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TECHNICAL BULLETINS 1950-1953 CONTENTS Introduction 1 1948 Jan. Dianetics: The Original Thesis 5 1950 Spring Terra Incognita: The Mind 6 May Dianetics: The Evolution of a Science 11 May Dianetics: The Modern Science of Mental Health 12 The Aims of the Hubbard Dianetic Research Foundation 13 June First Professional Course Lectures (20 June—4 Aug.) 14 July Standard Procedure (with Standard Procedure Chart) (DAB 1-1, 2) 15 Aug. Los Angeles Foundation Lectures (10 Aug.—8 Sept.) 22 Sept. How to Release a Chronic Somatic (DAB 1-3) 24 Sept. Oakland Lecture Series (23 Sept.—29 Sept.) 26 Oct. The Analytical Mind 27 Oct. Dianetics and Religion (DAB 14) 38 Nov. The Intensive Processing Procedure 39 Nov. Group Dianetics (excerpt) 43 Nov. The Processing of Children (DAB 1-5) 44 16 Nov. An Addition to Standard Procedure 50 20 Nov. Instruction Protocol 51 20 Nov. Standard Procedure Lectures (20 Nov.—1 Dec.) 54 Dec. Handling the Psychotic (DAB 1-6) 55 Dec. Certification Board Duties and Responsibilities 65 9 20 10 23 12 1951 Jan. Notes on the Lectures 67 Jan. Dianometry—Your Ability and State of Mind 68 Jan. Group Dianetics (DAB 1-7) i 1951 (cont.) Jan. Diagnosis and Repair of Groups 91 Jan. The Credo of a True Group Member 94 Jan. The Credo of a Good and Skilled Manager 96 Feb. The Theory of Affinity, Reality and Communication (DAB 1-8) 98 Feb. Radio Broadcasts ( 7 Feb.—15 Feb.) 103 Mar. The Problem of Sedation (DAB 1-9) 104 Apr. Wichita Lectures (9 Apr.—21 May) 106 Apr. Lock Scanning (DAB 1-10,11) 107 June Preventive Dianetics (DAB 1-12) 113 June Science of Survival 122 June First Annual Conference of Hubbard Dianetic Auditors Lectures (25 June—30 June) 123 July Education and the Auditor (DAB 2-1 ) 124 July Aberrations and Genius (DAB 2-1 ) 130 ca. 1951 Teaching 131 9 July Wichita Monday Lectures (9 July—6 Aug.) 132 Aug. An Essay on Management (DAB 2-2) 133 Aug. How to Pick Up Occluded Data (DAB 2-2) 144 Aug. The "26" Perceptics (DAB 2-2) 145 Aug. Self Analysis 146 Aug. Human Evaluation Course Lectures (13 Aug.—17 Aug.) 147 Sept. Basic Reason—Basic Principles (DAB 2-3) 148 Sept. All Possible Aberrations (SOS Supp. 1 ) 157 Sept. Validation Processing (SOS Supp. 2) 163 Oct. October Midwest Conference Lectures (8 Oct.—12 Oct.) 165 Oct. Child Dianetics 166 Oct. Self-Determined Effort Processing (DAB 24) 167 Oct. Wichita Foundation Auditor’s Course Lectures (15 Oct.—26 Oct.) 171 Nov. Advanced Procedure and Axioms 172 Nov. An Essay on Authoritarianism (DAB 2-5) 173 Nov. A Brief History of Psychotherapy (DAB 2-5) 181 Dec. Postulate Processing (DAB 2-6) 183 Dec. Dianetics: The Original Thesis see— 5 Dec. MEST Processing (SOS Supp. 3) 188 Dec. Handbook for Preclears 194 Dec. Second Annual Conference of Hubbard Dianetic Auditors Lectures (27 Dec.—30 Dec.) 195 7 9 25 13 8 15 ii 1952 Jan. An Afternoon with Ron (DAB 2-7) 196 Jan. Wichita Foundation Lectures (1 Jan.—8 Feb.) 207 Feb. Cause and Effect (DAB 2-8) 208 Feb. Effort Processing (SOS Supp. 4) 214 Feb. Processing of Auditors 216 18 Feb. Hubbard College Lectures (18 Feb.—25 Feb.) 218 3 Mar. Summary Course Lectures (3 Mar.—Apr.) 218 19 May Technique 80 Lectures (19 May—21 May) 220 June Electropsychometric Auditing—Operator’s Manual 221 June Individual Track Map 232 June A Key to the Unconscious—Symbological Processing 239 23 June Summer Session—Technique 88 Lectures (23 June—28 June) 264 8 July Technique 88 Supplementary Lectures (8 July—4 Sept.) 265 July A History of Man 266 July A Step by Step Breakdown of 88 267 ca. Aug. What is Scientology? (JOS 1-G) 268 ca. Aug. Electronics Gives Life to Freud’s Theory (JOS 1-G) 269 ca. Aug. The Handling of Arthritis (JOS 1-G) 272 ca. Aug. Professional Course Booklets 274 ca. Sept. The Running of Concepts (JOS 2-G) 275 Sept. Scientology 88 277 Sept. Auditing Formulae from Scientology 88 278 21 Sept. Technique 88 Supplementary Lectures (21 Sept.—24 Sept.) 279 ca. Sept. Danger: Black Dianetics! (part 1 of 3) (JOS 3-G) 280 ca. Oct. The Loophole in Guarded Rights (part 2 of 3) (JOS 4-G) 282 ca. Oct. Records of Mind Are Permanent (part 3 of 3) (JOS 5-G) 284 Oct. Self Analysis in Dianetics 286 Oct. Standard Operating Procedure for Theta Clearing Lectures (Oct.-30 Oct.) 287 Nov. Scientology 8-80 288 ca. Nov. Procedures for Theta Clearing (JOS 6-G) 289 10 Nov. Logics and Axioms Lectures (10 Nov.—12 Nov.) 291 10 Nov. London Professional Course Lectures (10 Nov.—21 Nov.) 291 ca. Nov. Sanity Needs Creation-Destruction Balance (JOS 7-G) 293 ca. Nov. The Components of Experience (JOS 7-G) 295 Dec. Scientology 8-8008 297 Dec. Philadelphia Doctorate Course Lectures (1 Dec.—18 Dec.) 298 Dec. New Data Doesn’t Invalidate Early, Proven Techniques (part 1 of 5) (JOS 8-G) 00 ca. iii 1952 (cont.) ca. Dec. Thetan, to Be "Sane," Must Learn How He’s Been Caring for Body (part 2 of 5) (JOS 9-G) 301 1953 ca. ca. 15 14 Jan. Feb. Mar. Jan. Preclears Must Be Audited According to Their Condition (part 3 of 5) (JOS 10-G) 302 Preclears Should Be Processed; Education Isn’t Auditor’s Task (part 4 of 5) (JOS 11-G) 304 Auditor First Should Know Tools Before He Goes in for Artistic (part 5 of 5) (JOS 12-G) 305 Philadelphia Doctorate Course Supplementary Lectures (14 Jan.—23 Jan.) 306 ca. Mar. London Group Auditor’s Course Lectures (ca. Mar.—Apr.) 306 23 Mar. London Spring Lectures (23 Mar.