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Technical Dictionary of Dianetics and Scientology

by

L. Ron Hubbard

Guide to the Dictionary

This is the long awaited and much heralded Dianetics and Scientology Technical Dictionary. It contains and defines almost all of the words and abbreviations used in connection with auditing technology and with the training of auditors to date in Dianetics and Scientology. Many words have several definitions taken from various periods of the development of Dianetics and Scientology.

A large amount of L. Ron Hubbard’s books, tape lectures, articles and technical bulletins etc. were researched for many years by a team of researchers. The period from 1950 to 1975 was heavily consulted for the terms and their definitions.

The student can readily see the progressive development through time of the vocabulary of Dianetics and Scientology by its Source and Founder, L. Ron Hubbard as well as the changes that have come about through his continued research. More important however, is the fact that all of the materials of the subjects remain valid and in force today.

In compiling this dictionary the researchers and editors have chosen to omit the conventional use of the ellipsis (. . .) which would indicate an intentional omission of words in the definition. This is so that each definition imparts a complete uninterrupted thought to the reader and allows him to form a concept of the word without distraction or the inclusion of data not contributory to the definition.

The references at the end of each definition allow the reader to consult the Source of the definition if further information is desired.

In addition to giving an understanding of the vocabulary of the subjects and clearing up misunderstood words and abbreviations in connection with Dianetics and Scientology, there is a further major use for this dictionary; The student requiring information about any area of Dianetics or Scientology need only look up the words connected with that area and he will be provided with references to appropriate material for further study of that area.

As the Tone Scale is referred to in many definitions a full Tone Scale appears at the end of the dictionary before the reference summary.

The Editors

Introduction

In the early sixties the research which I did on study and study materials brought so view the necessity of an accurate and modernized dictionary of Dianetics and Scientology. Despite the pressing need of this so many other research projects existed that I did not have an opportunity to personally engage upon this work of definitions. All of the grades and OT levels remained to be researched in full and therefore I relegated any dictionary compilations to staff action. Almost all the words used in Dianetics and Scientology are defined in the early bulletins in which they first appeared. However, a complete dictionary is a vital necessity and use of it can mean the difference between understanding and not understanding; being able to be an auditor and not being one. Philosophy has always had the liability of gathering to itself a great many new words and labels. The reason for this is that the philosopher finds phenomena in the physical universe or in the mind or humanities which have not hitherto been observed or properly identified. Each one of these tends to require a new word for its description. In actual fact this cycle of new observations requiring new labels is probably the growth of language itself. Language is obviously the product of unsung observers who then popularized a word to describe what had been observed. The system which has been followed in Dianetics and Scientology in labelling phenomena or observed things was originally to make verbs into nouns or vice versa. The practice of developing new nomenclature was actually held to a minimum. However, it was found that many old words in the field of philosophy, when used, conveyed to people an entirely new idea. The exactness of Dianetics and Scientology required a more precise approach. This approach was achieved by special naming with an eye to minimal confusion with already supposed or known phenomena. The Dianetics and Scientology vocabulary is nevertheless not large. It is interesting that many Dianetics and Scientology terms have moved sideways into society and are in common use today. In the search which brought about Dianetics and Scientology many new phenomena were encountered which resulted, for the first time, in a workable, predictable science of the humanities. The introduction of a few words of new meaning to make this possible seems to be a small price to pay. It is the hallmark of the Dianeticist and Scientologist that he uses these words even in his common conversation with ease and facility. The student who is not completely conversant with these exact words as contained in this dictionary will find himself drowsing over his bulletins and utterly appalled when he tries to obtain results which are not forthcoming due to his lack of understanding of some small word. The liability of misunderstood words is not a monopoly of Dianetics and Scientology. In broader university subjects you will find that not only the vocabulary of the subject, but the subject itself is often completely and totally misunderstood, leaving the student ARC broken, upset and even riotous. Whereas the subject of misunderstood words or understood words is, in itself, a broad one, it does not comprise, in itself, the entire technology of study. I hope this dictionary will be of use. Not only in clarifying some of the phenomena of existence, but also speeding greatly your study of Dianetics and Scientology and the results you will be able to attain thereby.

a

A, affinity. (5904C08)

AA, attempted abortion. (DMSMH, p. 245)

A=A=A, 1 . anything equals anything equals anything. This is the way the reactive mind thinks, irrationally identifying thoughts, people, objects, experiences, statements, etc., with one another where little or no similarity actually exists. (Scn AD) 2 . all differences are probably identities and all identities are different and all similarities are imaginary. We have a broad dissertation on this in Dianetics: the Modern Science of Mental Health as it affects insane behavior. Everything is everything else. Mr. X looks at a horse, knows it’s a house, knows it’s a school teacher, so when he sees a horse he is respectful. (HCO PL 26 Apr 70R) 3 . this is the behavior of the reactive mind. Everything is identified with everything on a certain subject. (PDC 20)

ABCD, 1. these are the steps designation of the second run through of R3R as given in the commands for R3R. Usually the auditor simply writes ABCD on his worksheet which shows he has given the command required and designated under A, under B, under C, under D, as and when he gives them to the preclear. (LRH Def. Notes) 2 . after the first time through an incident in Dn and when pc has recounted it, the auditor tells pc, A. “Move to the beginning of the incident.” B. “Tell me when you are there.” C. When pc has said he is, “Scan through to the end of the incident.” D. “Tell me what happened.” (BTB 6 May 69R II)

ABERRATE, to make something diverge from a straight line. The word comes basically from optics . (Dn 55!, p . 65) —adj. Aberrated, departed from rationality, deranged. (EOS, p. 14)

ABERRATED BEHAVIOR, destructive effort toward pro-survival data or entities on any dynamic or effort toward the survival of contra-survival data or entities for any dynamic. (Scn 0-8, p. 86) See ABERRATION.

ABERRATED PERSONALITY, the personality resultant from superimposition, on the genetic personality of personal characteristics and tendencies brought about by all environmental factors, pro-survival and aberrational. (SOS Gloss)

ABERRATION, 1. a departure from rational thought or behavior. From the Latin, aberrare, to wander from; Latin, ab, away, errare, to wander. It means basically to err, to make mistakes, or more specifically to have fixed ideas which are not true. The word is also used in its scientific sense. It means departure from a straight line. If a line should go from A to B, then if it is “aberrated” it would go from A to some other point, to some other point, to some other point, to some other point, to some other point and finally arrive at B. Taken in its scientific sense, it would also mean the lack of straightness or to see crookedly as, in example, a man sees a horse but thinks he sees an elephant. Aberrated conduct would be wrong conduct, or conduct not supported by reason. When a person has engrams, these tend to deflect what would be his normal ability to perceive truth and bring about an aberrated view of situations which then would cause an aberrated reaction to them. Aberration is opposed to sanity, which would be its opposite. (LRH Def. Notes) 2 . an aberrated person wanders from his self-determined course. He no longer goes where he wants to go now, but goes where he has wanted to go in the past. His course is, therefore, not rational, and he seems to go wherever the environment pushes him. He has as many aberrations as he has hidden contrasurvival decisions in his past. (Abil 114A) 3 . mental derangement, any irrational condition. (DMSMH, p. 102) 4 . the aberree’s reactions to and difficulties with his current environment. (DTOT, p. 127) 5 . the manifestation of an engram, and is serious only when it influences the competence of the individual in his environment. (Scn Jour 28-G) 6 . the degree of residual plus or minus randomity accumulated by compelling, inhibiting or unwarranted assisting of efforts on the part of other organisms or the physical (material) universe. (Scn 0-8, p. 86)

ABERRATIVE VALENCE, people from whom one felt that one could not withhold anything were the most aberrative valences on the case. We thus have a new definition for aberrative valences, namely the “cannot withhold from” valence. (PAB 128)

ABERREE, 1. a neologism meaning an aberrated person. (DMSMH, p. 22) 2 . a person not released or cleared. (DMSMH, p. 286) 3 . anybody who has one or more engrams. (EOS, p. 90) 4 . was sometimes used in the early days of Dn to designate an aberrated person. (LRH Def. Notes)

ABILITY, to observe, to make decisions, to act. (SH Spec 131, 6204C03)

ABILITY GAIN, the pc’s recognition that pc can now do things he could not do before. (HCOB 28 Feb 59)

ABILITY RELEASE, expanded Grade IV release. (CG&AC 75) See GRADE IV RELEASE.

ABILITY TO THINK, the capability of the mind to perceive, pose and resolve specific and general problems. (DASF, p. 90)

ABRIDGED STYLE AUDITING, (Level III style), by abridged is meant “abbreviated,” shorn of extras. Any not actually needful auditing command is deleted. In this s t y l e we have shifted from pure rote to a sensible use or omission as needful. We still use repetitive commands expertly, but we don’t use rote that is unnecessary to the situation. (HCOB 6 Nov 64)

ABSOLUTE OVERT ACT, a n absolute overt act would be something destructive on all eight dynamics. (5901C04)

ABSOLUTE RIGHTNESS, the immortality of the individual himself, his children, his group, mankind and the universe and all energy—the infinity of complete survival. (DASF, p. 80)

ABSOLUTE WRONGNESS, the extinction of the universe and all energy and the source of energy—the infinity of complete death. (DASF, p. 80)

ABSOLUTE ZERO, 1. something that does not have mass, doesn’t have wave-length, doesn’t have location and does not have time. (UPC 11) 2. absolute z e r o would be a no-motion, a no-temperature condition. (SH Spec 96, 6112C21)

AC, Ability Congress. (HCOB 29 Sept 66)

ACAD, Academy. (BPL 5 Nov 72R)

ACADEMY, in Scn the academy is that department of the technical division in which courses and training are delivered; Department 11, Division 4. (BTB 12 Apr 72R) Abbr. Acad.

ACC, Advanced Clinical Course. (PAB 71)

ACCELERATION PROCESS, this was an experimental rundown run in 1970- 1971 . It consisted of running down prior ARC breaks preceding engrams; it was superseded by L-10 and Expanded Dianetics. Mentioned in HCOB 21 Dec 69, Solo Auditing and R6EW. (LRH Def. Notes)

ACCEPTABLE EFFECT, one which is real. The person is certain that an effect of some kind or other has occurred. (5707C25)

ACCEPTANCE LEVEL, 1. the degree of a person’s actual willingness to accept people or things, monitored and determined by his consideration of the state or condition that those people or things must be in for him to be able to do so. (PXL Gloss) 2 . what he really could have. (XDN No. 4, 7204C07)

ACCEPTANCE LEVEL PROCESSING, t h a t process which discovers the lowest level of acceptance of the individual and discovers there the prevailing hunger and feeds that hunger by means of mock-ups until it is satiated. The process is not a separate process itself, but is actually a version of Expanded Gita. (PAB 15)

ACCESSIBILITY, 1. the willingness of the preclear to accept auditing and the ability of the auditor and the preclear to work as a team to increase the position of the preclear on the tone scale. (SOS, Bk. 2, p. 187) 2 . the accessibility of an individual has to do with his own ability to communicate with his environment and to communicate with his own past. (5011C22) 3 . generally, the desire of the individual to attain new and higher levels of survival and the betterment of mind and body. (SOS, Bk. 2, p. 185)

ACCIDENT-PRONE, a case where the reactive mind commands accidents. He is a serious menace in any society for his accidents are reactively intentional and they include the destruction of other people who are innocent. (DMSMH, p. 153)

ACC TRs, TRs which have been used on the 1st South African ACC and are a version of the E-meter drills. (HCOB 30 Apr 60)

ACK, acknowledgement. (HCOB 23 Aug 65)

ACK’ED, acknowledged. (BCR, p. 23)

ACKNOWLEDGEMENT, something said or done to inform another that his statement or action has been noted, understood and received. “Very good,” “Okay,” and other such phrases are intended to inform another who has spoken or acted that his statement or action has been accepted. An acknowledgement also tends to confirm that the statement has been made or the action has been done and so brings about a condition not only of communication but of reality between two or more people. Applause at a theater is an acknowledgement of the actor or act plus approval. Acknowledgement itself does not necessarily imply an approval or disapproval or any other thing beyond the knowledge that an action or statement has been observed and is received. In signaling with the morse code the receiver of a message transmits an R to the sender as a signal that the message has been received, which is to say acknowledged. There is such a thing as over-acknowledgement and there is such a thing as under-acknowledgement. A correct and exact acknowledgement communicates to someone who has spoken that what he has said has been heard. An acknowledgement tends to terminate or end the cycle of a communication, and when expertly used can sometimes stop a continued statement or continued action. An acknowledgement is also part of the communication formula and is one of its

steps. The Scientologist, sometimes, in using Scientologese abbreviates this to “Ack”; he “acked” the person. (LRH Def. Notes)

ACT, a stage of processing. Applies solely to the particular process in use at a certain case level. (AP&A Gloss)

ACTION, 1. a motion through space having a certain speed. (SH Spec 42, 6410C13) 2 . action=motion or movement=an act=a consideration that motion has occurred. (FOT, p. 19) 3 . doingness directed towards havingness. (Scn 8-8008, p. 26) 4. action consists of energy outputs and inputs. Action is energy interchanges on a gross mest level. (5203CM05A)

ACTION CYCLE, the creation, growth, conservation, decay and death or destruction of energy and matter in a space. Action cycles produce time; an action cycle goes from 40.0 to 0.0 on the tone scale. (Scn 0-8, p. 25)

ACTION DEFINITION, see DEFINITIONS, TYPES OF.

ACTION PHRASES, 1. words or phrases in engrams or locks (or at 0.1 in present time) which cause the individual to perform involuntary actions on the

time track. Action phrases are effective in the low tone ranges and not effective in the high ranges. As a case progresses up the scale, they lose their power. Types of action phrases are bouncer, down bouncer, grouper, denyer, holder, misdirector, scrambler, and the valence shifters corresponding to these. (SOS Gloss) 2 . those which seem to order the preclear in various directions. The action phrases are bouncers such as, “Get up,” “Get out”; holders such as “Stay here,” “Don’t move”; misdirectors such as “Don’t know whether I’m coming or going,” or “Everything is backwards”; downbouncers such as “Get under,” or “Go back”; groupers such as “Everything happens at once,” “Pull yourself together”; callbacks such as “Come back,” “Please come”; and one other, the denyer, which states that the engram does not exist, such as “There isn’t anything here,” “I can’t see anything.” There is also the valence shifter which shifts the individual from his own identity to the identity of another; the valence-bouncer, which prohibits an individual from going into some particular valence; the valence denyer, which may even deny that the person’s own valence exists; and the valence-grouper, which makes all valences into one valence. These are all the types of action phrases. (SOS, pp. 181-182)

ACTUAL, that which is really true; that which exists despite all apparencies; that which underlies the way things seem to be; the way things really are. (FOT, p. 20)

ACTUAL CYCLE OF ACTION, CREATE, create-create-create, create-counter-create, no creation, nothingness . CREATE = make, manufacture, construct, postulate, bring into beingness= CREATE. Create-create-create=create again continuously one moment after the next=SURVIVAL. Create-counter-create=to create something against a creation=to create one thing and then create something else against it=DESTROY. No creation =an absence of any creation=no creative activity. An ACTUAL cycle of action then consists of various activities, but each and every one of them is creative. The cycle of action contains an APPARENCY of SURVIVAL, but this is actually only a continuous creation. (FOT, pp. 20-21)

ACTUAL GOAL, the dominating significance of the thetan’s own causation which binds together the masses accumulated by the reliable items of an actual GPM. (HCOB 13 Apr 64, Scn VI Part One Glossary of Terms)

ACTUAL GPM, the composite black mass of all the pairs of reliable items and their associated locks, dominated and bound together by the significance of an actual goal and having a definite location as a mass on the time track. (HCOB 13 Apr 64, Scn VIPart One Glossary of Terms)

ACTUALITY, (Scientology Axiom 27), an actuality can exist for one individually, but when it is agreed with by others it can then be said to be a reality. (PXL, p. 175) 2. one’s attitude towards his own universe. (Scn 8-8008, p. 28)

ACUTE, immediate, right now. It doesn’t mean exaggerated. Medically it means simply right now, and rather temporary. (SH Spec 31, 6401C28)

ACUTE INSANITY, one which flares into existence for a few moments or a few days and then subsides, leaving a relatively normal person. (DASF, p. 77)

AD or A.D., after Dianetics (1950) e.g. 1965=AD 15. (HCOB 23 Aug 65)

ADAPTIVE POSTULATE, a pre-Dianetic error that an individual was healthy so long as he was adjusted to his environment. Nothing could be less workable than this “adaptive” postulate. Man succeeds because he adjusts his environment to him, not by adjusting himself to the environment. (SA, p. 112)

AD COURSES, see ADVANCED COURSES.

 

ADDITIVE, a thing which has been added. This usually has a bad meaning in that an additive is said to be something needless or harmful which has been done in addition to standard procedure. Additive normally means a departure from standard procedure. For example, an auditor puts different or additional words into a standard process or command. It means a twist on standard procedure. In common English, it might mean a substance put into a compound to improve its qualities or suppress undesirable qualities. In Dn and Scn it definitely means to add something to the technology procedure resulting in undesirable results. (LRH Def. Notes)

ADMIN, administration or administrator. (HCOB 23 Aug 65)

ADMINISTRATION (ADMIN), a contraction or shortening of the word administration, admin is used as a noun to denote the actions involved in administering an organization. The clerical and executive decisions, actions and duties necessary to the running of an organization, such as originating and answering mail, typing, filing, dispatching, applying policy and all those actions, large and small which make up an organization. Admin is also used to denote the action or fact of keeping auditor’s reports, summary reports, worksheets and other records related to an auditing session. “He kept good admin,” meaning that his summary report, auditor’s report and worksheets were neat, exactly on pattern, in proper sequence and easily understood as well as complete. “His admin was bad”; from the scribble and disorderly keeping of records of the session while it was in progress one could not make out what had happened in the session. You will also see the word admin in connection with the three musts of a well-run organization. It is said that its ethics, tech and admin must be “in,” which mean they must be properly done, orderly and effective. The word derives from minister, which means to serve. Administer means to manage, govern, to apply or direct the application of laws, or discipline, to conduct or execute religious offices, dispense rights. It comes from the Latin, administrare, to manage, carry out, accomplish, to attend, wait, serve. In modern English, when they use administration they mean management or running a government or the group that is in charge of the organization or the state. (LRH Def. Notes)

ADMIN TRs, the purpose of these TRs is to train the student to get compliance with and complete a cycle of action on administrative actions and orders, in spite of the randomities, confusions, justifications, excuses, traps and insanities of the third and sixth dynamics, and to confront such comfortably while doing so. (BTB 7 Feb 71)

ADMIRATION, 1. is the very substance of a communication line, and it is that thing which is considered desirable in the game of the three universes. (COHA, p. 203) 2 . a particle which unites and resolves, like the universal solvent, all types of energy, particularly force. (PAB 8)

ADVANCED CLINICAL COURSE, 1. basically a theory and research course which gives a much further insight into the phenomena of the mind and the rationale of research and investigation. (PAB 71) 2 . L. Roh Hubbard’s special courses personally taught by him, scheduled by him, and sponsored for him by an HCO office. (HCO PL 24 Feb 60) Abbr. ACC.

ADVANCED COURSES, 1. Solo Audit Course, Clearing Course or OT courses. (HCO PL 12 Aug 71 II) 2 . above VA processes, one enters the field of advanced courses, specifically dealing with materials of which one has to solo audit in order to attain the stable gains of the grade. (HCO PL 28 Mar 70) Abbr. Ad Crses.

ADVANCED ORGANIZATION, 1. the advanced courses were at first separate in the Office of LRH at Saint Hill and then became the Advanced Orgs (AOs) under the Sea Org. (HCOB 8 Oct 71 II) 2. that organization which runs the advanced courses. Its products are Clears and OTs. (FO 508)

ADVANCE PROGRAM, 1. the major actions to be undertaken to get the case back on the class chart from wherever he had erroneously gotten to on it. The advance program consists of writing down in sequence every needful step and process missed on the class chart by the case which is now to be done. It gets the preclear or pre-OT up to where he should be. (HCOB 14 Jun 70) 2 . this is what was called a “return program” in the C/S Series. The name was changed from “return” to “advance” as more appropriate. (HCOB 25 Jun 70 II)

A.E.S.P., attitudes, emotions, sensations, pains. (BTB 8 Jan 71R)

AESTHETIC MIND, that mind which, by an interplay of the dynamics, deals with the nebulous field of art and creation. (SOS, Bk. 2, p. 234)

AESTHETIC PRODUCT, Dn Axiom 169: any aesthetic product is a symbolic facsimile or combination of facsimiles of theta or physical universes in varied randomities and volumes of randomities with the interplay of tones. (AP&A, p. 99)

AESTHETICS, the study of ideal form and beauty—it is the philosophy of art, which itself is the quality of communication. (B&C, p. 15)

AFFINITY, 1. the feeling of love or liking for something or someone. Affinity is a phenomena of space in that it expresses the willingness to occupy the same place as the thing which is loved or liked. The reverse of it would be antipathy, “dislike” or rejection which would be the unwillingness to occupy the same space as or the unwillingness to approach something or someone. It came from the French, affinite, affinity, kindred, alliance, nearness and also from the Latin, affnis, meaning near, bordering upon. (LRH Def. Notes) 2 . the ability to occupy the space of, or be like or similar to, or to express a willingness to be something. (SH Spec 83, 6612C06) 3 . the relative distance and similarity of the two ends of a communication line. (Dn 55!, p. 35) 4 . emotional response; the feeling of affection or the lack of it, of emotion or misemotion connected with life. (HCOB 21 Jun 71 I) 5 . the attraction which exists between two human beings or between a human being and another life organism or between a human being and mest or theta or the Supreme Being. It has a rough parallel in the physical universe in magnetic and gravitic attraction. The affinity or lack of affinity between an organism and the environment or between the theta and mest of an organism and within the theta (including entheta) of the organism brings about what we have referred to as emotions. (SOS Gloss) 6 . in its truest definition which is coincidence of location and beingness, that is the ultimate in affinity. (9ACC-10, 5412CM20)

AFFINITY SCALE, 1 . a scale which refers to the individual’s relation with other people. The afflnity scale may refer, at any particular time, to just one or to a small number of people. But as affinity is suppressed repeatedly, the individual will begin to take on an habitual tone level, on the affinity scale, an habitual

reaction to almost all people. (NOTL, p. 102) 2 . the affinity scale includes most of the common emotions, apathy, grief, fear, anger, hostility, boredom, relief, contentment, enthusiasm, exhilaration, inspiration. (SOS Gloss)

AGAINST SCIENTOLOGY, a t t e n t i o n o f f Scientology and protesting Scientology behavior. (HCOB 19 Aug 63)

AGAINST SESSION, attention off own case and talking at the auditor in protest of auditor, PT auditing environment or Scn. (HCOB 19 Aug 63) See also OUT OF SESSION.

