the 1980s.

Is the kinesiology methodology in Power vs. Force scientifically valid?

No. Applied kinesiology — the muscle-testing technique Hawkins uses to derive his calibrations — has failed every blinded study it has been subjected to, and the calibration claims are unfalsifiable in practice. The book is influential within New Age publishing rather than within mainstream psychology or neuroscience.

Why did Power vs. Force become so widely read?

Mother Teresa’s endorsement and, from the early 2000s, Wayne Dyer’s sustained promotion through the Hay House catalogue drove a long second wave of readers. The "Map of Consciousness" framing also gave the consciousness-scale subculture a shared vocabulary that no other single book provided.

This theme across the index

Consciousness, in other forms.

The same current this book is working in, followed sideways through the catalogue — across formats, and the word itself.

All consciousness →

Keep following the thread.

One letter every Sunday — what we read this week, and one teaching worth your attention. No tracking.