—24 Apr.) 307 Apr. How to Live Though an Executive 308 ca. Apr. Marital Scientology (JOS 13-G) 309 15 Apr. Admiration Processing 311 Apr. Self Analysis in Scientology 286 23 Apr. Associate Newsletter 312 28 Apr. Associate Newsletter 315 ca. Apr. Child Scientology (JOS 14-G) 319 May Scientology 8-8008 Unlimited Techniques 329 ca. May Associate Newsletter No. 2 330 ca. May "The Old Man’s Case-Book" (JOS 15-G) 337 21 May Birmingham Lectures (21 May) 338 ca. May Associate Newsletter No. 3 339 10 May General Comments, Group Processing and a Summary of New Work: Certainties (PAB 1 ) 346 ca. May General Comments, SOP 8 and a Summary of SOP 8A (PAB 2) 353 ca. May Associate Newsletter No. 4 365 ca. June This is Scientology—The Science of Certainty (JOS 16-G) 374 ca. June Certainty Processing (PAB 3) 397 18 June Associate Newsletter No. 5 401 ca. June The Limitations of Homo Novis (JOS 17-G) 403 ca. June Beingness and Certainty Processing (PAB 4) 406 ca. July Associate Newsletter No. 6 408 ca. July About PABs (PAB 5) 411 ca. July Associate Newsletter No. 7 412 ca. July Off the Time Track (JOS 18-G) 418 ca. July Case Opening (PAB 6) iv 1953 (cont.) ca. Aug. Six Steps to Better Beingness (PAB 7) 423 ca. Aug. Associate Newsletter No. 8 429 ca. Aug. Viewpoint Processing (PAB 8) 431 ca. Sept. Formula H (PAB 9) 447 4 Sept. Associate Newsletter No. 9 452 ca. Sept. Change Processing (PAB 10) 453 ca. Sept. Associate Newsletter No. 10—Technique Bulletin 456 30 Sept. First International Congress of Dianeticists and Scientologists Lectures (30 Sept.—4 Oct.) 458 1st American Advanced Clinical Indoctrination Course Lectures (5 Oct.—14 Nov.) 459 6 Oct. ca. Oct. What the Thetan Is Trying to Do (PAB 11 ) 461 ca. Oct. The Theory of Communication (JOS 21-G) 464 ca. Oct. The Cycle of Action of an Explosion (PAB 12) 467 28 Oct. Step III Auditing Commands 472 ca. Nov. On Human Behavior (PAB 13) 473 17 Nov. 2nd American Advanced Clinical Course Lectures (17 Nov.—22 Dec.) 478 19 Nov. Associate Newsletter 480 ca. Nov. On Human Character (PAB 14) 482 ca. Dec. Acceptance Level Processing (PAB 15) 485 ca. Dec. What an Auditor Should Know (JOS 22-G) 488 ca. Dec. Acceptance Level Processing (PAB 16) 491 28 Dec. International Congress of Dianeticists and Scientologists Lectures (28 Dec.—31 Dec. ) 496 Subject Index 499 Alphabetical List of Titles v PERIODICALS BY ISSUE NUMBER DIANETIC AUDITOR’S BULLETIN Vol.-No. 1-1, 2 July/Aug. 50 Standard Procedure 15 1-3 Sept. 50 How to Release a Chronic Somatic 24 1-4 Oct. 50 Dianetics and Religion 38 1-5 Nov. 50 The Processing of Children 44 1-6 Dec. 50 Handling the Psychotic 55 1-7 Jan. 51 Group Dianetics 84 1-8 Feb. 51 The Theory of Affinity, Reality and Communication 98 1-9 Mar. 51 The Problem of Sedation 104 1-10,11 Apr./May 51 Lock Scanning 107 1-12 June 51 Preventive Dianetics 113 2-1 July 51 Education and the Auditor 124 Aberrations and Genius 130 An Essay on Management 133 How to Pick Up Occluded Data 144 The "26" Perceptics 145 2-2 Aug. 51 2-3 Sept. 51 Basic Reason—Basic Principles 148 2-4 Oct. 51 Self-Determined Effort Processing 167 2-5 Nov. 51 An Essay on Authoritarianism 173 A Brief History of Psychotherapy 181 2-6 Dec. 51 Postulate Processing 183 2-7 Jan. 52 An After noon with Ron 196 2-8 Feb. 52 Cause and Effect 208 SUPPLEMENT TO SCIENCE OF SURVIVAL No. 1 Sept. All Possible Aberrations 157 2 Sept. 51 Validation Processing 163 3 Dec. 51 MEST Processing 188 4 Feb. 52 Effort Processing vi THE JOURNAL OF SCIENTOLOGY Issue 1-G ca. Aug. 52 What is Scientology? 268 Electronics Gives Life to Freud’s Theory 269 The Handling of Arthritis 272 2-G ca. Sept. 52 The Running of Concepts 275 3-G ca. Sept. 52 Danger: Black Dianetics! (part 1 of 3 ) 280 4-G ca. Oct. 52 The Loophole in Guarded Rights (part 2 of 3) 282 5-G ca. Oct. 52 Records of Mind Are Permanent (part 3 of 3) 284 6-G ca. Nov. 52 Procedures for Theta Clearing 289 7-G ca. Nov. 52 Sanity Needs Creation-Destruction Balance 293 The Components of Experience 295 New Data Doesn’t Invalidate Early, Proven Techniques (part 1 of 5) 300 Thetan, to Be "Sane", Must Learn How He’s Been Caring for Body (part 2 of 5) 301 Preclears Must Be Audited According to Their Condition (part 3 of 5) 302 Preclears Should Be Processed; Education Isn’t Auditor’s Task (part 4 of 5) 304 Auditor First Should Know Tools Before He Goes in for Artistic (part 5 of 5) 305 8-G 9-G 10-G 11-G 12-G ca. Dec. 52 ca. Dec. 52 ca. Jan. 53 ca. Feb. 53 15 Mar. 53 13-G ca. Apr. 53 Marital Scientology 309 14-G ca. Apr. 53 Child Scientology 319 15-G ca. May 53 "The Old Man’s Case-Book" 337 16-G ca. June 53 This is Scientology—The Science of Certainty 374 17-G ca. June 53 The Limitations of Homo Novis 403 18-G ca. July 53 Off the Time Track 418 21-G ca. Oct. 53 The Theory of Communication 464 22-G ca. Dec. 53 What an Auditor Should Know vii ASSOCIATE NEWSLETTER No. 23 Apr. 53 312 28 Apr. 53 315 2 ca. May 53 330 3 ca. May 53 339 4 ca. May 53 365 5 18 June 53 401 6 ca. July 53 408 7 ca. July 53 412 8 ca. Aug. 53 429 9 4 Sept. 53 452 10 ca. Sept. 53 (last) 19 Nov. 53 Technique Bulletin 4560 viii PROFESSIONAL AUDITOR’S BULLETIN No. 10 May 53 General Comments, Group Processing and a Summary of New Work: Certainties 346 2 ca. May 53 General Comments, SOP 8 and a Summary of SOP 8A 353 3 ca. June 53 Certainty Processing 397 4 ca. June 53 Beingness and Certainty Processing 406 5 ca. July 53 About PABs 411 6 ca. July 53 Case Opening 419 7 ca. Aug. 53 Six Steps to Better Beingness 423 8 ca. Aug. 53 Viewpoint Processing 431 9 ca. Sept. 53 Formula H 447 10 ca. Sept. 53 Change Processing 453 11 ca. Oct. 53 What the Thetan Is Trying to Do 461 12 ca. Oct. 53 The Cycle of Action of an Explosion 467 13 ca. Nov. 53 On Human Behavior 473 14 ca. Nov. 53 On Human Character 482 15 ca. Dec. 53 Acceptance Level Processing 485 16 ca. Dec. 53 Acceptance Level Processing ix LONG CONTENTS Introduction, 1 The riddle of Man’s behavior, The story of how Dianetics and Scientology came about, 1 The basic nature of Man, 2 Development of Scientology, 3 A future without crime, insanity or war, 4 Spring 1950 TERRA INCOGNITA: THE MIND, 6 Dianetics, reason evolved, 6 Comanome, 7 Technique of Dianetics, 8 Selection of personnel, 9 Dianetics, original goal, 9 ca. 1950 THE AIMS OF THE HUBBARD DIANETIC RESEARCH FOUNDATION, 13 D A B V o l . 