AGE FLASH, the auditor says, “When I snap my fingers an age will occur to you. Give me the first number that comes into your mind.” He then snaps his fingers, and the preclear gives him the first number which comes into his head. (SOS, Bk. 2, p. 51)

AGONY, is the deep emotion of boredom. Boredom, in essence, is the warning signal that agony is on its way. (5312CM20)

AGREEMENT, 1. a mutual knowingness, a mutual postulatingness towards certain end products. (SH Spec 71, 6110C25) 2 . two or more people making the same postulates stick. (SH Spec 62, 6110C04) 3 . ability to co-act with or mimic or be mimicked by. (5303M24) 4. a specialized consideration, it is shared in common, and this we call an agreement. (5702C26)

AHMC, Anatomy of the Human Mind Course. (CG&AC 75)

AICL, Advanced Indoctrination Course Lectures. (HCOB 29 Sept 66)

ALL THE WAY SOUTH, Slang. that state of mind at the extreme bottom where the fellow must have total effect on self and could not possibly make any effect of any kind on anybody else. It’s below death. (5707C25)

ALLY, 1 . this is a noun which means an individual who cooperates with, supports and helps another for a common object; a supporter, a friend. In Dn and Scn, it basically means someone who protects a person who is in a weak state and becomes a very strong influence over the person. The weaker person, such as a child, even partakes the characteristics of the ally so that one may find that a person who has, for instance, a bad leg, has it because a protector or ally in his youth had a bad leg. The word is from French and Latin and means to bind together. (LRH Def. Notes) 2 . by ally in Scn, we mean a person from whom sympathy came when the preclear was ill or injured. If the ally came to the preclear’s defense or his words and/or actions were aligned with the individual’s survival, the reactive mind gives that ally the status of always being right— especially if this ally was obtained during a highly painful engram. (HCOB 20 Mar 70)

ALLY COMPUTATION, little more than a mere idiot calculation that anyone who is a friend can be kept a friend only by approximating the conditions wherein the friendship was realized. It is a computation on the basis that one can only be safe in the vicinity of certain people and that one can only be in the vicinity of certain people by being sick or crazy or poor and generally disabled. (DMSMH, p. 243)

ALTER-IS, 1 . a composite word meaning the action of altering or changing the reality of something. Is-ness means the way it is. When someone sees it differently he is doing an alter-is; in other words, is altering the way it is. This is taken from the Axioms. (LRH Def. Notes) 2 . to introduce a change and therefore time and persistence in an as-is-ness to obtain persistency. An introduction of an alter-is is therefore the addition of a lie to the real which causes it to persist and not to blow or as-is. (HCOB 11 May 65)

 

ALTER-IS-NESS, 1. the consideration which introduces change, and therefore time and persistence into an as-is-ness to obtain persistency. (PXL, p. 154) 2 . the effort to preserve something by altering its characteristics. (PXL, p. 53)

ALTER-IST, the control case, the person obsessively controlling things, and himself, is an alter-ist. He’s got to change, change. Well, he’s lost too much. Now he’s got to change everything but he’s not satisfied with anything. (PXL, p. 54)

ALTERNATE, 1 . occurring by turns; succeeding each other; one and then the other. (HCOB 10 May 65) 2 . in auditing, alternate means two questions run one after the other, consecutively, one command positive followed by one negative. (HCOB 4 Dec 59)

ALTERNATE CONFRONT, (PROCESS), “What can you confront?””What would you rather not confront?” (HCOB 16 Jun 60)

ALTITUDE, 1. a prestige which the auditor has in the eyes of the preclear. A somewhat artificial position of the auditor which gives the preclear greater confidence and therefore greater ability to run than he would otherwise have. (SOS Gloss) 2 . a difference of level of prestige—one in a higher altitude carries conviction to one on a lower altitude merely because of altitude. (D M S M H, p. 343)

AMNESIA, a guy who is so spooked that he doesn’t dare remember ten seconds ago. He has had some experience earlier than which he is not going to remember, including the experience, so he’s only willing to remember some moment after that experience. (SH Spec 72, 6607C28)

ANALYTICAL, capable of resolving, such as problems, situations. The word analytical is from the Greek analysis meaning resolve, undo, loosen, which is to say take something to pieces to see what it is made of. This is one of those examples of the shortcomings of the English language since no dictionary gives the word analytical any connection with thinking, reasoning, perceiving, which in essence is what it would have to mean, even in English. (LRH Def. Notes)

ANALYTICAL ATTENUATION, see ANATEN.

ANALYTICAL MIND, 1 . the conscious aware mind which thinks, observes data, remembers it, and resolves problems. It would be essentially the conscious mind as opposed to the unconscious mind. In Dn and Scn the analytical mind is the one which is alert and aware and the reactive mind simply reacts without analysis. (LRH Def. Notes) 2 . that mind which combines perceptions of the immediate environment, of the past (via pictures) and estimations of the future into conclusions which are based upon the realities of situations. The analytical mind combines the potential knowingness of the thetan with the conditions of his surroundings and brings him to independent conclusions. This mind could be said to consist of visual pictures either of the past or the physical universe, monitored by, and presided over, by the knowingness of a thetan. The keynote of the analytical mind is awareness, one knows what one is concluding and knows what he is doing. (FOT, pp. 57-58) 3 . the awareness of awareness unit plus some evaluative circuit or circuits, or machinery to make the handling of the body possible. (Dn 55!, pp. 11-12) 4 . that part of the being which perceives, when the individual is awake or in normal sleep (for sleep is not unconsciousness, and anything the individual has perceived while he was asleep is recorded in the standard mernory banks and is relatively easy for the auditor to recover). (SOS, Bk. 2, p. 230) 5. we say the analytical mind is kind of a misnomer because most people think it’s some kind of computing machine, and it’s not, it’s just the pc, the thetan. (SH Spec 23, 6106C29)

ANALYTICAL THOUGHT, 1. thought which directly observes and analyzes what it observes in terms of observations which are immediately present.

(COHA, p. 196) 2 . rational thought as modified by education and viewpoint. (DMSMH, p. 79)

ANALYZER, the analytical mind. (DMSMH, p. 44)

ANATEN, 1 . an abbreviation of analytical attenuation meaning diminution or weakening of the analytical awareness of an individual for a brief or extensive period of time. If sufficiently great, it can result in unconsciousness. (It stems from the restimulation of an engram which contains pain and unconsciousness.) (Scn AD) 2 . simply a drop in ARC to an extreme. (PAB 70) 3 . the physiological by-product of unconsciousness. (SOS, Bk. 2, p. 170) 4. dope-off. (Abil 52)

ANATOMY OF THE HUMAN MIND COURSE, a basic Scn course which teaches observation and understanding of the fundamentals of the human mind. It includes demonstrations of the parts of the human mind. There are no prerequisites for this course. (CG&AC 75) Abbr. AHMC.

ANCHOR POINTS, 1 . assigned or agreed-upon points of boundary, which are conceived to be motionless by the individual. (PDC 13) 2 . points which are anchored in a space different to the physical universe space around a body. (FOT, p. 63) 3 . those places which we called in Advanced Procedures and Axioms the sub-brains of the body; control centers, epicenters. (5410ClOD) 4 . the points which mark an area of space are called anchor points, and these, with the viewpoint, alone are responsible for space. (Scn Jour, Iss 14-G) 5 . a specialized kind of dimension point. (Scn 8-8008, p. 16) 6 . any kind of a point, any kind of a particle, any kind of electron, or anything which anybody believes is an actual point. There is nothing more real than a real anchor point. (2ACC-lA 5311CM17)

ANGER, 1. true anger is a hate hold. At exactly 1 .5 on the tone scale we have a total ridge. It’s hate. When we move a little above or a little below 1 .5 we get a dispersal. (5904C08) 2 . anger is simply the process of trying to hold everything still. (5203CM09A)

ANSWER HUNGER, an unfinished cycle of communication generates what might be called answer hunger. An individual who is waiting for a signal that his communication has been received is prone to accept any inflow. When an individual has, for a very long period of time, consistently waited for answers which did not arrive, any sort of answer from anywhere will be pulled in to him, by him, as an effort to remedy his scarcity of answels. (Dn 55!, p. 66)

 

ANTAGONlSM, at the level of tone 2.0, affinity is expressed as antagonism, a feeling of annoyance and irritation caused by the advances of other people toward the individual. (SOS, p. 56)

ANTI Q AND A TR, 1. commands: basically “Put that (object) on my knee.” Student is to get the coach to place the object that he has in his hand on the knee of the student. Purpose: (a) to train student in getting a pc to carry out a command using formal communication NOT tone 40. (b) to enable the student to maintain his TRs while giving commands. (c) to train the student to not get upset with a pc under formal auditing. (HCOB 20 Nov 73 I) 2 . to get this disease (Q&A) out of an HGC requires that auditors go through an anti Q and A handling. (HCOB 20 Nov 73 II)

ANTISOCIAL PERSONALITY, 1. there are certain characteristics and mental attitudes which cause about 20 per cent of a race to oppose violently any betterment activity or group. Such people are known to have antisocial tendencies. (ISE, p. 9) 2 . we’re calling it a suppressive because it’s more explicit. (SH Spec 78, 6608C25) See also SUPPRESSIVE PERSON.

ANXIETY, constant irresolute computation. Constant computation on a certain point or a certain problem. That is what worry is and that is what anxiety is. (T-80-2A 5205C20)

AO, Advanced Org. (HCOB 8 Oct 71 II)

AP, aberrated personality. (DMSMH, p. 124)

APA, American Personality Analysis, the personality test. (BTB 3 Nov 72R) See OCA.

APATHY, 1. complete withdrawal from person or people. There is in apathy no real attempt to contact one’s self and no attempt to contact others. Here we have a null point of dissonance which is on the threshold of death. (SOS, p. 57) 2 . a very docile and obedient, if sick, state of not-beingness. (HFP, p. 56) 3 . no effort, all counter-effort. (AP&A, p. 33) 4 . apathy actually is a motionless enturbulence. It’s an enturbulence cancelling itself out to the degree that it appears to be motionless. (5206CM25A) 5. apathy, near death, imitates death. If a person is almost all wrong, he approximates death. He says, “What’s the use? All is lost.” (NOTL, p. 20)

APPARENCY, 1 . noun, something that seems to be, that appears to be a certain way; something appears to be but is different from the way it looks. It is from the Latin, apparere, to appear. In Dianetics and Scientology it is used to mean something that looks one way but is, in actual fact, something else. “Gives an apparency of health” whereas it’s actually sick. (LRH Def. Notes) 2 . what appears to be as distinct from what actually is. (FOT, p. 19)

APPARENT CYCLE OF ACTION, create, then survive, then destroy; or creation, survival, destruction. (FOT, p. 18)

APPETITE OVER TIN CUP, Slang. a pioneer Western U.S. term used by riverboat men on the Missouri; it means thrown away violently, like “head over heels,” “bowled over.” (LRH Def. Notes)

APPLIED PHILOSOPHY, one which has to do with doing and action. One which applies to living—not just a theory, but one where the theory can be used to help you get on better in life. (BTB 4 Mar 65R)

APPRENTICE SCIENTOLOGIST, one who knows how to know, how to study, what life is about. (BCR, p. 14)

ARBITRARY, 1 . something which is introduced into the situation without regard to the data of the situation. (SH Spec 83, 6612C06) 2 . an order or command introduced into the group in an effort to lay aside certain harm which may befall the group or in an effort to get through a period, fancied or real, of foreshortened time. (NOTL, p. 136) 3 . an order or command which was issued without explanation, and demanded instantaneous action on the part of other members of the group. (NOTL, p. 131)

ARC, Anti-Radiation Congress. (HCOB 29 Sept 66)

ARC, 1 . a word from the initial letters of Afflnity, Reality, Communication which together equate to Understanding. It is pronounced by stating its letters, A-R- C. To Scientologists it has come to mean good feeling, love or friendliness, such as “He was in ARC with his friend.” One does not, however, fall out of ARC, he has an ARC break. (LRH Def. Notes) 2 . ARC=Understanding and Time. A=Space and the willingness to occupy the same space of. R=Mass or agreement. C=Energy or Recognition. (HCOB 27 Sept 68 II) 3 . affinity is a type of energy and can be produced at will. Reality is agreement; too much agreement under duress brings about the banishment of one’s entire consciousness. Communication, however, is far more important than affinity or reality, for it is the operation, the action by which one experiences emotion and by which one agrees. (PAB 1) 4 . the triagonal manifestation of theta each aspect affecting the other two. (SOS Gloss)

ARC BREAK, 1 . a sudden drop or cutting of one’s affinity, reality, or communication with someone or something. Upsets with people or things come about because of a lessening or sundering of affinity, reality, or communication

or understanding. It’s called an ARC break instead of an upset, because, if one discovers which of the three points of understanding have been cut, one can bring about a rapid recovery in the person’s state of mind. It is pronounced by its letters A-R-C break. When an ARC break is permitted to continue over too long a period of time and remains in restimulation, a person goes into a “sad effect” which is to say they become sad and mournful, usually without knowing what is causing it. This condition is handled by finding the earliest ARC break on the chain, finding whether it was a break in affinity, reality, communication, or understanding and indicating it to the person, always, of course, in session. (LRH Def. Notes) 2 . an incomplete cycle of some kind or another. It’s a lowering of Affinity, Reality and Communication, so we call it an ARC break. It’s a sudden down curve. It’s a highly technical term. It means exactly what it says but its incept and so forth is an incompete cycle of action. (SH Spec 65, 6507C27) Abbr. ARCX.

ARC BREAK ASSESSMENT, 1 . reading an ARC break list appropriate to the activity to the pc on a meter and doing nothing but locating and then indicating the charges found by telling the pc what registered on the needle. (HCOB 7 Sept 64 II) 2. it isn’t auditing because it doesn’t use the auditing comm cycle. You don’t ack what the pc says, you don’t ask the pc what it is. You don’t comm. You assess the list between you and the meter, same as no pc there. Then you find what reads and you tell the pc. And that’s all. (HCOB 7 Sept 64 II)

ARC BREAK LONG DURATION, spotted by a person who has led a sad or subdued or rather suppressed sort of life and is probably around .8 on down on the tone scale. (LRH Def. Notes)

ARC BREAK NEEDLE, 1 . a “floating needle” occurring above 3.0 or below 2.0 on a calibrated Mark V E-meter with the pc on two cans. An ARC break needle can occur between 2.0 and 3.0 where bad indicators are apparent. (HCOB 21 Oct 68) 2 . An F/N with bad indicators is an ARC break needle. These include propitiation. It is quite usual that a pc has just mentioned grief when the ARC break needle turns on, or some gloomy idea. A real F/N means the pc is out the top; an ARC break needle means he’s out the bottom. He ceases to mock up, through grief. (HCOB 5 Oct 68) 3 . may be dirty, stuck or sticky, but may also give the appearance of floating. The pc will be upset and out of comm at the same time. (HCOB 21 Sept 66)

ARC BREAK STRAIGHTWIRE, “Recall an ARC break.” “When?” (HCOB 3 Feb 59)

ARC BROKEN PCs, they gloom and misemote. They criticize and snarl. Sometimes they scream. They blow, they refuse auditing. If an auditor’s pc isn’t bright and happy, there’s an ARC break there with life or the bank or the session. (HCOB 29 Mar 65)

ARC ENGRAM, see SECONDARY ENGRAM. (NOTL, p. 35)

ARC LOCKS, 1 . a type of lock which results when affinity, communication, or reality is forced upon the individual by the environment when he does not want it, when it is not rationally necessary, or when one or more of these is inhibited or denied to the individual by others in the environment. (SOS, p. 113) 2 . “permanent” encystments of entheta resulting from the enturbulation of theta by enforcements or inhibitions of affinity, reality or communication and the trapping of this enturbulated theta by the physical pain of some engram or chain of engrams whose perceptics are approximately in the present-time enturbulation. Locks are analytical experiences. (SOS Gloss)

ARC SECONDARIES, ARC locks of such magnitude that they must be run as engrams in processing. Or, since locks are often run as engrams, ARC locks of great magnitude. (SOS Gloss)

 

ARC STRAIGHTWIRE, see STRAIGHTWIRE.

ARC STRAIGHTWIRE RELEASE, r e c a l l r e l e a s e . Freedom from deterioration; has hope; knows he/she won’t get any worse. (Scn 0-8, p. 137)

ARC TRIANGLE, 1. it is called a triangle because it has three related points: affinity, reality and the most important, communication. Without affinity there is no reality or communication. Without reality or some agreement, affinity and communication are absent. Without communication, there can be no affinity or reality. It is only necessary to improve one corner of this very valuable triangle in Scn in order to improve the remaining two corners. The easiest corner to improve is communication: improving one’s ability to communicate raises at the same time his affinity for others and life, as well as expands the scope of his agreements. (Scn AD) 2 . this triangle is a symbol of the fact that affinity, reality, and communication act together as a whole entity and that one of them cannot be considered unless the other two are also taken into account. (NOTL, p. 20)

ARCU, Affinity, Reality, Communication, Understanding. (HCOB 6 Aug 68)

ARF, see AUDITOR REPORT FORM.

