That “Quantum Psychology” needs a new edition in Russian is quite natural. It couldn’t go unnoticed—and there are at least three reasons for that. First, the author’s mysterious and contradictory image. Second, the unusual subject matter and the structure of the text itself. This is a non-linear book that you can read from any point—once you’ve laughed at some places and puzzled over others, you inevitably end up reading all twenty-three chapters (and then you’ll reread them again and again). Third, it’s simply a very well-written book that pleased everyone who read it—from “esoterics” to science fiction lovers, and from housewives to serious scholars. The success of “Quantum Psychology” is a sign that in the minds of our countrymen there is a quantum leap underway: they rise to a new level of evolution and begin to explore worlds governed by completely new—and much more interesting—laws. Worlds in which space-time is multidimensional, and therefore the sequence of events is non-linear. Worlds where what was an unattainable goal for people of previous eras becomes a normal working tool for achieving new goals.