1 , N o s . 1 - 2 , J u l y - A u g . . 1 9 5 0 S T A N D A R D P R O C E D U R E , 15 Starting the case, 15 Opening the case and running engrams, 15 Reverie, 1 5 Run pleasure incidents in this fashion, 15 Grief engrams result from losses of position, allies, or things, 16 File clerk and somatic strip, 16 Running engrams, 17 Removing demon circuit and valence commands, 18 Straight line memory, 19 When a lock has been contacted, 19 Reduce the earliest engrams, 20 When demon circuits or valence shifters have been contacted and reduced, 20 Run the case, 20 Standard Procedure Chart, 21 DAB Vol. 1, No. 3, Sept. 1950 HOW TO RELEASE A CHRONIC SOMATIC, 24 Straight memory, 24 Straight memory and reverie, 24 Complete release, 25 Clearing, 25 Oct. 1950 THE ANALYTICAL MIND, 27 Analytical Dianetics, 27 Wide difference between capability and cause, 28 Neurosurgical operations, reasons these methods continue, 29 Misconception regarding the analytical mind, 30 Analytical mind, ability to mimic, 31 Analytical mind, powers of, 32 Analytical mind, how it remembers, 33 One of the prime operating mechanisms of the analytical mind, 34 World conqueror operates with a perverted dynamic, x DAB Vol. 1, No. 4, Oct. 1950 DIANETICS AND RELIGION, 38 Orderly faith, 38 Zealotism, 3 8 Atheism, 38 1 Nov. 1950 THE INTENSIVE PROCESSING PROCEDURE, 39 Basic definition of Intensive Processing, 39 Intensive Processing, 39 Purpose of psychometry, 39 Chemical assist, 40 Necessity level and auditing, 42 1 Nov. 1950 GROUP DIANETICS (excerpt), 43 DAB Vol. 1, No. 5, Nov. 1950 THE PROCESSING OF CHILDREN, 44 Three major steps in the processing of children, 44 Language in the child’s reactive bank, 44 The accessibility of children, 45 Steps in addition to processing, 46 Dianetic education of parents, 46 Education of the child, 47 Semantic re-orientation, 47 Shifting environment during auditing, 48 Special problems, 49 Dividends, 49 16 Nov. 1950 AN ADDITION TO STANDARD PROCEDURE, 50 20 Nov. 1950 INSTRUCTION PROTOCOL, 51 Testing as a screen, 51 Troubles with students in training, 51 End product of training programs, 52 Training program, 52 DAB Vol. 1, No. 6, Dec. 1950 HANDLING THE PSYCHOTIC, 55 The usual reaction to psychosis, 55 The attitude of the professional, 56 Present outlook, 5 6 The classification of psychotics, 57 Three types of psychotics: computational, dramatizing, missing-parts, 57 Problems peculiar to psychotics, 58 Family relationships, 59 Accessibility, 60 Four types of treatment which will not help in handling psychotics, 60 Processing techniques, 61 Working near the psychotic break, 62 General working rules for an auditor, 62 Straight line memory, 63 12 Dec. 1950 CERTIFICATION BOARD DUTIES AND RESPONSIBILITIES, 65 Issuance of temporary certificates, 65 Requirements for permanent certification, 65 Examiner, trust placed in, 66 Examiner’s information line to Director of Training, 66 Purpose of Certification Board, xi Jan. 1951 DIANOMETRY—YOUR ABILITY AND STATE OF MIND, 68 Sanity and insanity, 68 The evolution of logic, 70 Process of logic consists of, 71 Graph of logic, 72 Processes of computation, 72 Errors to which the mind is liable, 76 Potential value equation, 77 Three types of minds, 79 Examples of the types of minds, 80 Tests for types of cases, 82 DAB Vol. 1, No. 7, Jan. 1951 GROUP DIANETICS, 84 Description of dynamics, 84 Cycle of a group receiving an engram, 85 Processing the group engram, 86 Principle of the introduction of an arbitrary, 87 Primary mission of Theta is the conquest of MEST, the individual must have this in each of his four dynamics, 88 Jan. 1951 DIAGNOSIS AND REPAIR OF GROUPS, 91 Ethical level of a group, 91 Ethics, distinction from morals, 91 Death, inclination towards, 92 Relation of altitude to effect of individual on group, 92 Group necessity value, 93 Effect on group of energy volume at high tone level, 93 Jan. 1951 THE CREDO OF A TRUE GROUP MEMBER, 94 Jan. 1951 THE CREDO OF A GOOD AND SKILLED MANAGER, 96 DAB Vol. 1, No. 8, Feb. 1951 THE THEORY OF AFFINITY, REALITY AND COMMUNICATION, 98 Affinity, 98 Communication, 99 Reality, 99 ARC down, 101 ARC up, 102 Processing and ARC, 103 DAB Vol. 1, No. 9, Mar. 1951 THE PROBLEM OF SEDATION, 104 Don’t process a person who is under sedation, 104 When to begin processing, 105 Observed action of sedatives and hypnotics, 105 DAB Vol. 1, No. 10-11, Apr.-May 1951 LOCK SCANNING, 107 Mechanism of scanning, 107 Technique of scanning, 108 Scanning speeds, 108 Basic use of lock scanning, 1 xii Scanning a chain of locks, 109 Reduction of lock chains, 110 Three special chains needing scanning, 110 Additional uses of lock scanning, 111 Lock scanning to run out past auditing, 111 DAB Vol. 1, No. 12, June 1951 PREVENTIVE DIANETICS, 113 Formula of Preventive Dianetics, 113 Industrial accident prevention, 115 On the nation’s highways, 117 The pregnant woman, 118 Morals and ethics, 119 Family life, 120 DAB Vol. 2, No. 1, July 1951 EDUCATION AND THE AUDITOR, 124 Acceptance: by authority or agreement, 124 Evaluation of data, 125 DAB Vol. 2, No. 1, July 1951 ABERRATIONS AND GENIUS, 130 ca. 1951 TEACHING, 131 D A B V o l . 2 , N o . 2 , A u g . 