ART, a word which summarizes the quality of communication. It therefore follows the laws of communication. Too much originality throws the audience into unfamiliarity and therefore disagreement, as communication contains duplication and “originality” is the foe of duplication. Technique should not rise above the level of workability for the purpose of communication. Perfection cannot be attained at the expense of communication. (HCOB 30 Aug 65)

ASHO, American Saint Hill Organization. (BPL 5 Nov 72RA)

AS-IS, to view anything exactly as it is without any distortions or lies, at which moment it will vanish and cease to exist. (Scn AD)

AS-IS-NESS, 1. the condition of immediate creation without persistence, and is the condition of existence which exists at the moment of creation and the moment of destruction and is different from other considerations in that it does not contain survival. (PXL, p. 154) 2. as-is-ness would be the condition created again in the same time, in the same space, with the same energy and the same mass, the same motion and the same time continuum. (PXL, p. 68) 3 . something that is just postulated or just being duplicated—no alteration taking place. As-is-ness contains no life continuum, no time continuum. (PXL, p. 91)

ASMC, Anatomy of the Spirit of Man Congress. (HCOB 29 Sept 66)

ASSERTED, another name for suggested, used mainly in check out of a goal to be sure, and occasionally in routine nulling when pc is declaring “it is my goal.” (HCOB 1 Aug 62)

ASSESS IN DIANETICS, means choose, from a list or statements which item or thing has the longest read or the pc’s interest. The longest read will also have the pc’s interest oddly enough. (HCOB 23 Apr 69)

ASSESSING BY ELIMINATION, 1 . doing it twice because of a possible instant read fault. Assessing by elimination is done on double (2 item) reads. But a hot auditor does it on best largest instant read. (BTB 11 Apr 74) 2 . after the first assessment the auditor continues to assess the reading items on the list by elimination down to ONE item. Sometimes some items will read three or four times, but the action is the same. The auditor assesses the reading items by elimination down to one item. (BTB 20 Aug 70R) [N.B. This action is revised by HCOB 14 Mar 1971R, F/N Everything and HCOB 20 Apr 72 Iss.II, C/S Series 78 Product, Purpose and Why and WC Error Correction. ]

ASSESSING, METHODS OF, 1 . the auditor starts at the top and takes up each read until he gets one to F/N. In this case the auditor does not do “Itsa earlier itsa.” He just cleans each read. (HCOB 28 May 70, Correction Lists, Use of) 2 . the auditor starts from the top and on each read cleans it and does itsa earlier itsa to F/N or to a clean no-read and goes on. (HCOB 28 May 70, Correction Lists, Use Of) [N.B. the actions described in 1 and 2 above are revised according to HCOB 14 Mar 1971R, F/NEverything.] 3 . method 3—you take a prepared list and you read it to the pc, and you read the next one to the pc, and the first one that reads you then take it down earlier similar earlier similar, earlier similar, earlier similar, until it F/Ns. (ilO6C12) 4 . the whole list is rapidly assessed over and over until one item stays in and that is given to the pc. (HCOB 28 May 70, Correction Lists, Use Of) [N.B. this action in 4 above is revised according to HCOB 14 Mar 1971R, F/N Everything. ] 5 . method 5—all the way through and then you sort out the reads accordingly, and get them into a sequence that will F/N. (7106C12) 6 . method 6—the L-10 method of assessing a prepared list. You look at the pc and ask him directly every question on the list. (7106C12)

ASSESSMENT, an inventory and evaluation of a preclear, his body and his case to establish processing level and procedure. (HCOB 3 Jul 59, General Information )

ASSESSMENT, 1. is an action done from a prepared list. There is no other word that goes with that. Assessment does not go with anything else but that. That is all that assessment means. It is associated with a prepared list. Only a prepared list. (Class VIII No. 11) 2. asse6sment isn’t auditing, it is simply trying to locate something to audit. You say the word right to the pc’s bank. (Class VIII No. 11) 3 . assessment is done by the auditor between the pc’s bank and the meter. There is no need in assessing to look at the pc. Just note which item has the longest fall or BD. The auditor looks at the meter while doing an assessment. (HCOB 21 May 69) 4 . the whole action of obtaining a significant item from a pc. (HCOB 5 Dec 62) 5 . any method of discovering a level on the pre-hav scale for a given pc. (HCOB 7 Nov 62 III)

ASSESSMENT BY INSTANT READ, E-meter drill 24. Purpose: to train the student auditor to assess a list accurately and rapidly by instant read. (EMD, p. 47)

ASSESSMENT BY TONE ARM, E-meter drill 23. Purpose: to train the student auditor to a s s e s s a list accurately by selecting that item which, upon brief discussion, produces the most movement of the tone arm. (EMD, p. 46)

ASSESSMENT FOR LONGEST READ, calling off the items the pc has given and marking down the reads that occur on the meter. The pc is not required to comment during this action and it is better if he does not. (HCOB 29 Apr 69)

ASSESSMENT TRs, used to get a list to read. Assessment questions are delivered with impingement, the auditor accenting or “barking” the last word and syllable. An assessment is done crisply and businesslike with real punch (not shouting)

so each line is to the pc. This is not to say that an assessment is done tone 40 or with antagonism. It’s friendly but businesslike and impinges. (BTB 13 Mar 75)

ASSESS ON PRE-HAV, to assess the whole pre-hav scale. (HCOB 13 Jul 61)

ASSIST, 1 . an action undertaken by a minister to assist the spirit to confront physical difficulties which can then be cared for with medical methodology by a medical doctor as needful. (Abil MA, 41) 2 . anything which is done to alleviate a present time discomfort. (Abil 7) 3 . simple, easily done processes that can be applied to anyone to help them recover more rapidly from accidents, mild illness or upsets. (Scn AD) 4 . the processing given to a recently injured person in order to relieve the stress of live energy which is holding the injury in suspension. (Scn 8-8008, p. 38) See also CONTACT ASSIST, TOUCH ASSIST, AUDITING ASSIST.

ASSIST ENGRAM, in the case of the manic, the fanatic or the zealot an engram has entirely blocked at least one of the purpose lines deriving from a dynamic. The engram may be called an assist engram. Its own surcharge (not the dynamic force) leads the individual to believe that he has a high purpose which will permit him to escape pain. This “purpose” is a false purpose not ordinarily sympathetic with the organism, having a hectic quality derived from the pain which is part of it, even though that pain is not wittingly experienced. This assist engram is using the native ability of the organism to accomplish its false “purpose” and brings about a furious and destructive effort on the part of the individual who, without this assist engram could have better accomplished the same goal. The worst feature of the assist engram is that the effort it commands is engramic dramatization of a particular sort, and if the engram itself is restimulated the individual becomes subject to the physical pain and fear which the entire experience contained. Therefore, the false purpose itself is subject to sporadic “sag.” (DTOT, p. 77)

ASSOCIATIVE DEFINITION, see DEFINITIONS, TYPES OF.

ASSOCIATIVE RESTIMULATORS, 1 . those things connected with the restimulator. (DMSMN, p. 354) 2 . a perceptic in the environment which is confused with an actual restimulator. (DTOT Gloss)

ASSUMPTION, 1 . the name given to the act of a theta being taking over a mest body. This is occasionally found to be part of the record of the GE strong enough to be audited. It is the sensation of being taken over thoroughly, sometimes contains the shock of contact. The assumption takes place in most cases just prior to birth for every GE generation. (HOM, p. 37) 2 . assumption point: where the thetan has taken over the body. (PAB 8)

ASTRAL BODIES, somebody’s delusion. Astral bodies are usually mock-ups which the mystic then tries to believe real. He sees the astral body as something else and then seeks to inhabit it in the most common practices of “astral walking.” Anyone who confuses astral bodies with thetans is apt to have difficulty with theta clearing for the two things are not the same order of similarity. (Scn 8-8008 Gloss)

ATE, Auditors’ Training Evening. (HCOB 29 Sept 66)

ATTENTION, 1. when interest becomes fixed, we have attention. (COHA, p. 99) 2 . a motion which must remain at an optimum effort. Attention is aberrated by becoming unfixed and sweeping at random or becoming too fixed without sweeping. (Scn 0-8, p. 75)

ATTENTION UNIT, 1 . a theta energy quantity of awareness existing in the mind in varying quantity from person to person. (HCOB 11 May 65) 2 . actually energy flows of small wavelengths and definite frequency. These are measurable

on specifically designed oscilloscopes and meters. No special particle is involved. (Scn 8-80, p. 45)

ATTENTION VALENCE, 1 . t h e valence one has assumed because it got attention from another valence. (PAB 95) 2 . one has become the valence B because one wants attention from C. Example—one becomes mother because mother received attention from father while self did not. (FOT, p. 95)

AUD, auditor. (HCOB 23 Aug 65)

AUD C, Auditors’ Congress. (HCOB 29 Sept 66)

AUDIO IMAGERY, when a person can recall things he has heard by simply hearing them again. (Exp Jour Winter-Spring 1950)

AUDIO-SEMANTIC, part of the standard banks, a special part of sound files; the recording of words heard. (DMSMH, p. 46)

AUDIT FOREVER CASE, the grind case, the audit forever case is an afraid to find out case. (HCOB 15 Mar 62)

AUDITING, 1. the application of Scn processes and procedures to someone by a trained auditor. (BTB 30 Sept 71 IV) 2 . the action of asking a preclear a question (which he can understand and answer), getting an answer to that question and acknowledging him for that answer. Auditing gets rid of unwanted barriers that inhibit, stop or blunt a person’s natural abilities as well as gradiently increasing the abilities a person has so that he becomes more able and his survival, happiness and intelligence increase enormously. (BTB 30 Sept 71 IV) 3 . Scn processing is called auditing by which the auditor (practitioner) listens, computes, and commands. (FOT, p. 88) 4 . to get a result on a pc. (SH Spec 71, 6607C26) 5 . an activity of an auditor taking over the control of and shepherding the attention of a pc so as to bring about a higher level of confront ability. (SH Spec 48, 6108C31) 6 . directing the pc’s attention on his own case and directing his ability to talk to the auditor. (SH Spec 49, 6109C05) 7 . the reversing of other-determined flows by gradient scales, putting the pc at cause again. (HCOB 7 May 59) 8 . a communicating process or a communication process with the end goal of raising the ability of another person so that he can handle his bank, body, others, and environment in general. (5707C17) 9 . the process of bringing a balance between freedom and barriers. Auditing is a game of exteriorization versus havingness. (Abil 25)

AUDITING ASSIST, an assist done by a trained auditor using an E-meter. It consists of “running out” the physically painful experience the person has just undergone, accident, illness, operation or emotional shock. This erases the “physical trauma” and speeds recovery to a remarkable degree. (HCOB 2 Apr 69)

AUDITING BY LIST, 1 . a technique using prepared l i s t s of questions. These isolate the trouble the pc is having with auditing. Such lists also cover and handle anything that could happen to a student or staff member. (LRH ED 257 Int) 2 . the earlier genus of this process was sec checking on the Joburg. Any list can be used. The questions asked are generalized and without time limiters; i.e. Has a withhold been missed? Have you been given a wrong goal? etc. If the line when asked has an instant read, say “That reads” then “What do you consider this could be?” or “What considerations do you have about this?” Let the pc answer all he wants to. This is continued until the line goes clean. If the line does not read say “That’s clean” and move on to the next line of the l i s t . This process gets charge off the case. (HCOB 23 Apr 64) [This process was later revised as follows.] 3 . we now F/N everything, we do not tell the pc what the meter is doing. This changes auditing by lists in both respects. We do not say to the pc, “That’s clean” or “That reads.” Use any authorized published l i s t . Green Form for general review, L1C for ARC breaks, L4B for listed items, list errors. You are looking for an instant read that occurs at the end of the exact syllable of

the question. If the question reads look expectantly at the pc. You can repeat the question by just saying it again if pc doesn’t begin to talk. (HCOB 3 Jul 71) [The above is a brief summary only. The full exact procedure can be found in the referenced HCOBs.]

AUDITING COMMAND, 1. a certain, exact command which the preclear can follow and perform. (FOT, p. 88) 2. an auditing command, when executed, has had performed exactly what it said and nothing else. An auditing command has no understoods about it. There is no pre-arrangement about an auditing command except maybe knowing the language. (SH Spec 25, 6107C05)

AUDITING COMMAND CYCLE, auditor asks, pc replies and knows he has answered, auditor acknowledges. Pc knows auditor has acknowledged. That is a full auditing command cycle. (HCOB 12 Nov 59)

AUDITING COMM CYCLE, this is the auditing comm cycle that is always in use: 1) is the pc ready to receive the command? (appearance, presence), 2) auditor gives command/question to pc (cause, distance, effect), 3) pc looks to bank for answer (itsa maker line), 4) pc receives answer from bank, 5) pc gives answer to auditor (cause, distance, effect), 6) auditor acknowledges pc, 7) auditor sees that pc received ack (attention), 8) new cycle beginning with (1). (HCOB 30 Apr 71)

AUDITING CYCLE, 1 . the basic of auditing is an auditing cycle of command which operates as an attention director. Call it a restimulator if you want, but it’s an attention director, eliciting a response from the pc to as-is that area and who knows he has done so when he receives from the practitioner an acknowledgment that it has occurred. That is the auditing cycle. (SH Spec 189, 6209C18) 2 . there are basically two communication cycles between the auditor and the pc that make up the auditing cycle. They are cause, distance, effect with the auditor at cause and the pc at effect, and cause, distance, effect, with the pc at cause and the auditor at effect. These are completely distinct one from the other. (HCOB 23 May 71R IV)

AUDITING GOOFS, minor unintentional omissions or mistakes in the application of Scn procedures to a person by a trained Scientologist. (ISE, p. 37)

AUDITING PROCEDURE, the general model of how one goes about addressing a preclear. (FOT, p. 96)

AUDITING SESSION, 1. a precise period of time during which the auditor listens to the preclear’s ideas about himself. (Abil 155) 2 . a period in which an auditor and preclear are in a quiet place where they will not be disturbed. The auditor gives the preclear certain and exact commands which the preclear can follow. (FOT, p. 88)

AUDITING SUPERVISOR, on the Saint Hill Special Briefing Course and in academies, supervision of the auditing section is done by the auditing supervisor, and auditing instructor or instructors. The auditing supervisor (or in some cases the course supervisor as at Saint Hill) assigns all sessions and teams. (HCO PL 21 Oct 62)

AUDITOR, 1. one who listens and computes; a Scn practitioner. (HCOB 26 May 59) 2 . one who has been trained in the technology of Scn. An auditor applies standard technology to preclears. (Aud 18 UK) 3 . a person who through church training becomes skilled in the successful application of Dn and Scn to his family, friends and the public to achieve the ability gained as stated on the Gradation Chart for his class of training. (FBDL 18, 2 Dec 70) 4 . Scn processing is done on the principle of making an individual look at his own existence, and improve his ability to confront what he is and where he is. An auditor is the person trained in the technology and whose job it is to ask the person to look, and get him to do so. The word auditor is used because it means one who listens, and a

Scn auditor does listen. (Scn 0-8, p. 14) 5 . the word auditor is used, not “operator” or “therapist,” because auditing is a cooperative effort between the auditor and the patient, and the law of affinity is at work. (DMSMH, p. 175) Abbr. Aud.

AUDITOR CLEARANCE, 1 . rudiment: “Is it all right if I audit you?” (HCOB 21 Mar 61) 2 . beginning rudiment: “Are you willing to talk to me about your difficulties?” (HCOB 21 Dec 61)

AUDITOR COMM LAG, lack of speed in giving commands. (HCOB 9 Aug 69)

AUDITOR C/S, a sheet on which the auditor writes the C/S instructions for the next session. (BTB 3 Nov 72R)

AUDITOR EXPERTISE DRILLS, drills to improve the quality of auditing by familiarizing auditors with the exact procedure of each auditing action through the use of drills. These drills are numbered as Expertise Drill-1 (ED-1), Expertise Drill-2 (ED-2), etc. (BTB 20 Jul 74)

AUDITOR PRESENCE, 1 . the impingement on a pc; familiarity, certainty that something is going to happen, not scared of confronting; ability to make an impact. (6102C14). 2. the auditor is as real and has as much presence to the pc as the rudiments stay in and has as little presence as the rudiments go out. (SH Spec 78, 6111C09)

AUDITOR REPORT FORM, 1. an auditor’s report form is made out at the end of each session. It gives an outline of what actions were taken during the session. (BTB 6 Nov 72R VI) 2 . they give the details of the beginning of the session, condition of pc, what’s intended, the wording of the process, total TA action. (HCOB 24 Jul 64) Abbr. ARF.

AUDITOR RUDIMENT, 1 . O/Ws off on Auditor or Auditors or PCs until OK to be audited. (HCOB 8 Jan 60) 2 . Auditor Clearance is the most important of the rudiments because if the Auditor is not cleared negative results will be obtained on the profile of the preclear. To handle charge on the Auditor, TR 5N should be run if charge does not blow on a little two-way comm. Overt-Withhold on the Auditor is far too accusative and invalidates the PC. (HCOB 25 Jan 61) 3 . Auditor Clearance, “Is it all right if I Audit you?” if not, clear objection, or use TR5N or “Who should I be to Audit you?” or “Who am I?” depending on nature of the difficulty. (HCOB 21 Mar 61) [Note this HCOB was later revised by the next referenced HCOB] 4. Auditor Clearance, “Are you willing to talk to me about your difficulties?” (HCOB 21 Dec 61)

AUDITOR’S CODE, 1 . a list of the things one must or must not do to preserve the theta-ness of theta and to inhibit the enturbulation of theta by the auditor. (SOS, Bk. 2, p. 12) 2 . a collection of rules (do’s and don’ts) that an auditor follows while auditing someone, which ensures that the preclear will get the greatest possible gain out of the processing that he is having. (Scn AD) 3 . the governing set of rules for the general activity of auditing. (FOT, p. 88) 4 . the Auditor’s Code was evolved from years of observing processing. It is the technical code of Scientology. It contains the important errors which harm cases. It could be called the moral code of Scn. (CoHA, p. 3)

AUDITOR’S HANDBOOK, the manual current at the time of the Phoenix Lectures which contained the Axioms and the Route One and Route Two processes of Intensive Procedure. It forms the basis of and is wholly included in The Creation of Human Ability. (PXL Gloss)

AUDITOR TRAINEE PROGRESS BOARD, a vertical auditor trainee progress board is kept by the intern supervisor. This has a space under each of the headings, left to right. Boxes along the top, left to right, serve to indicate the exact action the trainee is doing. The trainee’s name is on a tab that is pinned

to the space. The name tab is merely dated each time it is moved to the right. Thus the intern super can chase up any faltering student. (HCOB 7 Jan 72)

AUTOGENETIC, there are two kinds of illness: the first could be called autogenetic, which means that it originated within the organism and was self-generated, and exogenetic, which means that the origin of the illness was exterior. Psychosomatic illness would be autogenetic, generated by the body itself. (DMSMH, p. 92)

AUTOMATIC BANK, when a pc gets picture after picture after picture all out of control. This occurs when one isn’t following an assessed somatic or complaint or has chosen the wrong one which the pc is not ready to confront or by overwhelming the pc with rough TRs or going very nonstandard. (HCOB 23 Apr 69)

AUTOMATICITY, 1 . a sudden very rapid machine-gun fire outflow of answers given by the preclear. (HCOB 10 May 65) 2 . non-self-determined action which ought to be determined by the individual. The individual ought to be determining an action and he is not determining it. That’s a pretty broad consideration. It’s something not under the control of the individual. But if we said, something not under the control of the individual, as a total, unqualified definition of automaticity, we would have this, then: that car that just went down the street would be an automaticity to you. You didn’t have control of it. So this is not a precision definition. The precision definition has “which ought to be under the control of the individual.” (Abil 6) 3 . anything that goes on running outside the control of the individual. (Abil SW) 4 . something set up automatically to run without further attention from yourself. (2ACC-6A 5311CM20) 5 . there are three kinds of automaticities, those which create things, and those which make things persist, and those which destroy things. (2ACC-19A 5312CM09)

AUTOMATIC MOCK-UP, a picture of something which didn’t really happen. (PAB 99)

AUX. P.H., auxiliary pre-hav scale. (HCOB 3 Dec 61)

AVU, 1. Authority and Verifications Unit. (HCO PL 15 Aug 73) also known as 2. Authorizations and Verifications Unit. (HCO PL 28 Jul 73RA)

AWARENESS, 1 . the ability to perceive the existence of. (HCOB 4 Jan 73) 2 . awareness itself is perception. (2ACC-8B 5311CM24)

AWARENESS LEVEL, see AWARENESS SCALE.

AWARENESS OF AWARENESS UNIT, 1 . an actuality of no mass, no wave-length, no position in space or relation in time, but with the quality of creating or destroying mass or energy, locating itself or creating space, and of re-relating time. (Dn 55 .!, p. 29) 2 . the individual himself. (5410CM20) 3 . the thetan is the awareness of awareness unit. (5410C10D)

AWARENESS SCALE, there are fifty-two levels of awareness from Unexistence up to the state of Clear. By “level of awareness” is meant that of which a being is aware. A being who is at a level on this scale is aware only of that level and the others below it. (HCO PL 5 May 65)

AXIOMS, 1 . the Axioms are agreed-upon considerations. They are the central considerations which have been agreed upon. They are considerations. A self-evident truth is the dictionary definition of an axiom. No definition could be further from the truth. In the first place, a truth cannot be self-evident because it is a static. So, therefore, there is no self-evidency in any truth. There is not a self-evident truth, never has been, never will be. However, there are self-evident agreements and that is what an axiom is. (5501C21) 2 . statements of natural laws on the order of those of the physical sciences. (DMSMH, p. 6)

b

BACHELOR OF SCIENTOLOGY, the standard B Scn/HCS course is in actuality the 20th ACC. The tapes to be used are the 20th ACC tapes. The texts are Scientology Clear Procedure Issue One and ACC Clear Procedure as published in booklet form. The B Scn/HCS course is five weeks in length. If comm course and upper indoc have not been covered by the student, the course becomes seven weeks in length. (HCOB 26 Dec 58) Abbr. B. Scn.

BACK TO BATTERY, Slang. an artillery term. A gun, after it fires, is said to go out of battery, which is to say, it recoils. Then after it’s fired it’s supposed to go back to battery, which is sitting the way you see them in photographs. They use the term in slang to indicate somebody who is now fixed up. So this guy will be all right for something or, what he has had will now be over. I could give you a purer definition, and say it is a completed case for that level, but the C/S doesn’t normally think like that. (7204C07 SO II)

BAD CONTROL, a fallacy actually, control is either well done or not done. If a person is controlling something he is controlling it. If he is controlling it poorly, he is not controlling it. A machine which is being run well is controlled. A machine which is not being run well is not being controlled. Therefore we see that bad control is actually a not-control. People who tell you that control is bad are trying to tell you that automobile accidents and industrial accidents are good. (POW, p. 40)

BAD INDICATORS, the condition isn’t getting any better, not getting a lessening of the condition. Because we’re not getting a lessening of the condition we therefore have losses. (SH Spec 3 6401C09) See also INDICATORS.

BAD MEMORY, 1 . accumulated occlusion of it all, but it’s nevertheless nonconfront. (SH Spec 72, 6607C28) 2 . interposed blocks between control center and facsimiles. (HFP Gloss) See also AMNESIA.

BAD NEEDLE, a rock slam or a dirty needle or a stuck needle or a stage four needle. (HCO PL 30 Aug 70)

BANK, 1 . the mental image picture collection of the pc. It comes from computer technology where all data is in a “bank.” (HCOB 30 Apr 69) 2 . a colloquial name for the reactive mind. This is what the procedures of Scn are devoted to disposing of, for it is only a burden to an individual and he is much better off without it. (Scn AD) 3 . merely a combination of energy and significance and this comprises a mass that sits there in its own made up space, and it’s plotted against the pc’s experiential track known as time. (SH Spec 65, 6507C27) See also REACTIVE MIND.