1 9 5 1 A N E S S A Y O N M A N A G E M E N T , 133 Management, 133 Management is a specialty, 133 Source of goals, 134 Character of goals, 135 Group’s three spheres of interest and action, 135 True groups, 136 Tone scale of governments or companies or groups, 137 Power of an organization, 139 Tenets of an organization, 143 DAB Vol. 2, No. 2, Aug. 1951 HOW TO PICK UP OCCLUDED DATA, 144 DAB Vol. 2, No. 2, Aug. 1951 THE "26" PERCEPTICS, 145 DAB Vol. 2, No. 3, Sept. 1951 BASIC REASON—BASIC PRINCIPLES, 148 Dianetics a new simplicity, 148 Survival dependent upon reason, 149 Educational approaches, 149 Self-determinism and reason, 149 Types of processing cases, 150 Processing approaches, 150 Function of the mind, 151 Attitudes to environment, 152 Theory of natural selection, 152 Controlled reason, 153 Processing as domination, 153 Self-determinism explained, 153 Reaction of life to pain perceptics, xiii Operation of the mind, 155 Interruption of self-determinism, 155 Imaginative quality of mind, 155 Interrupted motor action, 156 SOS Supplement No. 1, Sept. 1951 ALL POSSIBLE ABERRATIONS, 157 Survival is subdivided into eight parts, 157 Dynamics suppressed in two ways, 159 Dynamic Straight Wire Chart, 160 Examples of suppression of dynamics by other dynamics, 160 SOS Supplement No. 2, Sept. 1951 VALIDATION PROCESSING, 163 Attacking entheta with too much entheta enturbulates, 163 Validate the analytical and neglect the reactive, 163 DAB Vol. 2, No. 4, Oct. 1951 SELF-DETERMINED EFFORT PROCESSING, 167 Rationality defined, 168 Nature of mind, 168 Acceptance of counter-effort, 169 Perception posts, 169 Processing efforts, 169 Processing engrams, 170 Self-determinism validated, 170 DAB Vol. 2, No. 5, Nov. 1951 AN ESSAY ON AUTHORITARIANISM, 173 Conquest of MEST by Theta, 173 Entheta and enMEST, 175 Creation and destruction, 176 Concept of authoritarianism, 178 DAB Vol. 2, No. 5, Nov. 1951 A BRIEF HISTORY OF PSYCHOTHERAPY, 181 DAB Vol. 2, No. 6, Dec. 1951 POSTULATE PROCESSING, 183 Areas of static thinking, 183 General areas of postulation, 183 Postulate Tone Scale, 184 Postulate Processing Procedure, 185 Scanning A-R-C, 186 Basic goals, 187 Deep and light processing, 187 SOS Supplement No. 3, Dec. 1951 MEST PROCESSING, 188 Cycle of conquest, 188 Theta’s tendency to own or be owned, 189 Interpersonal relations, 189 Attacking self, 190 Symbology of language, 190 Aims of MEST Processing, 191 MEST Processing Procedure, 191 Pro-survival/Contra-survival Processing, 192 MEST Processing and emotional tones, 192 Processing memory recalls, xiv DAB Vol. 2, No. 7, Jan. 1952 AN AFTERNOON WITH RON, 196 An informal discussion on auditing techniques, 196 Running regret, blame, sympathy, etc. on chronic somatic of wearing glasses, 196 Run postulate made about eyes in incident, 200 Repeater technique in Postulate Processing, 203 Steps to find computation, 204 How to work with original incident of overt act, 204 D A B V o l . 2 , N o . 8 , F e b . 1 9 5 2 C A U S E A N D E F F E C T , 208 Cause and effect necessarily inter-operate as a person experiences life, 208 Elective randomity, 209 Desire for effect, 209 Interaction of mind and body, 209 Group relationships, 210 Responsibility for one’s memories, 210 Processing cause and effect, 211 Seriousness, 2 11 What is hidden, 212 Consistent action, 212 Sympathy, 213 Trust-distrust, 2 1 3 Blame and regret, 213 Full responsibility, 213 SOS Supplement No. 4, Feb. 1952 EFFORT PROCESSING, 214 Motion is common to everything in physical universe, 214 Law concerning effort and organisms, 214 List used to exhaust old pain, 215 Feb. 1952 PROCESSING OF AUDITORS, 216 List of auditor’s efforts, emotions, and thoughts related to processing which must be run, 216 June 1952 ELECTROPSYCHOMETRIC AUDITING—OPERATOR’S MANUAL, 221 Historical data of electropsychometric auditing, 221 Principle of lie detector, 222 Lie detector is registering emotion contained in past incidents or present time situations which depend on the charge in the past incidents, 222 Invention of electropsychometer, 223 Theory of operation, 224 E-Meter measures the relative density of the body, 225 Mechanics of operation, 225 E-Meter, principle on which it works, 226 All that you read from an E-Meter is change, 227 How to read the needle, 227 Five reactions of the needle, 229 E-Metering the preclear, 230 June 1952 INDIVIDUAL TRACK MAP, 232 Three principal tracks in which the auditor is interested, xv June 1952 A KEY TO THE UNCONSCIOUS SYMBOLOGICAL PROCESSING, 239 A brief summary of how to use this book, 239 Symbological Processing, goal of, 239 Questions of the Symbological Processing counselor, 240 General purpose of Symbological Processing, 241 Procedure of Symbological Processing, 241 General causes of mental aberration, 242 Tone Scale, scale of emotional tones, 243 Differentiation and identification, 244 July 1952 A STEP BY STEP BREAKDOWN OF 88, 267 JOS Issue 1-G, ca. Aug. 1952 WHAT IS SCIENTOLOGY?, 268 JOS Issue 1-G, ca. Aug. 1952 ELECTRONICS GIVES LIFE TO FREUD’S THEORY, 269 "Technique 100" or "Associative Processing", 269 Needle manifestations, 270 JOS Issue 1-G, ca. Aug. 1952 THE HANDLING OF ARTHRITIS, 272 Arthritis, chronic somatic of depository type, 272 Processing of chronic arthritic, 272 JOS Issue 2-G, ca. Sept. 1952 THE RUNNING OF CONCEPTS, 275 Hubbard Chart of Attitudes and Concept Running, 275 Conditions and positions and states run as concepts, 276 Routine for Concept Running, 276 Sept. 1952 AUDITING FORMULAE FROM S C I E N T O L O G Y 8 8 , 278 Auditing formulae to make a theta clear, 278 JOS Issues 3-G, 4-G & 5-G, ca. Sept.-Oct. 1952 DANGER: BLACK DIANETICS!, 280 Efforts to influence and prevail over the minds of individuals, groups, and nations, 281 Basic technique of hypnotism, 281 The loophole in guarded rights, 282 White Dianetics, 282 First basic principle of Black Dianetics, 283 First law of Dianetics, 283 Records of mind are permanent, 284 Pain is caused by effort counter to effort of individual as a whole, 284 Restimulation is occasioned by some part of the early recording being approximated in the environment in the present, 285 JOS Issue 6-G, ca. Nov. 1952 PROCEDURES FOR THETA CLEARING, 289 Standard Operating Procedure for theta clearing, 289 Step I: Positive Exteriorizing, 289 Step II: Negative Exteriorizing, xvi Step III: By Orientation, 290 Step IV: Ridge Running, 290 Step V: DED-DEDEX running, 290 Step VI: A-R-C Straight Wire, 290 Step VII: Present Time Body Orientation, 290 JOS Issue 7-G, ca. Nov. 1952 SANITY NEEDS CREATION-DESTRUCTION BALANCE, 293 Space, time and energy have their parallels in start, stop and change, 293 Cycle of a universe, 293 Assessment of a case using Dynamics graph, 293 JOS Issue 7-G, ca. Nov. 1952 THE COMPONENTS OF EXPERIENCE, 295 Space, time and energy in experience become Be, Have and Do, the component parts of experience itself, 295 Space could be said to be BE, 295 Essence of time is apparently possession, 295 Energy can be summed into DO, 296 Loss is always identified with HAVE, 296 Change is essentially the redirection of energy, 296 JOS Issues 8-G, 9-G, 10-G, 11-G & 12-G, ca. Dec. 1952-15 Mar. 1953 NEW DATA DOESN’T INVALIDATE EARLY, PROVEN TECHNIQUES, 300 Consistency of theory, 300 Thetan, to be "sane," must learn how he’s been caring for body, 301 Preclears must be audited according to their condition, 302 Preclear must be processed at his own level, 303 Preclears should be processed; education isn’t auditor’s task, 304 Auditor first should know tools before he goes in for artistic, 305 JOS Issue 13-G, ca. Apr. 1953 MARITAL SCIENTOLOGY, 309 Communication is root of marital success, 309 Test for sanity: what is the communication lag of the individual, 310 15 Apr. 1953 ADMIRATION PROCESSING, 311 Standard Operating Procedure (SOP 5): amended, 311 Associate Newsletter, 23 Apr. 1953, 312 Degree of Doctor of Scientology, 312 Group Auditor’s Course, 312 Associate Newsletter, 28 Apr. 1953, 315 Theta clearing and aberration, what LRH is trying to do, 315 Reduction of the reactive mind, 315 What Scientology does, 316 JOS Issue 14-G, ca. Apr. 1953 CHILD SCIENTOLOGY, 319 Group Processing of children, 319 Process given to groups of children, xvii Results of group processing children, 321 Theory underlying child processing, 323 Discipline of imagination essential in any learning process, 324 Creation and control of mental images utilizes and disciplines energy, 324 What is a mock-up, 326 Group Processing of children, how it is done, 327 1 May 1953 SCIENTOLOGY 8-8008 UNLIMITED TECHNIQUES, 329 Holding MEST Points, 329 Comparison, 329 Duplication, 3 29 List mock-ups, 3 29 Spacation, 329 Unmocking, 3 29 Associate Newsletter No. 2, ca. May 1953, 330 Desire for pain, 333 Craving for work, 333 JOS Issue 15-G, ca. May 1953 "THE OLD MAN’S CASE-BOOK", 337 Auditing of babies, 337 Auditing of animals, 338 Associate Newsletter No. 3, ca. May 1953, 339 Group Processing plan, 339 Tape shipments, 340 General scene, 340 Scientology as "the science of certainty", 340 Personal note, 342 How to become a Doctor of Scientology, 343 PAB No. 1,10 May 1953 GENERAL COMMENTS, GROUP PROCESSING AND A SUMMARY OF NEW WORK: CERTAINTIES, 346 First goals, the control of the reactive mind and betterment of the analytical mind, reached, 346 Group processing and special auditing to reach above the group high, 347 Group Processing Formula, 348 Summary of new work—May 8, 1953, 349 Certainty itself is knowledge; a datum is secondary knowledge, 349 The most certain certainty is perception; the least certainty evaluation, 349 Advantages of "Self Analysis" Mock-up Processing, 349 Processing of certainties, 350 Role that communication plays in game called existence, 350 Affinity, communication and reality related, 350 Communication lag index as test of aberration, 351 Method of communication, 351 Levels of communication, 351 Beingness, communication, space, 352 Communication index lag, handling of, 352 The double terminal assist, 352 Double-terminaling and Dianetics, xviii PAB No. 2, May 1953 GENERAL COMMENTS, SOP 8 AND A SUMMARY O F S O P 8 A , 353 General comment, 353 Handling of groups, 353 Dissemination method, 353 Building a practice, 3 54 Level of awareness, 356 Auditor certainty and results, 357 The Factors, 358 A summary of SOP 8A, 359 Chronic somatic, handling of, 359 Why the occluded case is occluded, 360 V level case and solution, 362 Associate Newsletter No. 4, ca. May 1953, 365 Training and skill of auditors, 365 Teaching problem and handling of, 367 Instructor’s attitude, 367 Auditor, what he should know, 368 Valence shifting, enforcement of viewpoint, 369 General news, 369 Student certification, 372 JOS Issue 11G, ca. June 1953 THIS IS SCIENTOLOGY—THE SCIENCE OF CERTAINTY, 374 Foreword, 374 The Factors, 375 This is Scientology, 3 76 Scientology is the science of knowledge, 376 Ability to observe, 376 Para-Scientology, 377 The road to sanity, 377 Certainty is clarity of observation, 377 The triangle of certainty of awareness, 378 Uncertainty is the product of two certainties, 379 Two general types of mind, 379 Goals of the two minds, 380 What time consists of, 380 Eight dynamics and the three universes, 380 Downward and upward spirals on the tone scale, 