BANK-AGREEMENT, the common denominator of a group is the reactive bank. Thetans without banks have different responses. They only have their banks in common. They agree then only on bank principles. The bank-agreement has been what has made the earth a hell. (HCO PL 7 Feb 65)

BANK BEEFING UP, the sensation of increasing solidity of masses in the mind. (HCOB 19 Jan 67)

BANK MONITOR, the file clerk is the bank monitor. “He” monitors for both the reactive engram bank and the standard banks. (DMSMH, p. 198) See FILE CLERK.

BANKY, Slang. a term which means that a person is being influenced by his bank and is displaying bad temper, irritability, lack of cooperation and the signs of dramatization. He is being irrational. (Scn AD)

BARK, assessments are done to impinge and get a meter to read. The auditor barks the last word and the last syllable so it does impinge. You don’t drop your voice or downcurve your voice tone at the end of the line as that will cost you reads.

You punch the last sylable to make it read and to the pc. The accent is at the end of the sentence routinely, not on the earliest part. (BTB 13 Mar 75)

BARRIER, 1 . something which an individual cannot communicate beyond. (Dn 55 .1, p. 126) 2 . space, energy, matter and time— each is only a barrier to knowingness. A barrier is a barrier only in that it impedes knowingness. (COHA, p. 151) 3 . from Scientology Axiom 28: Barriers consist of Space, Interpositions (such as walls and screens of fast-moving particles) and Time. (COHA, p. 18)

BASIC, 1 . the first incident (engram, lock, overt act) on any chain. (HCOB 15 May 63) 2 . the first experience recorded in mental image pictures of that type of pain, sensation, discomfort, etc. Every chain has its basic. It is a peculiarity and a fact that when one gets down to the basic on a chain, (a) it erases and (b) the whole chain vanishes for good. Basic is simply earliest. (HCOB 23 Apr 69)

BASIC AREA, 1 . the time track from the first recording on the sperm or ovum track to the first missed menstrual period of the mother. (SOS Gloss) 2 . early prenatal. (DMSMH, p. 224)

BASIC AUDITING, 1 . the fundamental and most important elements of auditing—the skill of handling and keeping the preclear in session, proper use of the auditing communication cycle, the repetitive use of the auditing

communication cycle to flatten a process, the correct application of the technology of Scn, and the ability to use and read and E-meter correctly. (Scn AD) 2 . the handling of the pc as a being, the auditing cycle, the meter. (HCOB 26 Nov 63)

BASIC-BASIC, 1 . this belongs in Scn, not Dn. It means the most basic basic of all basics and results in clearing. It is found on the Clearing Course. (HCOB 23 Apr 69) 2 . the first engram on the whole time track.(HCOB 15 May 63) 3 . any similar circumstance repetitive through a person’s whole track has a first time it occurred and that first time that it occurred we call basic-basic. (SH Spec 69, 6110Cl9)

BASIC CYCLE OF ACTION, create, resist effects (survive) and destroy; create an object, have it resist effects (survive) and then destroy it; create a situation, continue it and change it, and destroy or end it. (COHA, p. 249)

BASIC ENGRAM, the earliest engram on an engram chain. (DTOT, p. 112) See also BASIC.

BASIC GOAL, that goal native to the personality for a lifetime. It is second only in importance to survival itself. It is incident to the individuation of the person. A child of two knows its basic goal. It is compounded from genetic generations of experience. It can be found and reduced in some long past heavy effort facsimile such as death. It is neither advisable nor inadvisable to tamper with it. Much experience aligns on it. Desensitized, it would be supplanted by another basic goal. (AP&A, p. 42)

BASIC INDIVIDUAL, 1 . the basic individual is not a buried unknown or a different person, but an intensity of all that is best and most able in the person. T h e basic individual equals the same person minus his pain and dramatizations. (DTOT, pp. 36-37) 2 . basic individual and Clear are nearly synonymous since they denote the unaberrated self in complete integration and in a state of highest possible rationality. A Clear is one who has become the basic individual through auditing. (DTOT, p. 34) See also CLEAR.

BASIC LIE, the basic lie is that a consideration which was made was not made or that it was different. (PXL, p. 181)

BASIC OVERT ACT, making somebody else want mest. (HCOB 17 Mar 60)

BASIC PERSONALITY, 1 . a person’s own identity. (FOT, p. 31) 2. the basic personality, the file clerk, the core of “I” which wants to be in command of the organism, the most fundamental desires of the personality, may be considered synonymous for our purposes. (DMSMH, p. 394) 3 . the individual himself. (DMSMH, p. 394) Abbr. B.P. (BP) .

BASIC PRINCIPLE OF EXISTENCE, the basic principle of existence is survival and that is only true for the body. A spirit cannot help but survive whether in heaven or in hell or on earth or in a theta trap. (Ability Mag 5)

BASIC PROGRAM, the program laid out in the Classification and Gradation Chart. (HCOB 12 Jun 70)

BASIC PURPOSE, it is a clinical fact that basic purpose is apparently known to the individual before he is two years of age: talent and inherent personality and basic purpose go together as a package. They seem to be part of the genetic pattern. (DMSMH, p. 238)

BASICS OF SCIENTOLOGY, axioms, scales, codes, fundamental theory about the thetan and the mind. (HCOB 3 May 62)

 

BASIC TRUTH, a static has no mass, meaning, mobility, no wave-length, no time, no location in space, no space. This has the technical name of “basic truth.” (PXL, p. 180)

BA STEPS, bring about steps—R6 material. (HCOB 23 Aug 65)

B .D ., before Dianetics. (DMSMH, p. 266)

BD, blowdown. (SH Spec 309, 6309C19)

B .E ., before earth. (5203CM10)

BEAUTY, beauty is a wave-length closely resembling theta or a harmony approximating theta. (Scn 8-80, p. 26)

BE, DO, HAVE, see CONDITIONS OF EXISTENCE.

BEEP METER, a machine developed by Volney Mathison for chiropractors from a model furnished him by a chiropractor. Wherever a person has a painful spot on his body, if you put the electrode on it, the machine goes “beep,” but right alongside of the painful spot, it doesn’t beep. (ESTO 6, 7203C03 SO III)

BEFORE EARTH, a theta line incident. There is a before earth and a before mest universe in all banks. The incidents are not dissimilar. The only thing remarkable about these before incidents is that they are a very definite degradation and condemnation of the preclear. (HOM, p. 66) Abbr. B.E.

BEGINNING RUDIMENTS, 1. rudiments at the beginning of session involve: (1) getting pc comfortable in environment; (2) getting pc willing to talk to auditor about pc’s own case; (3) getting off withholds; (4) checking for and handling PTPs. The above are the beginning rudiments. (HCOB 14 Dec 61) 2 . are normally devoted to getting the atmosphere and the environment out of the road, so you can audit the pc. (SH Spec 45, 6108C24)

BEHAVIOR PATTERNS, conflicts in the commands contained in engrams and conflicts between the basic drive and the engramic contents combine into behavior patterns. (DTOT, p. 55)

BEING, 1 . a viewpoint; he is as much a being as he is able to assume viewpoints. (Scn 8-8008, p. 17) 2 . an energy production source. (Scn 8-80, p. 33) See also THETAN.

BEINGNESS, 1 . the assumption or choosing of a category of identity. Beingness is assumed by oneself or given to oneself, or is attained. Examples of beingness would be one’s own name, one’s profession, one’s physical characteristics, one’s role in a game—each and all of these things could be called one’s beingness. (NSOL, p. 50) 2 . the person one should be in order to survive. (SH Spec 19, 6106C23) 3 . essentially, an identification of self with an object. (COHA, p. 76)

BEINGNESS OF MAN, essentially the beingness of theta itself acting in the mest and other universes in the accomplishment of the goals of theta and under the determination of a specific individual and particular personality for each being. (Scn 8-8008, p. 11)

BEINGNESS PROCESSING, is an alter-isness process. When a case is extremely inverted it is necessary to get the case up to a level where it can identify itself with something. Beingness is essentially identification of self with an object. In running beingness processing it will be discovered that the imagination of the preclear revives to a marked extent. Beingness processing recovers the various valences which the thetan is trying to avoid. The matter of valences is also a matter of packages of abilities, and where an individual is unable to be something which has certain definite abilities, he also cannot achieve those abilities, and this, in itself, is the heart of disability. (COHA, pp. 76-79)

BEING OTHER BODIES, 1 . out of valence; being another identity than his own. He’s in one body and he’s being another body. (5904C08) 2 . that’s shame. There is an emotion of shame connected with being other bodies. One is ashamed to be oneself, he is somebody else. (5904C08)

BELOW THE CENTER LINE, the American APA has a center line which is zero, above which we get plus and below which we get minus. An OCA is essentially the same thing, except the OCA has a better center graph. There are two conditions here below the center line: any negative, and “in the white.” (7203C30SO)

BENEFIT, defined as that which would enhance survival. (Scn 8-8008, p. 6)

B.E.R., bad exam report. (BTB 5 Nov 72R III) See also RED TAG.

BETRAYAL, 1. a betrayal is help turned to destruction. When help fails, destruction occurs, or so goes the most basic consideration behind living. (HCOB 6 Feb 58) 2 . the knock-in of anchor points. One’s anchor points are pulled out and then they are suddenly knocked in. That operation, when done exteriorly by somebody else is betrayal. (Spr Lect 17 5304CM08)

BETTER, negative gain, things disappear that have been annoying or unwanted. (HCOB 28 Feb 59)

BETTERMENT, to us, is a lessening of a bad condition. (SH Spec 3, 6401C09)

BETTERMENT LAG, how many hours you have to process a preclear before he can become cause. (5410CM06)

BETWEEN-LIVES AREA, 1 . the experiences of a thetan during the time between the loss of a body and the assumption of another. (PXL, p. 105) 2 . at death the theta being leaves the body and goes to the between-lives area. Here

he “reports in,” is given a strong forgetter implant and is then shot down to a body just before it is born. At least that is the way the old Invader in the earth area was operating. (HOM, p. 68)

BETWEEN SESSIONS, we don’t mean overnight. We mean solely, strictly, completely and utterly if they get out of the auditor’s sight at any time during a break. (SH Spec 7, 6106C05)

BIG MIDDLE RUDIMENTS, the big mid ruds can be used in the following places: At the start of any session. Examples: “Since the last time I audited you . . .” “Since the last time you were audited . . .” “Since you decided to be audited . . .” In or at the end of any session. Examples: “In this session . . .” On a list. Examples: “On this list . . .” “On (say list question) . . .” On a goal or item. Example: “On (say goal or item) . . .” Here is the correct wording and order of use for big mid ruds. “. . . has anything been suppressed?” “. . . is there anything you have been careful of?” “. . . is there anything you have failed to reveal?” “. . . has anything been invalidated?” “. . . has anything been suggested?” “. . . has any mistake been made?” “. . . is there anything you have been anxious about?” “. . . has anything been protested?” “. . . has anything been decided?” (HCOB 8 Mar 63) Abbr. B.M.R.

BIG THETA BOP, one-third of the dial back and forth or one-half of the dial back and forth, something like that. That’s a bop on the loss of and still trying to hold onto the home universe. (PDC 15)

BIG TIGER, the same drill as the tiger drill except that it additionally uses nearly found out, protest, anxious about and careful of. One shifts to big tiger when making sure of the last item in on the list or a goal that fires strongly. (HCOB 29 Nov 62) See also TIGER DRILL.

BIRTH, 1. birth is one of the most remarkable engrams in terms of contagion. Here the mother and child both receive the same engram which differs only in the location of pain and the depths of “unconsciousness.” Whatever the doctors, nurses and other people associated with the delivery say to the mother during labor and birth and immediately afterwards before the child is taken away is recorded in the reactive bank, making an identical engram in both mother and child. (DMSMN, p. 136) 2. birth is ordinarily a severely painful unconscious experience. It is ordinarily an engram of some magnitude. Anyone who has been born then possesses at least one engram. (DTOT, p. 52)

BIs, bad indicators. (BTB 6 Nov 72RA IV)

BLAB, Slang. there may once in a while be a person who reads nicely at their clear reading with no action and you’re very suspicious the guy isn’t Clear. This could be a complete “blab” no responsibility case—a mockery of Clear. (HCOB 26 May 60, Security Checks)

BLACK AND WHITE, 1 . the name of a string of incidents where the theta body was implanted with electronic waves. (5208 CM07C) 2 . the two extreme manifestations of perception on the part of the preclear. Seeing whiteness or color the thetan is able to discern or differentiate between objects, actions and spatial dimensions. Energy can also manifest itself as blackness. (Scn 8-8008, p. 50) 3 . a rapid process which eliminates the need for running single incidents, locks, or secondaries, and is effective only in occluded cases. Wide-open cases cannot see black or white, but see color. These black areas, which are curtains over occluded facsimiles along the time track, erase, or become white, when attention is centered on them, and turning the field white by concentrating on the aesthetic band is the only concern of the auditor or preclear. Heavy somatics may be expected during “black and white” processing, but these can be avoided by keeping the field white. (Scn 8-80 Gloss)

 

BLACK DIANETICS, 1 . hypnotism. (5109C17A) 2 . unscrupulous groups and individuals have been practicing a form a Black Dianetics on their fellow man for centuries. They have not called it that but the results have been and are the same. There are those who, to control, resort to narcotics, suggestion, gossip, slander—the thousands of overt and covert ways that can be classified as Black Dianetics. (Scn Jour Iss 3G)

BLACK FIELD, just some part of a mental image picture where the preclear is looking at blackness. It is part of some lock, secondary or engram. In Scn it can occur (rarely) when the pc is exterior, looking at something black. It responds to R3R. (HCOB 23 Apr 69)

BLACK FIELD CASE, a case that could not run engrams because he could not see them. (HCOB 14 Jan 60)

BLACK FIVE, 1 . a heavily occluded case characterized by mental pictures consisting of masses of blackness. This is a “step V” in early procedures such as Standard Operating Procedure 8 . (PXL, p. 141) 2 . a level of nonperception, whether the person is seeing blackness or invisibility. (SH Spec 271, 6305C20) 3 . a no-responsibility case. (COHA, p. 161)

BLACKNESS, 1 . usually the protective coating between the preclear and the pictures. (Abil SW, p. 15) 2 . both of these conditions regarding blackness exist. The machine that makes blackness and having a black picture in restimulation; there is also simply the blackness of looking around inside a head. (Abil SW, p. 15) 3 . the blackness on the case is indicative of a scarcity of viewpoints, a necessity for safeguarding and protective “screens,” a defensive and propitiative attitude towards existence, too much loss of allies and good, too much loss of space and finally and most importantly, loss of those who have evaluated for the preclear. The sudden departure of the person who has evaluated for the preclear results in loss of that viewpoint which the preclear unwittingly had assumed. (PAB 8) 4 . either the pc’s unwillingness to face things or his basic bank. It cures if you do Dianetics by gradients. (HCOB 3 Apr 66)

BLACKNESS OF CASES, the blackness of cases is an accumulation of the case’s own or another’s lies. (PXL, p. 183)

BLACK PANTHER MECHANISM, 1. in Dn considerable slang has been developed by patients and Dianeticists and they call the “Black Panther Mechanism” a neglect of the problem. One supposes this stems from the ridiculousness of biting black panthers. (DMSMH, p. 147) 2 . there are five ways in which a human being reacts toward a source of danger. Let us suppose that a particularly black-tempered black panther is sitting on the stairs and that a man named Gus is sitting in the living room. Gus wants to go to bed. But there is the black panther. The problem is to get upstairs. There are five things that Gus can do: (1) he can go attack the black panther; (2) he can run out of the house and flee the black panther; (3) he can use the back stairs and avoid the black panther; (4) he can neglect the black panther; and (5) he can succumb to the black panther. These are the five mechanisms. All actions can be seen to fall within these courses. And all actions are visible in life. (DMSMH, pp. 147- 148)

 

 

BLAME, 1 . it’s simply punishing other bodies. (5904C08) 2 . when one individual assigns cause to another entity, he delivers power to that entity. This assignment may be called blame, the arbitrary election of cause. (DAB, Vol. II, p. 233) 3 . bl e is the negation of your responsibility. You can blune self, that’s the last stage, or you can blame somebody else. That’s an effort not to be responsible. (5112CM28B)

BLANKET, to settle down over a mest body (one or more mest bodies). (5206CM26B)

BLANKETING, this incident consists of throwing oneself as a thetan over another thetan or over a mest body. Blanketing is done to obtain an emotional impact or even to kill. It is strongest in sexual incidents where the thetan throws two mest bodies together in the sexual act in order to experience their emotions. (HOM, p. 62)

BLINDNESS, extreme unawareness. (PAB 117)

BLIND REPAIR, when no FES is done, or when the pc has lost his folder, one is doing a blind repur. The progress program and advance program may have holes in them. (HCOB 6 Oct 70)

BLINKLESS TR 0, there is no such thing. Sitting with any attention on the body just isn’t confront—you aren’t doing the drill right. If your body blinks then OK, but if you are making it blink by having attention on the eyes then your TR 0 is out. (HCOB 8 Dec 74)

BLOCKING OUT, identifying incidents on the time track by dating, moving the time track to that date, asking the pc what is there, finding the duration, moving the pc through it to the end, asking the pc what happened, checking for earlier beginning, moving the pc through the incident again . ( SH Spec 272, 6306C11)

BLOW, n .1 . the sudden dissipation of mass in the mind with an accompanying feeling of relief. (Scn AD) 2 . a definite manifestation and the pc must say “something blew” or “it disappeared” or “it’s gone” or “it vanished,” not “I feel lighter.” (HCOB 24 Sept 71) 3 . the phenomena of obsessive efforts to individuate. (HCOB 12 Jan 61) 4 . departures, sudden and relatively unexplained, from sessions, posts, jobs, locations and areas. (HCOB 31 Dec 59)—v. Slang. 1 . unauthorized departure from an area, usually caused by misunderstood data or overts. (HCOB 19 Jun 71 III) 2 . leave, get out, rush away, cease to be where one should really be or just cease to be audited. (BCR, p. 23)

BLOWDOWN, 1 . a tone arm motion to the left made to keep the needle on the dial. (HCOB 29 Apr 69) 2 . a period of relief and cognition to a pc while it is occurring and for a moment after it stops. When the auditor has to move the tone arm from right to left to keep the needle on the dial and the movement is .1 divisions or more, then a blowdown is occurring. (HCOB 3 Aug 65) 3 . a movement of the needle from left to right as you face a meter with a hang-up at the right. That’s got to be included in training. It’s whether or not the needle stays over to the right that makes the blowdown, not what you do with the tone arm. (SH Spec 21, 6406C04) 4 . the meter reaction of having found the correct by-passed charge. (HCOB 19 Aug 63) Abbr. BD.

BLOW-OFFS, see BLOW.

BLOW-UP, in the low tone arm case, means a sudden approach of the tone arm from a non-optimum (below 2 .0) reading toward the optimum read. (HCOB 1 Sept 60)

BLUE SHEET, Return Programs (now called Advance Programs) are on bright blue sheets. (HCOB 25 Jun 70)

B.M.R., big mid ruds. (SH Spec 320, 6310C31)

BOARD POLICY LETTERS, color flash—green ink on cream paper. These are the issues of the Boards of Directors of the Churches of Scientology and are separate and distinct from those HCO Policy Letters written by LRH. Only LRH issues may be printed green on white for policy and only LRH issues may have the prefix HCO. These Board issues are valid as Policy. The purpose of this distinction is to keep LRH’s comm lines pure and to clearly distinguish between Source material and other issues and so that any conflict and/or confusion on Source can easily be resolved. (BPL 14 Jan 74R I) Abbr. BPL.

BOARD TECHNICAL BULLETIN, color flash—red ink on cream paper. These are the issues of the Boards of Directors of the Churches of Scientology and are separate and distinct from those HCO Bulletins written by LRH. Only LRH issues may be printed red on white for Technical Bulletins and only LRH issues may have the prefix HCO. These Board issues are valid as tech. The purpose of this distinction is to keep LRH’s comm lines pure and to clearly distinguish between Source material and other issues and so that any conflict and/or confusion on Source can easily be resolved. (BPL 14 Jan 74R I) Abbr. BTB.