381 Characteristics of top and bottom of tone scale, 381 Energy flow, 382 Concern of two viewpoints is attention, 382 Reactive mind’s conception of viewpoint, 384 Characteristic actions of the energy produced by the analytical mind, 384 Reaching and withdrawing, 384 Safe techniques, 388 The curse of the world today, 389 Standard Operating Procedure 8, 390 SOP 8 Step I, 390 SOP 8 Step II, 390 SOP 8 Step III—Spacation, 390 SOP 8 Step IV—Expanded GITA, 390 SOP 8 Step V—Present Time Differentiation; Exteriorization by Scenery, 392 SOP 8 Step VI—A-R-C Straight Wire, xix SOP 8 Step VII—Psychotic Cases, 392 Appendix No. 1 to SOP 8, 392 SOP 8 Appendix No. 1—Step I, 392 SOP 8 Appendix No. 1—Step II, 393 Appendix No. 2 of SOP 8—Certainty Processing, 393 Anatomy and resolution of maybe, 393 Resolution of chronic somatics, 393 Resolution of lack of space, 394 Basic technique of Certainty Processing, 394 Short 8, 395 PAB No. 3, ca. June 1953 CERTAINTY PROCESSING, 397 Anatomy and resolution of maybe, 397 Resolution of chronic somatics, 397 Resolution of lack of space, 398 Basic technique of Certainty Processing, 398 Associate Newsletter No. 5,18 June 1953, 401 Arrangements for Doctorate degrees, 401 Communication of material, 402 JOS Issue 17-G, ca. June 1953 THE LIMITATIONS OF HOMO NOVIS, 403 Theta being is principal target of auditor, 403 Liabilities of MEST body, 403 Qualities of theta being, 404 PAB No. 4, ca. June 1953 BEINGNESS AND CERTAINTY PROCESSING, 406 Beingness and cause and effect, 406 Occlusion, 406 Communication, 406 Matched or double terminals, 407 Associate Newsletter No. 6, ca. July 1953, 408 Organization, 408 Courses available, 408 Associates, 409 Short 8A and occluded cases, 410 PAB No. 5, ca. July 1953 ABOUT PABs, 411 Associate Newsletter No. 7, ca. July 1953, 412 Organization strategy and tactics, 412 HAS, what it is, 413 "Opposition" to Scientology, 415 Pictures, how they are made, 415 Beingness Processing, 416 Cycle of wasting, 416 Freud, 416 Analysis of bullfight, 417 JOS Issue 18-G, ca. July 1953 OFF THE TIME TRACK, xx PAB No. 6, ca. July 1953 CASE OPENING, 419 Mind and body, 419 Physical illness—cure before engram running, 420 Pre-auditing steps, 421 PAB No. 7, ca. Aug. 1953 SIX STEPS TO BETTER BEINGNESS, 423 Six unlimited processes, 424 Take Ten Minutes of Nothing, 425 Duplication, Short 8, Step E, 425 Spacation (Step III of SOP 8), 426 Contact (Step VII of SOP 8), 426 Self Analysis (Step VI of SOP 8), 426 Opposite Pole Processing, 427 Six Steps for Self-Auditing (SSSA), 427 Associate Newsletter No. 8, ca. Aug. 1953, 429 International Congress of Dianeticists and Scientologists, 429 Road to Doctorate, 429 PAB No. 8, ca. Aug. 1953 VIEWPOINT PROCESSING, 431 Structure and bacteria, 431 Techniques, evaluation of, 431 Recommended techniques, 43 2 Gradient scale of cases, 435 Tone scale and cause and effect, 436 Cause and effect, 438 Viewpoint Processing, 439 Effective computations to be run, 440 Viewpoint Processing technique, 440 Primary requisite of the viewpoint, 441 Time factor of the viewpoint, 442 Invalidation is basically non-attention, 443 Center centerness of all thinking, 443 P A B N o . 9 , c a . S e p t . 1 9 5 3 F O R M U L A H , 447 Use of Formula H, 448 Resolution of geographical areas, 448 Para-Scientology, 449 Geographical processing, 449 Example of Formula H, 450 Associate Newsletter No. 9, 4 Sept. 1953, 452 Requested report of statistics, 452 PAB No. 10, ca. Sept. 1953 CHANGE PROCESSING, 453 Fixation in space, 453 Method of running aberrative evaluation, 454 Associate Newsletter No. 10, ca. Sept. 1953 TECHNIQUE BULLETIN, 456 Computation of workability of techniques, 456 Cycle that something would solve everything, xxi PAB No. 11, ca. Oct. 1953 WHAT THE THETAN IS TRYING TO DO, 461 Thetan’s own mock-ups, 461 Change in Step 6 (Opposite Poles) of Six Steps of Self Auditing, 463 JOS Issue 21-G, ca. Oct. 1953 THE THEORY OF COMMUNICATION, 464 Communication, most important factor of ARC triangle, 464 ARC triangle, formulation of, 464 Communication, shift of a particle from one part of space to another part of space, 464 Communication is an anchor point, 465 Communication lag is inverse to amount of space a person has, 465 PAB No. 12, ca. Oct. 1953 THE CYCLE OF ACTION OF AN EXPLOSION, 467 Cycle of action of life is cycle of action of an explosion, 467 Cycle of explosion audited in brackets, 468 Cycle of explosion, what it is, 469 Knowledge is basically an impact, 470 28 Oct. 1953 STEP III AUDITING COMMANDS, 472 PAB No. 13, ca. Nov. 1953 ON HUMAN BEHAVIOR, 473 Characteristics of aberrative personality, 473 "Merchants of fear", 473 Method of processing aberrative personality, 474 Computation of aberrative personality, 475 Communication lag of aberrative personality, 475 Associate Newsletter, 19 Nov. 1953, 480 PAB No. 14, ca. Nov. 1953 ON HUMAN CHARACTER, 482 Body’s effort to make something out of nothing, 482 Characteristics of love, 483 PAB No. 15, ca. Dec. 1953 ACCEPTANCE LEVEL PROCESSING, 485 Man, a body and a spirit, 485 Acceptance Level Processing, what it does, 485 Acceptance Level Processing, how it is done, 485 Mest universe actions, law of, 486 JOS Issue 22-G, ca. Dec. 1953 WHAT AN AUDITOR SHOULD KNOW, 488 Necessity for auditors to review the entire process of the evolution of the science, 489 PAB No. 16, ca. Dec. 1953 ACCEPTANCE LEVEL PROCESSING, 491 How to make a MEST Clear, 491 Acceptance Level Processing specialized list, 492 Remedying scarcity, 493 Character Processing Chart, xxii Introduction There is adequate and long background to Dianetics and Scientology. For fifty thousand years Man has been faced with the enigma of himself and his fellows. And Man has been victimized by impulses and brutal instincts which have caused him to erect in self-protection, prisons and legal codes and complex social systems. Man has not felt safe from Man. And indeed, the conduct of men down the ages has not much justified belief or faith. Wars, murder and arson, treachery and betrayal, cynicism and destruction have marred his progress until history itself has become a long montage of battles, murders and running blood. Confronted with this aspect in himself and his fellows, Man has long searched for an answer to the riddle of his own behavior and for ways to remedy that behavior. Long before Diogenes, Man was searching for such answers to his questions. In Babylon, Chaldea, India and even into distant and primitive times those men who could think found concern in the antisocial and unreasonable conduct of their fellows. Throughout all these ages, little by little, bits of the answer were forthcoming. No flashing and spectacular result in modem times can gainsay the brilliance of achievement of the early searchers in the field of the human mind, for these, out of the morass of superstition and taboo, sorted out the first phenomena vital to the solution of the problem. Man’s search for the answer to his own riddle was quickened during the last century by two things: the first was the energy and curiosity of Sigmund Freud and the second was the mathematics of James Clerk Maxwell who gave to us the fundamentals of energy. To talk of the faults of Freud, as do those who practice psychoanalysis today, is ungenerous. This great pioneer, against the violent objections of medical doctors and the psychiatrists of his day, ventured to put forth the theory that memory was connected with present time behavior and that by talk alone a patient could be made well. Whatever the repute of the libido theory, whatever the disillusionment of this great man himself—for he admitted defeat before he died—his work and method of address were a valuable step toward an eventual solution. The probable reason why this solution did not earlier appear has to do with the knowledge we have gained in this century about the physical universe and its structure. The mind was a problem which had to be solved from a knowledge both of humanity and of nuclear physics and modem mathematics. The final solution was simple. The route to it required the physical universe knowledge given to us by searchers in the physical sciences and mathematics. The story of how Scientology and Dianetics came about will demonstrate this. It will illustrate the background knowledge which was apparently necessary to carry forth to conclusion work which was initiated by Freud and the countless generations behind him. In the Twenties I was fortunate enough to know Commander Thompson of the Medical Corps of the United States Navy. He was a colorful man, poised, polished, greatly traveled, curious in half a hundred sciences. The United States Navy, having heard much of the work of Freud in Vienna, sent an officer, Commander Thompson, to study under Freud and bring back to the Navy any benefit from psychoanalysis. When I knew Thompson he was but lately returned from long study with the master. And Thompson was not too impatient and not too bored to communicate something of Freud’s teachings to a boy. As a dashing and brilliant figure, Thompson was enough to incite enthusiasm in any youngster and I fear I imposed greatly on his patience and his time. But a career in the humanities was not on schedule for me. My father, a naval officer, decreed that I would study engineering and mathematics and so I found myself obediently studying the physical sciences at George Washington University in Washington, D.C. A course called “Atomic and Molecular Phenomena” had been instituted there. Today we call it Nuclear Physics. I was fortunate enough to be an early student of that subject in what I believe was the first course in nuclear physics formally taught in the United States. While at the university I adventured upon certain researches which were off curriculum. I wanted to find the smallest particle or unit of energy Man could contact. And, recalling Thompson’s teachings, decided to investigate the energy of the human mind. Considerable travel and examination of the cultures of Man, considerable study in philosophy, occasional encouragement from such men as Will Durant brought me by 1938 into possession of the basic formulas of human behavior. They were rough, those early conclusions. They were crude. And they lacked a technique of application. The basic nature of Man is not bad. It is good. One should realize that as a possibility. The basic nature of Man itself is not at fault. But the basic primitive adventures of Man were violent and savage and, as Freud supposed, it is that imposed brutality which Man must hold in check. Living with the beasts of the jungle, caught at every hand by death and terror, early Man could not but develop brutal reactions. Murder and war were the commonplace. Man had not learned to control his environment and so he had to combat it. Every walk forth from his cave might mean death or battle. Every mischance might bring about catastrophe. Man had no choice to be anything but brutal and savage. Then came civilization. Then came law and order and the right to eat without being killed. Then came the partial control of the surroundings sufficient to call Man’s state civilized. But Man could not wholly escape his heritage. Here today, when Man supposedly can