BODHI, 1. one who has attained intellectual and ethical perfection by human means. This probably would be a Dn Release. (PXL, p. 18) 2 . B o d h i means enlightenment or, alternately, one who has attained intellectual and ethical perfection by human means. (HOA, Intro)

BODY, 1 . a carbon-oxygen engine which runs at 98 .6°F. The theta being is the engineer running this engine in a Homo sapiens. (HOM, p. 42) 2 . a solid appendage which makes the person recognizable. (PAB 125) 3 . an identifying form or non-identifiable form to facilitate the control of, the communication of and with, and the havingness for the thetan in his existence in the mest universe. (HCOB 3 Jul 59) 4 . the thetan’s communication center. (CFC, p. 9) 5 . a carbon-oxygen engine which runs on low combustion fuel, generally derived from other life forms. The body is directly monitored by the genetic entity in activities such as respiration, heartbeat and endocrine secretions; but these activities may be modified by the thetan. (Scn 8-8008, p. 8) 6 . a physical object. It is not the being himself. As a body has mass it tends to remain motionless unless moved and tends to keep going in a certain direction unless steered. (HCOB 10 May 72)

BODY IN PAWN, an incident of protecting bodies. Societies have gone totally batty on the track with this and we call it bodies in pawn. (5904C08)

BODY MOTION, any motion of the body which causes the tone arm to move falsely up or down. Body motion is never recorded in a session. (EMD, p. 25)

BODY-PLUS-THETAN SCALE, from 0.0 to 4 .0 on the tone scale, and the position on this scale is established by the social environment and education of the composite being and is a stimulus-response scale. (Scn 8-8008, p. 76)

BODY REACTIONS, one of the ten main needle actions of an E-meter. The deep breathing of a preclear, a sigh, a yawn, a sneeze, a stomach growl can any one of them make a needle react. They’re not important once you know what they are. (EME, pp. 18-19)

BODY VALENCE, human identity. (HCOB 14 Jul 56)

BOGGED STUDENT, he is groggy or puzzled or frowning or even emotionally upset by his misunderstood words. When not caught and handled he will go to sleep or just stare into space. (HCO PL 26 Jun 72)

BOIL-OFF, v. to become groggy and seem to go to sleep. (HFP, p. 100)—n. 1 . usually a flow running too long in one direction. (7204C07 SO III) 2 . a manifestation of unconsciousness, is very mild, and simply means that some

period of the person’s life wherein he was unconscious has been slightly restimulated. (Scn Jour ISS. 14-G) 3 . a state of unconsciousness produced by a confusion of effort impinging upon one area. It is a slow motion unconsciousness. (PDC 29) 4 . a condition of somnolence which is sometimes indistinguishable from sleep. (SOS, Bk. 2, p. 133) 5 . boil-off was originally and sedately named “comatic reduction,” but such erudition has been outvoted by the fact that it has never been used. (DMSMH, p. 303) 6 . it actually is a flow which is run too long in one direction. That’s what boil-off, anaten, etc. is. (SH Spec 229, 6301C10)

BONUS PACKAGE, occasionally you get a bonus package off one list. In addition to the item you are looking for, sometimes two R/Sing items will show up on the same list opposing each other and blow. They oppose each other, not what you’re listing. (HCOB 23 Nov 62) Abbr. BP.

BOOK AND BOTTLE, Opening Procedure by Duplication. Il;s goal is the separating of time, moment from moment. This is done by getting a preclear to duplicate the same action over and over again with two dissimilar objects. In England this process is called “Book and Bottle,” probably because these two familiar objects are the most used in doing Opening Procedure by Duplication. (Dn 55!, p. 114)

BOOK AUDITOR, 1 . someone who has successfully applied Scn from a book to help someone else and who has received a Hubbard Book Auditor certificate for doing so. (Scn AD) 2 . someone who has studied books on Scn and listens to other people to make them better. (Abil 155)

BOOK ONE CLEAR, Mest Clear. (Abil 87) See also MEST CLEAR.

BOOK ONE OF DIANETICS, Dianetics: The Modern Science of Mental Health. (HCO PL 25 Jan 57)

BOOK ONE OF SCIENTOLOGY, Scientology: The Fundamentals of Thought. (HCO PL 25 Jan 57)

BOREDOM, 1 . boredom is not just not doing anything. Boredom is an eddying back and forth which on its lower harmonic becomes pain and on a lower harmonic becomes agony. (2ACC28B, 5312CM20) 2. boredom is not a state of inaction. It is a state of idle action, vacillating action where penalties are yet in existence, and where they are grave, but a state in which one has decided he can’t really do anything about them. It’s just a high-toned apathy. (PDC 59)

BORROWED FACSIMILES, facsimiles that aren’t yours. That is to say they are borrowed from people or they’re photographed or they’re taken right straight out of other theta beings, just outright stolen; we call it borrowing. (5207CM24B)

 

BOTTOM TERMINAL, the terminal farthest from present time. (SH Spec 306, 6309C11)

BOUNCER, 1 . an engram which contains the species of phrase, “can’t stay here,” “Get out!” and other phrases which will not permit the preclear to remain in its vicinity but returns him to present time. (DTOT, p. 129) 2 . the preclear may be in an engram and yet be bounced into present time. This creates a situation in which the preclear seems to be in present time but is actually under considerable tension being held in an engram. (SOS, p. 106)

BP, bonus package. (HCOB 23 Nov 62)

B .P ., basic personality. The attention units called basic personality. (DMSMH, p. 124)

BPC, by-passed charge. (HCOB 23 Aug 65)

BPI, designation on HCO Policy Letters and HCO Bulletins indicates dissemination and restriction as follows: Broad Public Issue. Give to HCOs of all types, all staff of central organizations, field Auditors, put in magazines, do what you like with it. (HCO PL 22 May 59)

BPL, Board Policy Letter. (BPL 14 Jan 74R I)

BRACKET, 1 . the standard bracket is a five-way bracket. The general form of this is as follows: you . . . terminal; terminal . . . you; terminal . . . another; another . . . terminal; terminal . . . terminal. (HCOB 30 Apr 61) 2 . the word bracket is taken from the artillery, meaning to enclose with a salvo of fire. A bracket is run as follows: first one gets the concept as happening to the preclear. Then one gets the concept of the preclear making it happen (or thinking or saying it) to another. Then one gets the concept as being directed by another at others. (Scn 8-80, p. 40) 3 . with these three things: the thetan trying to put up mock-ups of his own which persist; trying to divert the mock-ups of others; and trying to observe what others are doing to others; we have what we call a bracket in Scn. (PAB 11) 4 . the individual does it himself, somebody else does it, others do it, or the individual does it to somebody else, or somebody does it to him or others do it to others. (PDC 31)

BRAIN, 1 . another part of the nervous system which receives and sends impulses to the body parts. (SPB) 2 . a neuro-shock absorber. It has very little to do with thinking. (SH Spec 75, 6608C16) 3 . a very mechanical rattletrap sort of a switchboard that’s been thrown together by you in order to translate thought into action and to coordinate energy. (5203CM03B)

BREAK-ENGRAM, 1 . a late engram which crosses chains of engrams would be a “cross engram.” If such an engram resulted in a loss of sanity it would be called a “break-engram.” (DMSMH, p. 144) 2 . the secondary engram after the receipt of which the individual experienced a lowering of general tone to 2 .5 or below and became therefore unable to cope with his environment. (DTOT Gloss)

BREAKING A CASE, Slang. meaning that one breaks the hold of the preclear on a nonsurvival facsimile, never breaking the preclear or his spirit, but breaking what is breaking the preclear. (NFP Gloss)

BRIDGE, THE, 1 . the route to Clear, t h e b r i d g e , which we call the Classification, Gradation and Awareness Chart. (Aud 107 ASNO) 2 . a term originating in early Dn days to symbolize travel from unknowingness to revelation. (Aud 72 ASNO)

BROKEN, Slang. used in the wise of “breaking a case,” meaning that one breaks the hold of the preclear on a nonsurvival facsimile. Used in greater or lesser magnitude such as “breaking a circuit” or “breaking into a chain” or “breaking a computation.” Never breaking the preclear or his spirit, but breaking what’s breaking the preclear. (NFP Gloss)

BROKEN DRAMATIZATION, where the individual has been prevented from carrying out the commands of the engram which is restimulated by present time environmental perceptics. (SOS, Bk. 2, p. 118)

BROKEN DRAMATIZATION LOCKS, locks in which the chief factor is that the individual has been prevented from completing the dramatization of a restimulated engram. These are most abundant at the 1 .5 level. (SOS Gloss)

B .S ., Beginning Scientologist. (HCOB 23 Aug 65)

B . Scn., Bachelor of Scientology. (HCOB 23 Aug 65)

B .T ., before time. (5203CMlOA)

BTB, Board Technical Bulletin. (BPL 14 Jan 74R I)

BUBBLE GUM INCIDENT, 1 . an incident on the track where you are hit with motion and finally develop an obsession about motion. (I wish you to carefully note these very technical terms like bubble gum.) (5206CM23A) 2 . the first incident on the track that has any words in it and is usually the last incident on the track of any magnitude that has any words in it for millions of years afterward. It sits there all by itself. It’s a verbal implant, a thought implant. (5206CM25B)

BUDDHA, simply one who has attained bodhi. There have been many buddhas and there are expected to be many more. (PAB 32)

BUGGED, the word bugged is slang for snarled up or halted. (HCO PL 29 Feb 72 II)

BULL-BAITING, in coaching certain drills, the coach attempts to find certain actions, words, phrases, mannerisms or subjects that cause the student doing the drill to become distracted from the drill by reacting to the coach. As a bullfighter attempts to attract the bull’s attention and control the bull, so does the coach attempt to attract and control the student’s attention, however the coach flunks the student whenever he succeeds in distracting the student from the drill and then repeats the action until it no longer has any effect on the student. Taken from a Spanish and English sport of “baiting” which means “to set dogs upon a chained bull,” but mainly “to attack or torment especially with persistent insult, criticism or ridicule.” Also “to tease.” (LRH Def. Notes)

BUREAU 5, (Continental Liaison Office) Bureau 5 covers the standard functions done in Scientology Church Tech and Qual Divisions. (SO ED 96 Int)

BUTTERED ALL OVER THE UNIVERSE, 1 . a preclear who does not know where he is. The preclear has used remote viewpoints, and has left remote viewpoints located all over everywhere to such a degree that the preclear thinks he is anyplace rather than where he is. (Dn 55!, pp. 145-146) 2 . in his failures to control the individual withdraws from things he has attempted to control but leaves himself connected with them in terms of “dead energy.” Thus we get the manifestation of buttered all over the universe. (COHA, p. 123) 3 . Colloquial; a thetan unknowingly in contact with a large part of a universe. (COHA, p. 74) 4 . the lower harmonic of exteriorization, which is: “I don’t want to be there and I’ve backed out in spite of myself.” (5411C29) 5 . the super reach case. He isn’t withdrawing, he’s reaching, compulsively and he can’t stop himself. (2ACC-29A, 5312C M20)

BUTTON(S), 1 . items, words, phrases, subjects or areas that cause response or reaction in an individual by the words or actions of other people, and which cause him discomfort, embarrassment, or upset, or make him laugh uncontrollably. (Scn AD) 2 . things in particular that each human being finds aberrative and has in common. (HFP, p. 127) 3 . restimulators, words, voice tones, music, whatever they are—things which are filed in the reactive mind bank as parts of engrams. (DMSMH, p. 74) 4 . (suppress button, invalidate button, etc.), it is called a button because when you push it (say it) you can get a meter reaction. (HCOB 29 Jan 70)

BUTTON CHART, chart of attitudes toward life. This might be called a “button chart” for it contains the major difficulties people have. (HFP, p. 38)

BY-PASS CIRCUITS, see DEMON CIRCUITS.

BY-PASSED CHARGE, 1 . mental energy or mass that has been restimulated in some way in an individual, and that is either partially or wholly unknown to that individual and so is capable of affecting him adversely. (Scn AD) 2 . when one gets a lock, a lower earlier incident restimulates. That is BPC. It isn’t the auditor by-passing it. One handled later charge that restimulated earlier charge. That is BPC (tech of ‘62), and that is all that the term means. (HCOB 10 Jun 72 I) 3 . reactive charge that has been by-passed (restimulated but overlooked by both pc and auditor). (BCR, p. 21) Abbr. BPC.

BY-PASSED CHARGE ASSESSMENT, 1 . auditing by list to help the preclear find by-passed charge. The moment the correct by-passed charge is found the preclear feels much better. (Scn AD) 2 . a BPC assessment is actual auditing (Level III). Here one cleans each smallest read of a question (but not cleaning cleans), before going onto the next question, handling originations by the pc and acknowledging. One never does this with an ARC broken pc. With an ARC break one just ploughs on looking for a big read and indicates it to pc. (BCR, p. 41) 3 . a by-passed charge assessment is auditing because you clean every read of the needle on the list being assessed. The pc is acked, the pc is permitted to itsa and give his opinions. But you never do a by-passed charge assessment on an ARC broken pc. These two different activities (by-passed charge assessment and ARC break assessment) unfortunately have the word assessment in common and they use the same lists, therefore some students confuse them. (HCOB 7 Sept 64 II)

BY-PASSED ITEM, when a list has been made and includes a reliable item and that reliable item was not used to find an item in opposition to it, the item which was not so found is called a by-passed item. (HCOB 17 Nov 62)

c

CALIBRATION, finding and marking the correct positions on the tone arm dial so that TA 2 and TA 3 positions are known precisely by the auditor at start of session. (EMD, p. 16A)

CALL-BACK, a type of action phrase which would, in present time, cause the preclear to move back to another position in space, and when contained in an engram would pull the preclear down from present time into the engram. (SOS, p. 105)

CAL-MAG FORMULA, working on this in 1973, for other uses than drug reactions, I found the means of getting calcium into solution in the body along with magnesium so that the results of both could be achieved. (HCOB 5 Nov 74)

CANCELLER, 1 . in Dn processing we used to use what was called a “canceller.” At the beginning of the session, the preclear was told that anything which had been said to him would be cancelled when the word cancelled was uttered at the end of the session. This canceller is no longer employed, not because it was not useful but because lock scanning provides the means of scanning off all the auditing. This is a far more effective and positive mechanism than the canceller. (SOS, Bk. 2, pp. 228-229) 2 . a contract with the patient that whatever the auditor says will not become literally interpreted by the patient or used by him in any way. It prevents accidental positive suggestion. (DMSMH, p. 200)

CANNED LIST, Slang. a pre-prepared and issued list. (7204C07 SO I)

CANS, electrodes for the E-meter. Steel soup or vegetable cans, unpainted, tops cleanly removed, label and glue washed off, tin plated or not, have been standard for many years. It is with these that calibration has been done. (HCOB 14 Jul 70)

CAN’T HAVE, 1 . it means just that—a depriving of substance or action or things. (HCO PL 12 May 72) 2 . denial of something to someone else. (BTB 22 Oct 72) 3 . a moment of pain or unconsciousness is a moment of can’t have. If, at a certain moment, an individual couldn’t have the environment, couldn’t have the circumstances he was undergoing then it is a certainty that he’ll pile up an engram right at that spot in time. (Abil 14)

CAS, Church of American Science. (PAB 74)

CASE, the whole sum of past by-passed charge. (HCOB 19 Aug 63)

CASE ANALYSIS, 1 . the determination of where pc’s attention (at current state of case) is fixed on the track and restoring pc’s determinism over those places. (HCOB 28 Feb 59) 2 . the steps for case analysis are (1) discover what the pc is sitting in, (2) get the lies off, (3) locate and indicate the charge. (HCOB 14 Dec 63)

CASE CRACKING SECTION, a section in the Dept. of Review in the Qualifications Division of a Scientology Church. This section audits cases (students or HGC pcs or other pcs in difficulty such as field auditor rejects) to a result. (HCO PL 24 Apr 65)

CASE V, 1 . the definition of a case V is no mock-ups, only blackness. (Scn 8- 8008, p. 120) [For a complete list of the eight levels of case of SOP 8-C, see STATES OF CASE SCALE.]

CASE GAIN, 1 . the improvements and resurgences a person experiences from auditing. (Scn AD) 2 . any case betterment according to the pc. (Abil 155)

CASE HISTORIES, reports on preclears’ individual records. (FOT, p. 15)

CASE LEVEL, see STATE OF CASE SCALE.

CASE PROGRESS SHEET, a sheet which details the levels of processing and training the pc has achieved while moving up the grade chart. It also lists incidental rundowns and setup actions the pc has had. The sheet gives at a glance the pc’s progress to OT. (BTB 3 Nov 72R)

CASE, STATES OF, see STATE OF CASE SCALE.

CASE SUPERVISOR, 1 . that person in a Scientology Church who gives instructions regarding, and supervises the auditing of preclears. The abbreviation C/S can refer to the Case Supervisor or to the written instructions of a case supervisor depending on context. (BTB 12 Apr 72R) 2 . the C/S is the case supervisor. He has to be an accomplished and properly certified auditor and a person trained additionally to supervise cases. The C/S is the auditor’s “handler.” He tells the auditor what to do, corrects his tech, keeps the lines straight and keeps the auditor calm and willing and winning. The C/S is the pc’s case director. His actions are donefor the pc. (Dn Today, Bk. 3, p. 545) Abbr. C/S. See also C/S.

CATATONIA, 1 . a psychiatric name for withdrawn totally. (HCOB 24 Nov 65) 2 . catatonia means the person is lying still in apathy unmovingly and not reaching anything. (SH Spec 303, 6309C05)

CAUSATION, imposing time and space upon objects, people, self, events and individuals. (Scn 8-80, p. 44)

CAUSE, 1 . cause could be defined as emanation. It could be defined also, for purposes of communication, as source-point. (FOT, p. 77) 2 . a potential source of flow. (COHA, p. 258) 3 . is simply the point of emanation of the communication. Cause in our dictionary here means only “source point.” (Dn 55 .1, p. 70)

“CAVE IN,” (noun) “CAVED IN” (adjective), mental and/or physical collapse to the extent that the individual cannot function causatively . The individual is quite effect . A U . S . Western term which symbolized mental or physical collapse as like being at the bottom of a mine shaft or in a tunnel when the supports collapsed and left the person under tons of debris. (LRH Def. Notes)

CC, Clearing Course. (HCO PL 6 Sept 72 II)

CCHs, 1 . a highly workable set of processes starting with control, going to communication and leading to havingness in that order. The CCHs are auditing specifically aimed at and using all the parts of the two way comm formula. (BTB 12 Sept 63) 2 . several associated processes which bring a person into better control of his body and surroundings, put him into better communication with his surroundings and other people, and increase his ability to have things

for himself. They bring him into the present, away from his past problems. (Scn AD) 3 . actually, control, communication and havingness. When you apply control, you obtain communication which gives the preclear havingness. And it is a method of entrance on cases which is rather infallible. (SH Spec 9, 6106C07)

CCH-O, the sum of CCH-O is find the auditor, find the auditing room, find the pc, knock out any existing PT problem, establish goals, clear help, get agreement on session length and get up to the first real auditing command. CCH-O isn’t necessarily run in that order and this isn’t necessarily all of CCH-O, but if any of these are seriously scamped, the session will somewhere get into trouble. (SCP, p. 8)

CCH OB, clear help in brackets with a meter, running meter toward a freer needle. (PAB 138)

CDEI, curiosity, desire, enforcement, inhibition. (BTB 1 Dec 71RB II)

CDEINR, curious, desired, enforced, inhibited, no, refused. (BTB 1 Dec 71RB II)

CELL, 1 . the virus and cell are matter and energy animated and motivated in space and time by theta. (Scn 0-8, p. 75) 2 . a unit of life which is seeking to survive and only to survive. (DMSMH, p. 50)

CEN-O, designation on HCO Policy Letters and HCO Bulletins indicates dissemination and restriction as follows: to go to all staff of Central Organizations only plus HCO Area Sec, HCO Cont, HCO WW. (HCO PL 22 May 59)

CEN-O-CON, designation on HCO Policy Letters and HCO Bulletins indicates dissemination and restriction as follows: to go to Association Secretaries or Organization Secretaries of Central Organizations only, not to staff; also to HCO Area Sec, HCO Cont, HCO WW. (HCO PL 22 May 59) 2 . modifies HCO PL 22 May 59, HCO Policy Letters which are marked CenOCon may be issued to all staff including HASI Personnel. (HCO PL 25 Jun 59)

CENT, central. (BPL 5 Nov 72RA)

CENTRAL ORG (ORGANIZATION), Church of Scientology (Class IV). (HCO PL 6 Feb 66)

CERT, see CERTIFICATE.

CERTAINTY, 1. the degree of willingness to accept the awareness of an is-ness. (SH Spec 84, 6612C13) 2 . knowledge itself is certainty; knowledge is not data. Knowingness is certainty. Sanity is certainty, providing only that that certainty does not fall beyond the conviction of another when he views it. To obtain a certainty one must be able to observe. (COHA, p. 187) 3 . knowingness—knowing one knows—a state of beingness. (PAB 29) 4 . measurement of the effort and locations and distances necessary to make two points coincide at a certain instant in time. And that is really a low level certainty. That is certainty in terms of motion. (5311CM17A) 5 . clarity of observation. (COHA, p. 190)

CERTAINTY PROCESSING, the processing of certainties. The anatomy of maybe consists of uncertainties and is resolved by the processiug of certainties. (Scn 8-8008, p. 126)

CERTIFICATE, an award given by the Hubbard Communications Office to designate study and practice performed and skill attained. It is not a degree as it

signalizes competence whereas degrees ordinarily symbolize merely time spent in theoretical study and impart no index of skill. (Aud 2 UK) Abbr. Cert.

CERTIFICATION COURSE, you teach the student the theory in the certification course and the drills and key processes for the grade in the classification course. (HCOB 22 Sept 65)

CERTIFICATION EXAM, this is a written test taken from the HCOBs, tapes, policy letters of the theory material the student studies. (FO 1685)

CHAIN, 1 . a series of recordings of similar experiences. A chain has engrams, secondaries and locks. (HCOB 23 Apr 69) 2 . incidents of similar nature strung out in time. (SH Spec 70, 6607C21) 3 . a series of incidents of similar nature or similar subject matter. (HCOB 1 Mar 62)

CHAIN OF INCIDENTS, 1 . when one speaks of a chain of incidents, one means usually a chain of locks or a chain of engrams or a chain of secondaries which have similar content. (SOS, Bk. 2, p. 194) 2 . a whole adventure or activity related by the same subject, general location or people, understood to take place in a long time period, weeks, months, years or even billions or trillions of years. (HCOB 15 May 63) See also CHAIN.

CHANGE, 1 . a shift of location in space. (SH Spec 4, 6105C26) 2 . essentially the redirection of energy. When change is too rapid or too slow both beingness and havingness suffer. (Scn 8-8008, p. 103)

CHANGE OF CHARACTERISTIC, 1 . one of the ten main needle actions of an E-meter. A change of characteristic occurs when we hit on something in the preclear’s bank. It occurs only when and each time we ask that exact question. As the question or item alone changes the needle pattern, we must assume that that is it and we use it. It is not much used but must be known. (EME, pp. 15-16) 2 . the meter on a certain question has its needle shift into a different action than it was in. It resumes its old action when you no longer ask the question. (SH Spec 1, 6105C07)

 

CHANGE OF SPACE PROCESSING, the object of change of space processing is to get all areas into present time. Originally it could be conceived that only the place where the preclear is is in present time, that all other places are in past time to the degree that they are far from the preclear. Change of space processing is done in this fashion: “Be at the place where you entered the mest universe,” “Be at the center of this room,” “Be at the place where you entered the mest universe,” “Center of this room,” “Entrance point,” “Room” and so forth until the entrance point is in present time. The preclear should be made to run change of space on any area until that area is in present time. (COHA, p. 38)

CHANGE OF VIEWPOINT, the primary requisite of the viewpoint is that it has position relative to points. A change of viewpoint necessitates a change of positions rather than a change of idea. The change of position is primary; the change of idea is secondary. (PAB 8)

CHANGE PROCESSES, 1 . resistance to change prevents the pc from having, and as the ideas of change are sorted out the pc has increased havingness. (HCOB 27 Apr 61) 2 . if a pc is bad off on change (which includes about eighty per cent of the pcs you get), he cannot run another auditing command cleanly as he never really runs the command but runs something else. Therefore the only thing that can be run is a change process and it must be run until motion is removed from the tone arm. There are many, many versions of change. To get the best result, adapt a process to the pc. (HCOB 27 Apr 61)

CHAOS, 1 . all points in motion—no points fixed. (5410CM07) 2 . there’s nothing traveling in one direction and there’s nothing in alignment. (PDC 59)

CHAOS MERCHANT, the slave master, the fellow who’s trying to hold everybody down, the fellow who’s trying to keep everybody shook up one way or the other and so he can’t ever get up again, the fellow who makes his money and his daily bread out of how terrible everything is. (SH Spec 328, 6312C10) See also MERCHANTS OF CHAOS.

CHARGE, 1 . harmful energy or force accumulated and stored within the reactive mind, resulting from the conflicts and unpleasant experiences that a person has had. Auditing discharges this charge so that it is no longer there to affect the individual. (Scn AD) 2 . the electrical impulse on the case that activates the meter. (HCOB 27 May 70) 3 . stored energy or stored recreatable potentials of energy. (HCOB 8 Jun 63) 4 . the stored quantities of energy in the time track. It is the sole thing that is being relieved or removed by the auditor from the time track. (HCOB 13 Apr 64, Scn VIPart One Tone Arm Action) 5 . emotional charge or energy. (NSOL, p. 29) 6 . the accumulation of entheta in locks and secondaries which charges up the engrams and gives them their force to aberrate. (SOS Gloss) 7 . by charge is meant anger, fear, grief, or apathy contained as misemotion in the case. (SOS, p. 108) See also CHRONIC CHARGE.

CHARGE UP, charge that is restimulated but not released causes the case to “charge up” in that charge already on the time track is triggered but is not yet viewed by the pc. (HCOB 8 Jun 63)

CHARGED UP, the key-in and additional locks begin to give the engram more and more entheta, and it becomes more and more powerful in its effect upon the individual. It has to be, in short, charged up in order to affect the individual. (SOS, Bk. 2, p. 137)

CHART OF ATTITUDES, 1. a chart on which are plotted with the numerical values of the emotional tone scale the gradient attitudes that fall between the highest and lowest states of consideration about life. Example: top-CAUSE; bottom-FULL EFFECT. (PXL Gloss) 2 . a chart of attitudes toward life. This might be called a “button chart” for it contains the major difficulties people have. It is also a self-evaluation chart. You can find a level on it where you agree and that is your level of reaction toward life. (HFP, p. 38)

CHC, Clean Hands Congress. (HCOB 29 Sept 66)

CHECKLIST, a list of actions or inspections to ready an activity or machinery or object for use or estimate the needful repairs or corrections. This is erroneously sometimes called a “checksheet” but that word is reserved for study steps. (HCOB 19 Jun 71 III)

CHECKOUT, the action of verifying a student’s knowledge of an item given on a checksheet. (HCOB 19 Jun 71 III)

CHECKSHEET, a list of materials, often divided into sections, that give the theory and practical steps which, when completed, give one a study completion. The items are selected to add up to the required knowledge of the subject. They are arranged in the sequence necessary to a gradient of increasing knowledge on the subject. After each item there is a place for the initial of the student or the person checking the student out. When the checksheet is fully initialed, it is complete, meaning the student may now take an exam and be granted the award for completion. Some checksheets are required to be gone through twice before completion is granted. (HCOB 19 Jun 71 III) Abbr. c/sheet or ch. sheet or Ösht.

CHECKSHEET MATERIAL, the policy letters, bulletins, tapes, mimeo issues, any reference book or any books mentioned on the checksheet. (HCO PL 16 Mar 71)

CHEMICAL RELEASE, drugs (or alcohol) give an enforced moment or period of release. It is surrounded in mass. They are deadly because they give the sensation of release while actually pulling in mass. (HCOB 23 Sept 68)

CHEW AROUND, tendency on the part of preclears to change the direction or position of the energy masses which they are handling, and when this is the case there is a certain loss of havingness by reason of heat and friction. (PAB 52)

CHEW ENERGY, Slang. just “chewing the energy around” doesn’t make it persist, but, with all this chewing he isn’t as-ising anything. All he is doing is moving mass “A” to position “B.” Anybody who is doing this gets no cognition out of it at all. He is waiting for that piece of energy to tell him something, and this tells you a great deal about the preclear who couldn’t run an engram. He was waiting for the MEST to say something. (PAB 56)

CHKSHT, checksheet. (BPL 5 Nov 72RA)

CHRONIC CHARGE, the impulse to withdraw from that which can’t be withdrawn from or to approach that which can’t be approached, and this, like a two pole battery, generates current. This constantly generated current is chronic charge. (HCOB 15 May 63)

CHRONIC ENGRAM, an engram which has been more or less continuously restimulated so that it has become an apparent portion of the individual. (DTOT, p. 45)

CHRONIC HIGH TA, one which is found high two sessions running (consecutive). “High” means around 4 .0 or above. But 3 .8 can also be called “high” if it occurs at session beginning too often. (HCOB 13 Feb 70) See also HIGH TA.

CHRONIC INSANITY, 1 . an acute insanity with the time factor lengthily extended. (DASF) 2 . one which, having appeared, does not subside but holds the individual in an abnormal state. (DASF)

CHRONIC SOMATIC, 1 . a stuck moment on a time track, which is the stable datum of a prior confusion. (SH Spec 61, 6110C03) 2 . an obvious

demonstration of a help-failure cycle where the individual has used an effort to help and has failed and has gotten a somatic back. (5112CM30A) 3 . psychosomatic illness, as it is called in the field of medicine, is named in Dn a chronic somatic, since it is not an illness, and cannot be diagnosed as such but is only some former pain which is in restimulation. (SOS, p. xv) 4 . a psychosomatic illness, since it is discovered that psychosomatic illness is only the restimulated somatic of some engram and goes away when the engram is contacted and reduced or erased. (SOS, p. 26) 5 . simply an area of randomity, a theta facsimile of past pain, effort, counter-effort, that has swamped the individual. It throws him all out of whack. As far as atoms and molecules are concerned, he suffers pain. (5109CM24B)

CHUG, a needle reaction in which the needle in falling appears to encounter, penetrate and surge beyond a “skin.” (HCOB 13 Apr 64, Scn VIPart One Glossary of Terms)

CIRCUIT, 1 . a part of an individual’s bank that behaves as though it were someone or something separate from him and that either talks to him or goes into action of its own accord, and may even, if severe enough, take control of him while it operates. A tune that keeps going around in someone’s head is an example of a circuit. (NOTL Gloss) 2 . just an identity that is so dominant that it balls up a whole section of the whole track. It takes a large section of the whole track and bundles it all up in a black ball and it’s full of pictures. (SH Spec 105, 6201C25) 3 . a circuit has no livingness in it. It is simply a motivated mass. (SH Spec 21, 6106C27) 4 . matter, energy, space and time at a mental level, enclosing thought. (6009C13) 5 . a mechanism which becomes an identity in itself, with its own “I” which takes a piece of the analyzer, walls it off with the charge, and thereafter dictates to the preclear. In olden times, these were called demons. (SOS, Bk. 2, p. 202) 6 . divisions of your own mind that seem to make up other personalities and these other personalities affect you and argue with you and so forth. (5203CM05D)

CIRCUIT CASES, the auditor will encounter many cases which resolve very rapidly. These account for fully 50% of the people who come to him, but he will also encounter many people whose cases are resistive and he will encounter a small handful who wouldn’t let anything happen if the auditor used a shotgun on them. These are classified as “circuit cases.” (PAB 19)

CIRCUITRY, 1 . consists of “you” phrases. They are the phrases addressed from an exterior “I” to “you.” “I have to tell you” is still a “you” addressing the “I.” These phrases are received from persons who seek to nullify the independence of judgment of others. (NOTL, p. 49) 2. circuitry is an escape from knowing. It is knowingness in a substitute for lack of knowing. When a thetan escapes from knowing, he sets up a circuit. (SH Spec 68, 6110C18)

CLASS, 1 . refers to the level of classification of an auditor. (BTB 12 Apr 72) 2 . a technical certificate in Scn goes by classes on the gradation chart. (HCO PL 13 Mar 66) Abbr. Cl.

CLASS 0, see HRS.

CLASS I, see HTS.

CLASS II, see HCA.

CLASS III, see HPA.

CLASS IV, see HAA.

CLASS V, see HVA.

CLASS VI, see HSS.

 

CLASS VII, see HGA.

CLASS VIII, see HSTS.

CLASS VIII C/S-6, list useful in running out past bad auditing. (HCOB 28 Mar 74)

CLASS VIII DRUG RUNDOWN, one of the steps in a complete drug rundown. It consists of listing and rehabbing all drugs, 3-way recalls, secondaries, and engrams of taking and giving drugs. (HCOB 31 Aug 74)

CLASS IX, Hubbard Advanced Technical Specialist. The Class IX Course is taught at Saint Hill organizations and contains data concerning advanced procedures and developments since Class VIII. (CG&AC 75)

CLASS X, an advanced Scn course available only on Flag. It teaches L-10 OT, an upper level rundown whose basic tech comes from research into increasing OT powers. (CG&AC 75)

CLASS XI, an advanced Scn Course, available to Sea Org auditors only and is taught on Flag. It teaches L-11, the New Life Rundown and L-llX, the New Life Expansion Rundown. (CG&AC 75)

CLASS XII, an advanced Scn course available to Sea Org auditors only and is taught on Flag. It teaches L-12, the Flag OT executive Rundown. (CG&AC 75)

CLASS CHART, see CLASSIFICATION GRADATION AND AWARENESS CHART.

CLASSIFICATION, 1. classification means that we require certain actions to have been done or conditions to have been attained before an individual is classified on that level and we let him go on. (Aud 107 ASHO) 2 . an award earned by an auditor that entitles him to audit certain levels of processes, and that shows that he has attained the ability and skill to do so by actual test. (Scn AD)

CLASSIFICATION COURSE, the practical drills and student auditing portion of an auditor training course. After completion of the classification course the auditor is classified to that level and may audit pcs professionally on the processes of that level. (PRD Gloss)

CLASSIFICATION EXAM, this is a practical exam. The test consists of a checkout of TR-4, any of the meter drills of the level, and the auditing of a doll on the process or processes of that level with full TRs and admin. (FO 1685)

CLASSIFICATION GRADATION AND AWARENESS CHART, the route to Clear, the Bridge. On the right side of the chart there are various steps called the states of release. The left-hand side of the chart describes the very important steps of training on which one gains the knowledge and abilities necessary to deliver the grades of release to another. It is a guide for the individual from the point where he first becomes dimly aware of a Scientologist or Scn and shows him how and where he should move up in order to make it. Scn contains the entire map for getting the individual through all the various points on this gradation scale and for getting him across the Bridge to a higher state of existence. (Aud 107 ASHO)

CLAY DEMO, abbreviation for clay demonstration. A Scn study technique whereby the student demonstrates definitions, principles, etc. in clay to obtain greater understanding by translating significance into actual mass. (BTB 12 Apr 72R) CLAY TABLE, a clay table is any platform at which a student, sianding or sitting, can work comfortably. The surface must be smooth. A table built of rough timber will serve but the top surface where the work is done should be oil

cloth or linoleum. Otherwise the clay sticks to it and it cannot be cleaned and will soon lead to an inability to see clearly what is being done because it is stained with clay leavings. (HCOB 10 Dec 70 I)

CLAY TABLE CLEARING, 1 . a process of clearing words and symbols. (HCOB 9 Sept 64) 2 . as one Scn remedy for increased IQ and destimulation, clay table clearing is audited by an auditor in a session. The entire effort by the auditor in a session of clay table clearing is to help the pc regain confidence in being able to achieve things by removing the misunderstandings which have prevented that achievement. (HCOB 18 Aug 64)

CLAY TABLE HEALING, gets the pc to name the condition the pc requires to be handled and gets the pc to represent this in clay. The whole process is flat when the condition has vanished. Clay table healing is a very precise series of actions. (HCOB 9 Sept 64) [The above is a very brief summary only. The full series of steps can be found in the referenced HCOB.l Abbr. CTH.

CLAY TABLE IQ PROCESSING, 1 . trace back (with no meter) what word or term the pc failed to grasp in the subject chosen. Get the pc to make up the mass represented by the word in clay and any related masses. Get them all labeled and explained. I.Q. (intelligence quotient or the relative brightness of the individual) can be rocketed out of sight with HGC use of a clay table. (HCOB 17 Aug 64) 2 . the original issue of “Clay Table Clearing” was called “Clay Table I.Q. Processing.” (HCOB 27 Sept 64)

CLAY TABLE PROCESSING, 1. the clay table presents us with a new series of processes. The preclear is made to make in clay and labels whatever he.or she is currently worried about or hasn’t understood in life. The essence of clay table processing is to get the pc to work it out. In auditing the pc tells the auditor. This is still true in clay table processing. (HCOB 17 Aug 64) 2 . the pc handles the mass. The auditor does not suggest subjects or colors or forms. The auditor just finds out what should be made and tells the pc to do it in clay and labels. And keeps calling for related objects to be done in clay. (HCOB 17 Aug 64)

CLAY TABLE TRACK ANALYSIS, a training activity for Class VI. (HCOB 18 Aug 64)

CLAY TABLE TRAINING, the student is given a word or auditing action or situation to demonstrate. He then does this in clay. (HCOB 11 Oct 67)

CLEAN HANDS, in order for an auditor who is regarded as a security risk to be considered to have clean hands, it is necessary for him to receive a Clean Hands Clearance Check from HCO. If on completion there are questions which are alive or if there are any missed or partial withholds the person must go back to the HGC to have them cleaned up before he is considered to have clean hands. If no questions are alive and there are no missed or partial withholds, then the person will be awarded a Clean Hands seal on his certificate and will be considered to be in good standing with HCO. (HCO PL 27 Feb 62)

CLEANING A CLEAN, 1 . attempting to clean up or deal with something that has already been cleaned up or dealt with or that wasn’t troublesome to the person in the first place. (Scn AD) 2 . there is nothing there yet the auditor tries to get it and the pc ARC breaks. This is cleaning a clean with an E-meter. (HCO PL 16 Apr 65) 3 . this is the same as asking a pc for something that isn’t there and develops a “withhold of nothing.” (HCOB 13 Apr 64, Scn VI Part One Tone Arm Action)

CLEAN NEEDLE, 1 . a needle that acts when the auditor speaks and does nothing the rest of the time. (EMD, p. 42) 2 . it is a total uniform speed. There is not the faintest tick in it. There is not the faintest speed-up. There is nothing. It is just like molasses pouring out of the barrel—and there it is, and that’s a clean needle.

(SH Spec 224, 6212C13) 3 . one which flows, producing no pattern or erratic motions of the smallest kind with the auditor sitting looking at it and doing nothing. A clean needle is not just something that doesn’t react to a particular question. It’s a lovely slow flow, usually a rise, most beautifully expressed on a Mark V at 64 sensitivity. (HCOB 30 Dec 62)

CLEAR, n. 1 . a thetan who can be at cause knowingly and at will over mental matter, energy, space and time as regards the first dynamic (survival for self). The state of Clear is above the release grades (all of which are requisite to clearing) and is attained by completion of the Clearing Course at an Advanced Organization. (ScnAD) 2 . a Clear, in an absolute sense, would be someone who could confront anything and everything in the past, present and future. (Abil Mag 56) 3 . a Clear is not an all-knowing being. A Clear is somebody who has lost the mass, energy, space and time connected with the thing called mind . ( SH Spec 80, 6609C08) 4 . a picture is completely unnecessary for any kind of a recall at all which is probably about the only change there has been from the definition of a Book One Clear. (SH Spec 59, 6504C27) 5 . a Clear has no vicious reactive mind and operates at total mental capacity just like the first book (DMSMH) said. In fact every early definition of Clear is found to be correct. (HCOB 2 Apr 65) 6 . the name of a button on an adding machine. When you push it, all the hidden answers in the machine clear and the machine can be used for a proper computation. So long as the button is not pressed the machine adds all old answers to all new efforts to compute and wrong answers result. Really, that’s all a Clear is. Clears are beings who have been cleared of wrong answers or useless answers which keep them from living or thinking. (Aud 4 UK) 7 . a Clear has risen from the analogy between the mind and the computing machine. Before a computer can be used to solve a problem, it must be cleared of old problems, of old data and conclusions. Otherwise, it will add all the old conclusions into the new one and produce an invalid answer. Processing clears more and more of these problems from the computer. The completely cleared individual would have all his self-determinism in present time and would be completely self-determined. (Abil 114A) 8 . a thetan clesred of enforced and unwanted behavior patterns and discomforts. (HCOB 8 May 63) 9 . simply an awareness of awareness unit which knows it’s an awareness of awareness unit, can create energy at will, and can handle and control, erase or re-create an analytical mind or reactive mind. (Dn 55 .l pp. 17-18)1 0 . a person who can have or not have at will anything in the universe. (5412CM06) 1 1 . an unaberrated person. He is rational in that he forms the best possible solutions he can on the data he has and from his viewpoint. He obtains the maximum pleasure for the organism, present and future, as well as for the subjects along the other dynamics. The Clear has no engrams which can be restimulated to throw out the correctness of computation by entering hidden and false data in it. (DMSMH, p. 111) 1 2 . one who has become the basic individual through auditing. (DTOT, p. 33) —v. 1 . to clear: to release all the physical pain and painful emotion from the life of an individual. (DMSMH, p. 170)

CLEARED CANNIBAL, the individual without engrams seeks survival along all of the dynamics in accordance with his breadth of understanding. This does not mean that a Zulu who has been cleared of all his engrams would not continue to eat missionaries if he were a cannibal by education; but it does mean that he would be as rational as possible about eating missionaries; further, it would be easier to re-educate him about eating missionaries if he were a Clear. (SOS, p. 110)

CLEARED THETA CLEAR, 1 . a person who is able to create his own universe; or, living in the mest universe is able to create illusions perceivable by others at will, to handle mest universe objects without mechanical means and to have and feel no need of bodies or even the mest universe to keep himself and his friends interested in existence. (Scn 8-8008, p. 114) 2 . next level above theta clear (which is cleared of need to have a body). All of a person’s engrams have been turned into conceptual experience. He is clear all the way along the track. He can

really deliver the horsepower. (5206CM26A) 3 . one who has full recall of everything and full ability as a thetan. (Scn 8-80, p. 59)

CLEARING, 1 . a gradient process of finding places where attention is fixed and restoring the ability of the pc to place and remove attention under his own determinism. (HCOB 28 Feb 59) 2 . what is clearing but regaining awareness that one is himself, and regaining confidence. (HCOB 1 Feb 58)

CLEARING COMMANDS, 1 . when running a process newly or whenever the preclear is confused about the meaning of the commands, clear the commands with the preclear, using the dictionary if necessary. The auditor reads the commands one at a time to the pc and asks the pc “What does this command mean to you?” (HCOB 14 Nov 65) 2. clear the commands (or questions or list items) by first clearing in turn each word in backwards sequence of the words in the command. (e.g. if command is “Do fish swim?” clear “swim” then “fish” then “do.”) This prevents the pc starting to run the process by himself while you are still clearing the words. (BTB 2 May 72R)

CLEAR MOCKERY, a condition in which the thetan thinks of himself as dead. If you just ask him, “How could you help me?” although he is sitting here at 3 on the dial, there is no action on the needle. The needle is stiff. He is all machine motivated. You’ll find in his normal course of endeavor he has all kinds of bad luck. He doesn’t quite groove in but basically this: he doesn’t believe anything can be done. No help, no doingness. (SH Spec 1, 6105C07)

CLEAR OT, our definition of an operating thetan is that of a Clear Operating Thetan. This is a proofed-up being who no longer has a bank, and who has experience. This is a completely stable state—a being who won’t hit the banana peel. (SH Spec 82, 6611C29)

CLEAR READ, when a preclear is Clear he may occasionally get some tone arm motion due to purely body electronics but in the main reads at male or female on the tone arm (3 or 2) according to his or her sex. (EME, p. 11)

CLEAR THINKING, a Clear does not have any “mental voices.” He does not think vocally. He thinks without articulation of his thoughts and his thoughts are not in voice terms. He thinks at such speed that the word stream of consciousness would be left at the post. (DMSMH, p. 87)

CLOSED TERMINALS, when one begins to identify, one has “closed terminals” too closely, and believes one terminal is another terminal. (PAB 63) See also SNAPPING TERMINALS.