reason, murder, arson and war stalk his shaded streets and homes. Man, in an apparent civilization, is haunted by instincts he cannot understand. He has prisons where he puts men such as one cages wild beasts. He has institutions which house millions upon millions of men who are insane and can no longer reason. And Man gazes with collective horror upon the prospect of being obliterated by a weapon so sweeping and terrible that all of civilization may perish in the click of a button—the atomic bomb. Man is grasping wildly today for some method of restraining the brutality of his fellows or even himself. And he is motivated in that brutality by all the crimes of his yesterdays. Man is subjugated and made afraid, he is made brutal and wicked by basic instincts. In order to be civilized Man must repress those instincts. The moment he represses them he becomes sick. Thus the solution is impossible. Unless Man can reach inside himself and eradicate in some manner the things which make him kill and steal and make war. Can instincts be eradicated from the mind? They certainly can be and with less trouble than anyone ever suspected. And is Man healthy and better with them gone? He is so much better, so much more reliable, so much healthier, so much happier that one immediately finds in him new hope for Mankind. What is the basic nature of Man? Man is basically good. But between him and that goodness lies a savage and twisted past, inherited from all the centuries of his being, the instincts which he had to wear as a primitive, as a savage. They are still there, on full record, there in a world which now must be civilized if Man is not to perish from the earth. The basic impulse of Man is to help his fellows. He is not a monomaniacal fiend, intent only upon his own gain. But the instincts, fears and rages he represses make him seem so. He wants to help his fellows. He wants Man to live. He wants the world to survive. But because he has been taught in the brutal school of tooth and claw that life can be treacherous, he seeks unreasonable and treacherous means of achieving his ends. Take away the savage antisocial impulses of Man, of any man or woman or child, and he is FREE, free to act, to be happy, to gain and to be without fear of what he might do if he let himself loose. Take away these unwanted brutalities and Man’s intelligence rises or even doubles. Take away these impulses and Man’s health of being evidently improves beyond past knowledge. In 1938 I codified certain axioms and phenomena into what I called “Scientology”. Scientology is the science of knowledge or the codification of epistemology. Dianetics was evolved from these. Over two hundred axioms comprise Scientology and embrace Dianetics. Over two hundred new phenomena concerning the human mind have been discovered and cataloged as to their relative importance. In 1948 I wrote a thesis on an elementary technique of application and submitted it to the medical and psychiatric professions for their use or consideration. The data was not utilized. In 1950, I issued a popular book on the subject called Dianetics. The Modern Science of Mental Health. The book, much to the astonishment of myself and everyone else, became a best seller immediately and still sells regularly. Other books followed. The address of Dianetics and Scientology is not to the ill, the insane or the criminal. It is effective in these fields. But its intention is toward the improvement of the able. Men who already can accomplish things can accomplish more. The problems of the society depend upon clear-thinking and sane men. Processing can bring about that state according to long experience. Processing has now become relatively simple. The auditor first must understand the basic axioms of the subject and their meaning in processing. He must have a good grasp of his essential tools. He can gain this understanding in a few weeks if he is quick and intelligent. He must then be able to handle the techniques of application. These are effective and swift. When one starts to handle primitive instincts in a human being, that human being sometimes has the sensation of having lived before. We know the instincts from distant times are there and we know where they are filed and we know how to change the record. It is relatively simple to call up in any human being the basic and underlying records which have haunted Man for generations. No matter how solidly he is repressing them, the instincts are there. When they are in sight and deintensified, he is able to relax, to be free, and to be effective. The simplicity of the present techniques seems to belie the arduousness of their discovery. But they contain all the thousands of years of Man’s search for what makes Man hate Man. Dianetics and Scientology are no more than reason joining research in the humanities and research in the fields of energy and the physical sciences. Once this knowledge was joined, the answers were readily available. Perhaps now it may be possible, in an overwrought world, to do something about the criminals, the insane, about war and the antisocial hatred Man feels for Man. Can we do something for the savage in civilized garb before he ruins this world and all Man? That is a question which the future must answer. I cannot do more than the work I have done and to publish and make available what has been done. Every facility which I have and every knowledge which we have gained is at your disposal. It is at your disposal to improve you, to make crime a thing of yesterday, to banish war forever. But it is up to you. 6 February 1952 Wichita, Kansas