CLOSURE MECHANISM (of problems), problems close in on one as an actual mental mass when one invents solutions for them. The solution is not the problem so does not as-is or erase. When one invents problems or conceives of problems as simply problems, the mental mass moves away from him in space. This can be demonstrated to a pc (who can see mental mass) by having him invent some solutions. A mental mass will move in on him. But when he invents problems the mental mass moves away. See HCOB 11 June 57, page 6 . In considerable use in 1955 in London. (LRH Def. Notes)

COACH, to train intensively by instruction, demonstration and practice. In training drills, one twin is made the coach and the other the student. The coach in his coaching actions, coaches the student to achieve the purpose of the drill. He coaches with reality and intention following exactly the materials pertaining to the drill to get the student through it. When this is achieved the roles are then reversed—the student becoming the coach and the coach becoming the student. (HCOB 19 Jun 71 III)

CO-AUDIT, n. a team of any two people who are helping each other reach a better life with Scn processing. (Abil 155)

 

CO-AUDITING, is an abbreviation for cooperative auditing. It means a team of any two people who are helping each other reach a better life with Scn processing. (Aud 90 UK)

CO-AUDITING TEAM, where two people audit each other alternately. There is also the three-way team, in which three people co-audit. This has the advantage of keeping altitude for each auditor, since in the triangle, none is being processed by anyone he is auditing. (SOS, Bk. 2, pp. 266-267)

CO-AUDITOR, one who audits another co-auditor under supervision and after training at a given level. (Aud 2 UK)

CODE, collection of rules (do’s and don’ts). (BTB 30 Sept 71 IV)

CODE OF A SCIENTOLOGIST, the Code of a Scientologist was evolved to safeguard ScientologistH in general, and is subscribed to by leading Scientologists. (CONA, p. 7)

CODE OF HONOR, 1 . the ethical code of Scn; the code one uses, not because he has to, but because he can afford such a luxury. (COHA Gloss) 2. the Code of Honor clearly states conditions of acceptable comradeship amongst those fighting on one side against something which they conceive should be remedied. Anyone practicing the Code of Honor would maintain a good opinion of his fellows, a much more important thing, than having one’s fellows maintain a good opinion of one. (PAB 40)

COFFEE GRINDER, an alternate name for Facsimile One. (HOM, p. 64) See FACSIMILE ONE.

COF, designation on HCO Policy Letters and HCO Bulletins indicates dissemination and restriction as follows: HCO City Offices and all their field Auditors, HCO Franchises, central organizations, HCO Area, continental and HCO WW. (HCO PL 22 May 59)

COFFEE SHOP AUDITING, 1 . out of session auditing of someone. (HCOB 20 Apr 72 II) 2 . meterless fool-around, often by students, stirring up cases. (HCOB 8 Mar 71)

COFFIN CASE, a preclear who lies in the position of a dead man, with arms folded. This is a grief engram having to do with the death of some loved one, and with the preclear in the valence of the loved one. (SOS, p. 112) See also CORPSE CASE.

COG, cognition. (HCOB 23 Aug 65)

COGNITING, as-ising aberration with a realization about life. (HCOB 26 Apr 71 I)

COGNITION, 1 . as-ising aberration with a realization about life. (HCOB 26 Apr 71 I) 2 . a pc origination indicating he has “Come to realize.” It’s a “What do you know, I . . .” statement. (HCOB 14 May 69 II) 3 . something a pc suddenly understands or feels. “Well, what do you know about that?” (HCOB 25 Feb 60) Abbr. Cog.

COGNITION SURGE, a release of electrical charge. It goes along with the person having a cognition. (SH Spec 9, 6106C07)

COLD, an extreme stillness. (SH Spec 56, 6109C20)

COLOR-VISIO AND TONE-AUDIO, when a person can imagine in terms of color motion pictures with sound. (Exp Jour, Winter-Spring 50)

COMANOME, 1 . once upon a time, engrams were called comanomes. (5009CM23B) 2 . a period of unconsciousness which contained physical pain and apparent antagonism to the survival of the individual. (Exp Jour, Winter-Spring 1950) See ENGRAM.

COMATIC REDUCTION, boil-off was originally and sedately named comatic reduction but such erudition has been outvoted by the fact that it has never been used. (DMSMH, p. 303) See BOIL-OFF.

COMBINATION VALENCE, one which has all the characteristics of the terminal and oppterm. (SH Spec 105, 6201C25)

COMBINED TERMINAL, an item or identity the pc has both been and opposed produces therefore both pain and sensation when it is “late on the track,” which is to say, after the fact of many terminals and opposition terminals. The combination terminal is the closure between terminal and opposition terminal lines which possesses attributes of both and the clarity of neither. It signifies a period toward the end of a game. It is found most commonly when the pc’s case is only shallowly entered. They exist on all cases but are fewer than terminals and opposition terminals. Symbol. COTERM. (HCOB 8 Nov 62)

COME ALIVE, on a second or third assessment items which were at first null or reading poorly will be found to come alive and read well. The pc by being audited has had an increase of ability to confront. The result is that items beyond his reach previously (and did not read well) are now available and can be run easily. (HCOB 29 Apr 69)

COMM, communication. (HCOB 23 Aug 65)

COMMAND PHRASES, statements that group, bounce or deny. (HCOB 15 May 63) See ACTION PHRASES.

COMMAND POSTS, 1. control centers. (5110CMllB) 2 . epicenters which stand along the nerve channels of the body and are like switchboards. (HOM, p. 25)

COMMAND SOMATIC, a somatic brought from a different part of the time track by some command phrase, such as “My arm hurts.” The preclear may have this somatic while running a prenatal engram although he was only three days conceived in the incident. Command somatics occur where the preclear is out of valence. (SOS Gloss)

COMM COURSE, because the H.A.S. Course is a course about communication it is often called the Comm Course. (HCO PL 15 Apr 71R) See H.A.S. COURSE.

COMM CYCLE, communication cycle. (HCOB 23 Aug 65)

COMMENT, a statement or remark aimed only at the student or the room. (HCOB 16 Aug 71 II)

COMM LAG, communication lag. (Abil SW)

COMM LINE, see COMMUNICATION LINE.

COMMUNICATION, 1 . the consideration and action of impelling an impulse or particle from source point across a distance to receipt point with the intention of bringing into being at the receipt point a duplication and understanding of that which emanated from the source point. (HCOB 5 Apr 73) 2 . the first and most basic definition of any part of communication is that communication or any part thereof is a consideration. As duplication is a consideration, communication is possible to the degree that the preclear can freely make considerations. (COHA, pp. 170-171) 3 . the operation, the action, by which one

experiences emotion and by which one agrees. Communication is not only the modus operandi, it is the heart of life and is by thousands of per cent the senior in importance to affinity and reality. (PAB 1) 4 . any ritual by which effects can be produced and perceived. Thus a letter, a bullet, the output of theta “flitter” are all, to us, communication. (PAB 4) 5 . the ability to translate sympathy or some component of sympathy from one terminal to another terminal. (Spr Lect 5, 5303CM25) 6 . an interchange of energy from one beingness to another in the thetan, and in Homo sapiens, communication is known as perception. (Scn 8- 8008, p. 21) 7 . the handling of particles, of motion. (PAB 1) 8 . the interchange of perception through the material universe between organisms or the perception of the material universe by sense channels. (Scn 0-8, p. 83) 9 . the interchange of ideas across space. (Scn 0-8, p. 36)1 0 . the use of those sense channels with which the individual contacts the physical universe. (DAB, Vol. II, p. 218)

COMMUNICATION BRIDGE, 1 . it simply closes off the process you were running, maintains ARC, and opens up the new process on which you are about to embark. (PAB 151) 2 . before a question is asked, the preclear should have the question discussed with him and the wording agreed upon as though he were making a contract with the auditor. This is the first part of a communication bridge. It precedes all questions but when one is changing from one process to another the bridge becomes a bridge indeed. (PAB 88) 3 . the reason we use a communication bridge is so a pc will not be startled by change, for if we change too rapidly in a session, we stick the preclear in the session every time. We give him some warning; and that is what a communication bridge is for. (PAB 151)

COMMUNICATION CHANGE, by communication change we also mean perception change. (PAB 1)

COMMUNICATION COURSE, 1 . because the H.A.S. Course is a course about communication, it is often called the Comm Course (comm being for communication). (HCO PL 15 Apr 71R) 2 . a basic Scn course consisting mainly of the TRs; also called the H.A.S. (Hubbard Apprentice Scientologist Course). (PRD Gloss) See H.A.S. COURSE.

COMMUNICATION CYCLE, 1. a cycle of communication and two-way communication are actually two different things. A cycle of communication is not a two-way communication in its entirety. In a cycle of communication we have Joe as the originator of a communication addressed to Bill. We find Bill receiving it and then Bill originating an answer or acknowledgement back to Joe and thus ends the c y c l e . (Dn 55 .!, p. 82) 2 . consists of just cause, distance, effect with intention, attention, duplication and understanding. (HCOB 23 May 1971R IV) Abbr. comm cycle.

COMMUNICATION FORMULA, 1 . communication is the interchange of ideas or objects between two people or terminals. (PXL Gloss) 2. the formula of communication is: Cause, Distance, Effect with Intention, Attention and Duplication with Understanding. (HCOB 5 Apr 73)

 

COMMUNICATION LAG, the length of time intervening between the asking of the question by the auditor and the reply to that specific question by the preclear. The question must be precise; the reply must be precisely to that question. It does not matter what intervenes in the time between the asking of the question and the receipt of the answer. The preclear may outflow, jabber, discuss, pause, hedge, disperse, dither or be silent; no matter what he does or how he does it, between the asking of the question and the giving of the answer, the time is the communication lag. The near answer, a guessing answer, an undecided answer, are alike imprecise answers, and are not adequate responses to the question. On receipt of such questionable answers, the auditor must ask the question again. That he asks the question again does not reduce the communication lag; he is still operating from the moment he asked the question the first time. And if he has to ask the question 20 or 30 times more in the next hour in order to get a precise and adequate answer from the preclear, the length of time of the lag would be from the asking of the first question to the final receipt of the answer. Near answers to the question are inadequate, and are, themselves, simply part of the communication lag. (PAB 43)

COMMUNICATION LAG INDEX, 1 . the length of time it takes to get a logical answer. ( Spr Lect 3, 5303CM24) 2 . the most important method of telling whether or not a person is sick or well. A person who answers quickly (and rationally) is in much better condition than a person who answers after a long consideration. (PAB 2)

COMMUNICATION LINE, 1 . the route along which a communication travels from one person to another. (Scn AD) 2 . any sequence through which a message of any character may go. (SOS, p. 94)

COMMUNICATION PROCESS, any process which places the preclear at cause and uses communication as the principal command phrase. (HCOB 7 Aug 59)

COMMUNICATION SCALE, refers to the individual’s ability to communicate with other people (in relation to his position on the tone scale). (NOTL, p. 103)

COMMUNICATIONS RELEASE, expanded Grade 0 release. (CG&AC 75) See GRADE 0 RELEASE.

COMPARABLE MAGNITUDE, 1 . similar importance. (PAB 126) 2 . a datum can only be evaluated by comparison with another datum of comparable magnitude. This means the basic unit must therefore, be two. (SOS Gloss) Abbr. Comp Mag.

COMPARTMENTING THE QUESTION, 1 . reading it word by word and phrase by phrase to see if any one word or any one phrase falls rather than the question as a whole. (HCOB 28 Sept 61) 2 . using the prior reads occurring at the exact end of the minor thoughts to dig up different data not related to the whole thought. (HCOB 25 May 62)

COMPLETE, the reverse of quickie. To make whole, entire or perfect; end after satisfying all demands or requirements. (HCOB 19 Apr 72)

COMPLETE CASE, a case is not complete unless the lowest incomplete grade chart action is complete and then each completed in turn on up. (HCOB 26 Aug 70)

COMPLETE LIST, 1. a list which has only one reading item on l i s t . (HCOB 1 Aug 68) 2. any list listed for assessment that does not produce a dirty needle while nulling or tiger drilling. (HCOB 12 Nov 62)

COMPLETION, 1. a completion is the completing of a specific course or an auditing grade meaning it has been started, worked through and has successfully

ended with an award in Qual. (HCOB 19 Jun 71 III) 2 . a finished level or rundown. (HCO PL 29 Aug 71)

COMP MAG, comparable magnitude. (BTB 20 Aug 71R II)

COMPOSITE ILLNESS, an illness composed of many somatics. (HCOB 19 Jul 69)

COMPULSION, 1 . an engramic command that the organism must do something. (DTOT, p. 58) 2 . things pc feels compelled to do. (BTB 24 Apr 69)

COMPULSIVE COMMUNICATION, an outflow which is not pertinent to the surrounding terminals and situation. In other words, compulsive communication is an outflow which is not in reality with the existing reality. (Dn 55!, p. 93)

COMPULSIVE EXTERIORIZATION, a manifestation which we call in Scn “doing a bunk,” in other words, running away. (Dn 55! p. 136)

COMPUTATION, technically, that aberrated evaluation and postulate that one must be consistently in a certain state in order to succeed. The computation thus may mean that one must entertain in order to be alive or that one must be dignified in order to succeed or that one must own much in order to live. A computation is simply stated. It is always aberrated. A computation is as insidious as it pretends to align with survival. All computations are nonsurvival. Computations are held in place wholly to invalidate others. (AP&A, p. 41)

COMPUTATIONAL ALTITUDE, signifying that the individual has an outstanding ability to think, to compute upon data. Albert Einstein had computational altitude. (SOS Gloss)

COMPUTING PSYCHOTIC, 1. a psychotic who from his reactivity figure-figures. He’s inconstant in his conduct, he’s computive. He figures it all out, he’s got explanations. His psychosis is derived because these are crazy explanations. He’s obsessively solving a problem that does not exist. (SH Spec 83, 6612C06) 2 . the computing psychotic passes quite commonly for a normal. Here the individual is taking dictation solely from a facsimile of some past moment of pain and is acting upon the advice of that “circuit” and is calling it thought. The psychotic personality is distinguished by its irrationality and its perversion of values. The distinguishing characteristic of the computing psychotic is his utter inability to change his mind. (AP&A, p. 38)

CONCENTRATION, duration of a mock-up in present time. (Spr Lect 4, 5303M24)

CONCEPT, 1 . a high wave thought, above perception or reason or single incidents. (Scn 8-80, p. 29) 2 . that which is retained after something has been perceived. (DMSMH, p. 46)

CONCEPT RUNNING, the preclear “gets the idea” of knowing or not being and holds it, the while looking at his time track. The concept runs out, or the somatic it brings on runs out, and the concept itself is run. It is not addressed at individual incidents but at hundreds. (Scn 8-80, p. 29)

CONCLUSION, the theta facsimiles of a group of combined data. (Scn 0-8, p. 78)

CONDITION, 1 . anything called for as a requirement before the performance, completion or effectiveness of something else; provision; stipulation. Anything essential to the existence or occurrence of something else; external circumstances or factors. Manner or state of being. Proper or healthy state. (HCOB 11 May 65) 2 . a circumstance regarding a mass or terminal. (PAB 126)

 

CONDITIONS BY DYNAMICS, an ethics type action. Have the person study the conditions formulas. Clear up the words related to his dynamics one to eight, and what they are. Now ask him what is his condition on the first dynamic. Have him study the formulas. Don’t buy any glib PR. When he’s completely sure of what his condition really is on the first dynamic he will cognite. Similarly go on up each one of the dynamics until you have a condition for each one. Continue to work this way. Somewhere along the line he will start to change markedly. (HCO PL 4 Apr 72) [The above is a brief summary only. The full procedure will be found in the referenced HCO PL.]

CONDITIONS (ETHICS), in Scn the term also means the ethics conditions (confusion,* treason, enemy, doubt, liability, nonexistence, danger, emergency, normal, affluence, power change, power). The state or condition of any person, group or activity can be plotted on this scale of conditions which shows the degree of success or survival of that person, group or activity at any time. Data on the application of these conditions is contained in the ethics policies and tapes of Scn. (BTB 12 Apr 72R) [*The ethics condition of confusion came later than the date of this BTB and is added here by the editor in order that all the current ethics conditions are included.]

CONDITION OF BEING, see CONDITIONS OF EXISTENCE.

CONDITIONS OF EXISTENCE, there are three conditions of existence. These three conditions comprise life. They are BE, DO and HAVE. The condition of being is defined as the assumption (choosing) of a category of identity. An example of beingness could be one’s own name. Another example would be one’s profession. The second condition of existence is doing. By doing, we mean action, function, accomplishment, the attainment of goals, the fulfilling of purpose, or any change of position in space. The third condition is havingness. By havingness we mean owning, possessing, being capable of commanding, positioning, taking charge of objects, energies or spaces. These three conditions are given in an order of seniority (importance) where life is concerned. (FOT, pp. 26-27)

CONDUCT SURVIVAL PATTERN, the conduct survival pattern is built upon the equation of the optimum solution. It is the basic equation of all rational behavior and is the equation on which a Clear functions. It is inherent in man. In other words, the best solution to any problem is that which will bring the greatest good to the greatest number of beings. (DMSMH, p. 34)

CONF, conference. (HCOB 29 Sept 66)

CONFESSION, a limited effort to relieve a person of the pressure of his overt acts. (HCOB 21 Jan 60, Justification)

CONFESSIONAL, 1 . sec checking done in session not for security purposes is called a confessional. (HCOB 14 Oct 72) 2 . modern confessional is not earlier style security checking, this is new tech. F/Ning every item, getting questions asked to F/N, not some other question. (FBDL 245, 23 Nov 72) See also SECURITY CHECKING and INTEGRITY PROCESSING.

CONFESSIONAL AID (E-METER), the confessional aid assists the minister in locating and relieving the spiritual travail of individual parishioners in the Scn confessional. The confessional aid does not diagnose or treat human ailments of body or mind, nor does it affect the structure or any function of the body; its use is directed as an article of faith of the Church of Scientology, and was never intended for use outside of the Scientology ministry. (HCO PL 9 Jul 69) See also E-METER.

CONFRONT, n. 1 . an action of being able to face. (HCOB 4 Jan 73) 2 . the ability to be there comfortably and perceive. (HCOB 2 Jun 71 I) 3. confront itself is a result and an end product. It itself isn’t a doingness, it’s an ability. (SH Spec 21, 6106C27) —v. to face without flinching or avoiding. (HCOB 4 Jan 73)

CONFRONTING, 1 . the ability to be there comfortably and perceive. (HCOB 2 Jun 71R-1) 2 . the ability to front up to. (SH Spec 84, 6612C13)

CONFRONT PROCESS, 1. the confront process for a pc from the Thirty-Six Presessions. The confront process gets the preclear to present time from areas on the track where his attention was fixed by an earlier process. (EME, p. 20) 2 . it should move pc on the track, going further into the past and easier and easier into present time. Pc’s pictures should improve on a confront process. (HCOB 23 Sept 60)

CONFUSION, 1. a confusion can be defined as any set of factors or circumstances which do not seem to have any immediate solution. More broadly, a confusion in this universe is random motion. (POW, p. 21) 2 . plus randomity. It means motion unexpected above the tolerance level of the person viewing it. (Abil 36) 3 . a number of force vectors traveling in a number of different directions. (UPC 11) 4 . a confusion consists of two things, time and space; change of particles in, predicted or unpredicted, and if they are unpredicted changes in space you will have a confusion. (SH Spec 58, 6109C26)

CONNECTEDNESS, the basic process on association of theta with mest. All forms and kinds of association, including being caught in traps, prone to become identifications as in Dn. Connectedness puts the thetan at cause in making the mest (or people when run outside) connect with him. (SCP, p. 28)

CONSCIOUS, when the analytical mind is fully in command of the organism. (DMSMH, p. 59)

CONSCIOUSNESS, 1 . awareness of now. (DTOT, p. 24) 2 . consciousness is awareness. Awareness itself is perception. (2ACC-8B, 5311CM24)

CONSERVATISM, at 3 .0 on the tone scale we have the person who is democratic, but who is somewhat more conservative than the liberal at 3 .5 in his attitudes and more given to social regulations, being more in need of them. (SOS, p. 124)

CONSIDER, think, believe, suppose, postulate. (PAB 82)

CONSIDERATION, 1 . a thought, a postulate about something. (BTB 1 Dec 71R IV) 2. a consideration is a continuing postulate. (5702C26) 3 . the highest capability of life, taking rank over the mechanics of space, energy and time. (COHA Gloss)

CONSULTANT, an instructor who is on duty sporadically or from time to time but not routinely in any one place. (HCOB 23 Apr 59)

CONT, continue (-d) (-ing), continental. (BPL 5 Nov 72RA)

CONTACT ASSIST, the patient is taken to the area where the injury occurred and makes the injured member gently contact it several times. A sudden pain will fly off and the injury if minor, lessens or vanishes. This is a physical communication factor. The body member seems to have withdrawn from that exact spot in the physical universe. The restoration of awareness is often necessary before healing can occur. The prolongation of a chronic injury occurs in the absence of physical communication with the affected area or with the location of the spot of injury in the physical universe. (HCOB 2 Apr 69)

CONTAGION OF ABERRATION, 1 . entheta, in proximity to theta, makes entheta out of it. From this we have the contagion of aberration. (SOS, Bk. 2 , p . 2 4 ) 2 . people under stress, if aberrated, dramatize engrams. Such dramatization may involve the injury of another person and render him more or less “unconscious.” The “unconscious” person then receives as an engram the dramatization. (DMSMH, p. 134)

CONTAGION OF ERROR, on a course where the students audit each other a contagion of error can occur. For example, student A does a bad assessment on student B. Student B is then likely to give a bad assessment to his next pc and you soon have a whole rash of bad assessments. A similar phenomenon occurs when students are permitted to get the answers to their queries from other students. (HCOB 20 May 69)

CONTINUING OVERT ACT, continually committing overts before, during and after processing. The person who is not getting case gains is committing continuing overts. (HCOB 29 Sept 65 II)

CONTINUING OVERT CASE, who commits overts even when being audited and between sessions. (HCOB 1 Jun 65)

CONTINUOUS MISSED WITHHOLD, a continuous missed withhold occurs when a person feels some way and anyone who sees him misses it. Example: a doctor feels very unconfident of his skill. Every patient who sees him misses the fact that he is not confident. This reacts as a missed withhold. It is of course based upon some bad incident that destroyed his confidence (usually of an engramic intensity). (HCOB 15 Dec 73)

CONTINUOUS OVERT, this is not quite the same as The Continuing Overt Act, HCOB 29 Sept 65 . In that type the person is repeating overt acts against something usually named. In the continuous overt a person who believes he is harmful to others may also believe that many of his common ordinary actions are harmful. He may feel he is committing a continuous overt on others. Example: a clothing model believes she is committing a fraud on older women by displaying clothing to them in which they will look poorly. In her estimation this is a continuous overt act. (HCOB 15 Dec 73)

CONTINUOUS OVERTS CASE, here’s one that commits antisocial acts daily during auditing. He’s psychotic, he’ll never get better, case always hangs up. We can even solve that case. (HCOB 4 Apr 65)

CONTRA-SURVIVAL ENGRAM, l. any kind of engram which lies across the dynamics and has no alignment with purpose. (DMSMH, p. 262) 2 . a contra-survival engram contains physical pain, painful emotions, all other perceptions and menace to the organism. It contains apparent or actual antagonism to the individual. (DMSMN, p. 62)

CONTROL, 1 . you are stating a greater truth when you say that control is predictable change than if you say control is start, change and stop because start and stop are, of course, necessary to change. You might say the thinking or philosophic definition would be predictable change. (5703C10) 2 . when we say control, we simply mean willingness to start, stop and change. (Dn 55!, p. 100) 3 . positive postulating, which is intention, and the execution thereof. (Scn 0-8, p. 36)

CONTROL CASE, l. the case where control is obsessive or other-determined, or where the individual is controlling things out of compulsion or fear. (Dn 55!, p. 100) 2 . the person who feels he must be cold blooded in order to be rational is what is called in Dianetics a “control case,” and on examination will be found to be very far from as rational as he might be. People who cannot experience emotion because of their aberrations are ordinarily sick people. (SA, p. 94)

CONTROL CENTER, l. the control center of the organism can be defined as the contact point between theta and the physical universe and is that center which is aware of being aware and which has charge of and responsibility for the organism along all its dynamics. (Scn 0-8, p. 84) 2 . every mind may be considered to have a control center. This could be called the “awareness of awareness unit” of the mind, or it could be called simply “I”. The control center is cause. It directs, through emotional relay systems, the actions of the body and the environment. It is not a physical thing. (HFP, p. 30)

CONTROL CIRCUIT, the control circuit may conduct itself as an interior entity which takes the preclear out of the auditor’s hands. When preclears are very hard to handle, take the bit in their teeth and try to run their own cases despite anything the auditor may do, they are running on control circuitB, recorded commands which make the preclear misbehave under auditing. (SOS, Bk. 2, p. 204)

CONTROL-CONCEPT PROCESSING, you just get the concept of “you can’t control it” and the concept that “you can control it.” (5209CM04B)

CONTROL PROCESSES, processes which place the pc’s body and actions under the auditor’s control to invite control of them by the pc. (HCOB 29 Oct 57)

CONTROL TRANSFER, a specialized kind of transfer wherein the thetan having devoted himself to a mest body now begins to control the environment and other people for his body much as he controls the body. (HOM, p. 78)

CONTROL TRIO, a three-stage process on a heavy spotting control. It runs in this fashion. “Get the idea that you can have that (object).” And when this is relatively flat, “Get the idea of making that (object) remain where it is” (or continue where it is) and “Get the idea of making that (object) disappear.” This is actually a very fine process and undercuts (runs on a lower case than) trio itself. (SCP, p. 22)

CONVERSATION, the process of alternating outflowing and inflowing communication. (Dn 55!, p. 63)

COO, designation on HCO Policy Letters and HCO Bulletins indicates dissemination and restriction as follows: HCO City Offices only, not to be shown or given to HCO franchise holders or field Auditors; also goes to central organizations, HCO Area, HCO Cont, HCO WW. (HCO PL 22 May 59)

COPY, n. 1 . a duplicate, distinguished from a perfect duplicate, in that it does not necessarily occupy the same space, same time, nor use the same energies as the original. (COHA Gloss) 2 . the word “duplicate” is used, rather sloppily, to indicate a copy. However, a copy is not a complete duplicate; a copy is a facsimile. (COHA, p. 82) 3 . something that a thetan on his own volition simply made of an object in the physical universe with full knowingness. (PXL, p. 65) —v. to make another one just like it. (COHA, p. 34)

CORPSE CASE, a pc who would lie upon the couch with his arms crossed neatly all ready for a lily and would always audit in this fashion. The preclear is so fixed in a death that he is trying to make everything unreal, and the only real thing, to him, would be the unreality of death. (PAB 50) See also COFFIN CASE.

CORRECTION LIST, 1 . a list of prepared questions on a mimeod sheet which is used by the auditor for the repair of a particular situation, action, or rundown. (BTB 7 Nov 72 I) 2 . the various lists designed to find by-passed charge and repair a faulty auditing action or life situation. (HCOB 28 May 70)

COTERM, combined terminal. (HCOB 8 Nov 62)

COUNTER-CREATE, see CREATE-COUNTER-CREATE.

COUNTER-EFFORT, 1. the effort which c o u n t e r s one’s survival. (5203CM06A) 2 . a n y e f f o r t the environment can exert against you. (5203CM04B) 3 . what we’re talking about when we talk about a counter-effort is the force of impact of an engram. The force of impact which gives the pc an engram is a counter-effort. (5206CM25A)

COUNTER-EMOTION, any emotion that is countering an existing emotion. (SH Spec 84, 6612C13)

COUNTER-THOUGHT, you think one thing somebody else thinks another. Their thought is counter to your thought. (HFP, p. 115)

COURAGE, the theta force necessary to overcome the obstacles in surviving. (SOS, p. 139)

COURSE ADMINISTRATOR, the course staff member in charge of the course materials and records. (HCOB 19 Jun 71 III)

COURSE CHECKSHEET, see CHECKSHEET.

COURSE MATERIALS, in Scn and Dn course materials are defined as those books, tapes, magazines, HCO Bulletins, HCO Policy Letters and other authorized technical issues listed on the checksheets of courses designed for use by the Church’s public. (BTB 24 Nov 71 II)

COURSE SUP, course supervisor. (HCOB 23 Aug 65)

COURSE SUPERVISOR, 1 . the instructor in charge of a course and its students. (HCOB 19 Jun 71 III) 2 . basically, someone who in addition to his others duties can refer the person to the exact bulletin to get his information and never tells him another thing. (6905C29) Abbr. Crse Sup.

COURSE SUPERVISOR CORRECTION LIST, a correction list designed to help locate the individual reasons a supervisor has for not fully applying the study tech in supervision. (HCOB 27 Mar 72R II)

COVERT AUDITING, some students covertly audit. In “talking” to someone they also seek to audit that person “without the person knowing anything about it.” This of course is nonsense since auditing results are best achieved in a session and a session depends upon a self-determined agreement to be audited. (HCOB 17 Oct 64 III)

COVERT HOSTILITY, around 1 .1 on the tone scale we reach the level of covert hostility. Here the hatred of the individual has been socially and individually censured to a point where it has been suppressed, and the individual no longer dares demonstrate hate as such. He yet possesses sufficient energy to express some feeling on the matter, and so what hatred he feels comes forth covertly. All manner of subterfuges may be resorted to. The person may claim to love others and to have the good of others as his foremost interest; yet, at the same moment, he works, unconsciously or otherwise, to injure or destroy the lives and reputations of people and also to destroy property. (SOS, p. 56)

CR, cramming. (HCOB 16 Jun 71 III) [Replaced now by BTB 16 Jun 71RA III.]

CRAMMING, 1 . a section in the Qualifications Division where a student is given high pressure instruction at his own cost after being found slow in study or when failing his exams. (HCOB 19 Jun 71 III) 2. the cramming section teaches students what they have missed. This includes trained auditors who wish to be brought up-to-date on current technical developments. (HCO PL 13 May 69)

CRAMMING ORDER, 1. a cramming order is written to handle a specific situation. If that is not handled, the situation will worsen or change, thus the original cramming order will not sufficiently handle if it is stale dated. (BTB 21 Jan 73R) 2 . there is a certain technology on how to write up a cramming order: (1) isolate the exact outnesses in the folder; (2) order those HCOBs or PLs crammed; (3) now look in a slightly wider circle around the data flunked and get which basic is involved (i.e. Auditor Code, TRs, metering, handling the session, handling the pc as a being, etc.) and get that crammed, too. (BTB 12 Dec 71R)

CREAK, a stiffness, and out-of-plumbness, an unchanging situation, a no-energy flow. (HCOB 13 Apr 64, Scn VI Part One Glossary of Terms)

CREATE, make, manufacture, construct, postulate, bring into beingness. (FOT, p. 20)

CREATE-COUNTER-CREATE, t o create something against a creation, to create one thing and then create something else against it. (FOT, pp. 20-21)

CREATE-CREATE-CREATE, create again continuously one moment after the next=SURVIVAL. (FOT, p. 20)

CREATIVE IMAGINATION, imagination, whereby in the field of aesthetics the urges and impulses of the various dynamics are interwoven into new scenes and ideas. (SOS, Bk. 2, p. 101)

CREATIVE PROCESSING, 1. the exercise by which the pc is actually putting up the physical universe. (SH Spec 52, 6502C23) 2 . creative processing consists of having the preclear make, with his own creative energies, a mock-up. (COHA Gloss)

CRIMINAL, 1 . one who is unable to think of the other fellow, unable to determine his own actions, unable to follow orders, unable to make things grow, unable to determine the difference between good and evil, unable to think at all on the future. Anybody has some of these; the criminal has ALL of them. (NSOL, p.78) 2 . one who thinks help cannot be on any dynamic or uses help on anyone to injure and destroy. (HCOB 28 May 60) 3 . criminals are people who are frantically attempting to create an effect long after they know they cannot. They cannot then create decent effects, only violent effects. Neither can they work. (FOT, pp. 31-32)

CRISS-CROSS, see 3DXX.

CRITICAL THOUGHT, 1 . a symptom of an overt act having been committed. (SH Spec 37, 6409C01) 2 . a critical pc=a withhold from the auditor. (HCOB 23 Aug 71)

CRITICISM, 1 . most criticism is justification of having done an overt. There are rightnesses and wrongnesses in conduct and society and life at large, but random, carping 1 .1 criticism when not borne out in fact is only an effort to reduce the size of the target of the overt. (HCOB 21 Jan 60, Justification) 2 . a criticism is a hope that they can damage, and that’s what a criticism is, with an inability to do so. (SH Spec 119, 6202C22)

CR0000-1, a drill to train the student to raise his awareness of the condition of the pc called “Set up for a perfect session” drill. (HCOB 16 Jun 71 III) An auditor must be able to see when a pc has not eaten or slept, or what his tone level is, or is the pc auditable. [This HCOB is cancelled and replaced by BTB 16 Jun 71RA III and the drill renamed “Ideal Session Start.”]

CR0000-2, a drill to train an auditor to increase session pace when auditing a fast pc. Its name is Rapid TR-2 . This is basically a correction drill for auditors who tend

to lose session control by slow acknowledgements inviting endless itsa. (BTB 16 Jun 71R II)

CR0000-3, an E-meter drill to train an auditor to confront an E-meter. If a student has difficulty doing the preceding E-meter drills, this drill is done. It is a gradient step towards greater session control. The student confronts the E-meter and does nothing else for two hours. (BTB 16 Jun 71R II)

CR0000-4, a drill to train an auditor to be able to see the pc, the pc’s hands on the cans, the meter plus any reads, and the worksheets without having to look at any one of them. The auditor is trained to widen his/her vision until the auditor can see the meter, the pc, the pc’s hands on the cans, and the worksheets effortlessly. (BTB 16 Jun 71R II)

CR0000-5, E-meter trim check drill. A drill to train an auditor to be able to do a trim check effortlessly in a session without distracting the pc in any way. (BTB 16 Jun 71R II)

CROSS ENGRAM, an engram which embraces more than one engram chain. The receipt of the cross engran, containing as it does the convergence of two or more engram chains, is often accompanied by a “nervous breakdown” or the sudden insanity of an individual. A cross engram may occur in a severe accident, in prolonged or severe illness under antagonistic circumstances, or a nitrous oxide operation. (DTOT, p. 115)

CROSSOVER, 1 . the area in the center of a GPM is the crossover. This means the RI’s which cause the pc to become an opponent of his own goal. (HCOB 4 Apr s3) 2. crossover means where the individual ceases to be for the goal, and starts to be against the goal. (SH Spec 329, s312C12)

CRS, course. (BPL 5 Nov 72RA)

C/S, a case supervisor direction of what to audit on a pc. (HCOB 23 Aug 71)

C/S, 1. case supervisor. (HCOB 23 Aug 71) 2. commodore’s staff. (BPL 5 Nov 72 RA)

CSC, Clearing Success Congress. (HCOB 29 Sept 55)

C/S 53, the basic list to get TA up or down into normal range. Assessed M-5, reading items handled then reassessed etc. to F/Ning assessment. Done well with good basic auditing this action should not need to be frequently repeated on a case. TA going high or low in later auditing after C/S 53 already fully handled is normally handled with the correction list for that action (e.g. L4BR when TA high after listing or WCCL on word clearing, etc.). EP is C/S 53 F/Ning on assessment with TA in normal range. (BTB 11 Aug 72RA) [This list has been revised a number of times and its current number is C/S 53RJ.]

CS-5, Commodores Staff 5 Qualifications. (BPL 5 Nov 72RA)

CS-4, Commodores Staff 4 Training and Services. (BPL 5 Nov 72RA)

C/SHEET, also ch. sheet or Ö/sht. Abbreviation for checksheet. (BTB 12 Apr 72R)

C/SING IN THE CHAIR, the auditor may not C/S in the auditing chair while auditing the pc. If he has no case supervisor he writes the C/S before session and adheres to it in session. To do something else and not follow the C/S is called C/Sing in the chair and is very poor form as it leads to Q & A. (HCOB 23 Aug 71)

 

CS-1, 1 . a general C/S which covers the basics of getting a pc sessionable. The product is an educated pc who can run Scn or Dn easily and get case gain. (BTB 8 Jan 71R) 2 . purpose: to give pcs new to Dn or Scn and to give previously audited pcs as needed, the necessary data and R-factor on basics and auditing procedure so that he understands and is able and willing to be audited successfully. (BTB 8 Jan 71R)

C/S-6, see CLASS VIII C/S-6 .

CT, clay table. (HCOB 6 Nov 64)

CTH, clay table healing. (HCOB 27 Apr 65)

CULTURE, the pattern (if any) of life in the society. All factors of the society, social educational, economic, etc., whether creative or destructive. The culture might be said to be the theta body of the society. (SOS Gloss)

CURVE, throw a curve means to give an unexpected contrary datum. Also to shift reality. Curve itself is also the ordinary dictionary meaning. (LRH Def. Notes)

CUTATIVE, an invented word to mean the impulse to shorten or leave out or the thing left out. (HCO PL 26 Sept 70 III)

CUT COGNITION, you taking too soon an F/N (F/N indicated at the first twitch) you cut the cognition and leave by-passed charge (a withheld cognition). (HCOB 14 Mar 71R)

CYCLE, 1 . in Scn, a cycle just means from the beginning to the conclusion of an intentional action. (Aud 39) 2 . a span of time with a beginning and an end=a section of the totality of time with a beginning and an end=in beginningless and endless time one can set out periods which do have a beginning and an end insofar as action is concerned. (FOT, p. 19)

CYCLE OF ACTION, 1 . the sequence that an action goes through, wherein the action is started, is continued for as long as is required and then is completed as planned. (Scn AD) 2 . the creation, growth, conservation, decay and death or destruction of energy and matter in a space. Cycles of action produce time. (PXL, p. 8) See also ACTUAL CYCLE OF ACTION.

CYCLE OF AN ORGANISM, the cycle of an organism, a group of organisms or a species is inception, growth, re-creation, decay and death. (HFP, p. 172)

CYCLE OF AN OVERT, it goes like this. (1) a being doesn’t get the meaning of a word or symbol. (2) this causes the being to misunderstand the area of the symbol or word (who used it, whatever it applied to). (3) this causes the being to feel different from or antagonized toward the user or whatever of the symbol and so makes it all right to commit an overt. (4) having committed the overt, the being now feels he has to have a motivator and so feels caved in. This is the stuff of which Hades is made. This is the trap. This is why people get sick. This is stupidity and lack of ability. (HCOB 8 Sept 64)

CYCLE OF A UNIVERSE, could be said to be the cycle of creation, growth, conservation, decay and destruction. This is the cycle of an entire universe or any part of that universe. It is also the cycle of life forms. (Scn 8-8008, p. 97)

CYCLE OF MIS-DEFINITION, (1) a person didn’t grasp a word, then (2) didn’t understand a principle or theory, then (3) became different from it, commits and committed overts against it, then (4) restrained himself or was restrained from committing these overts, then (5) being on a withhold (inflow) pulled in a motivator. Not every word somebody didn’t grasp was followed by a principle or theory. An overt was not committed every time this happened. Not every overt

committed was restrained. So no motivator was pulled in. Every nattery or nonprogressing student or pc is hung in the above 1,2,3,4,5 cycle. And every such student or pc has a misdefined word at the bottom of that pile. (HCOB 21 Feb 66)

CYCLE OF MOTION, go from a no change to a change to a no change. (SH Spec 14, 6106C14)

CYCLE OF RANDOMITY, the cycle of randomity is from static, through optimum, through randomity sufficiently repetitious or similar to constitute another static. (HFP, p. 174)

CYCLE OF SURVIVAL, conception, growth, attainment, decay, death, conception, growth, attainment, decay, death, over and over again. (HFP, p. 20)

CYCLE OF THE ROCK, a person (1) failed to communicate himself; (2) started using something to communicate with; (3) put the last item on automatic and it created for him; (4) it failed. The rock, itself, when first located will be a solution to many earlier cycles as described above. And so, a rock is peeled off cycle by cycle as above. (HCOB 29 Jul 58)

CYCLIC PROCESS, a repetitive process which causes the preclear to cycle on the time track as in recall type processes. IHCOB 29 Sept 65, Cyclical and Non-Cyclical Processes)

CYCLIC PSYCHOTIC, a psychotic who becomes completely enturbulated during certain periods of the day, or of the week, or of the month. This type is generally running on a time factor contained in the engram. The incident may have occurred on the twenty-fifth of the month and continued to the thirtieth of every month. Or the incident may have occurred at ten o’clock at night so the psychotic is only insane at ten o’clock every night. (SOS, Bk. 2, p. 190)

d

DA, Dn Auditor. (Scn Jour Iss. 31-G)

DAC, Dianetic Auditor Course. (BTB 12 Apr 72R) [The course teaching Dianetics prior to the Hubbard Standard Dianetics Course (HSDC).]

DANGEROUS AUDITOR, 1. an auditor who consistently does things that are upsetting to a pc’s case. (HCOB 12 Feb 66) 2 . the auditor who gets off safe withholds is dangerous and the auditor who gets off unsafe withholds is safe. An auditor who will not pull dangerous withholds from the pc is a dangerous auditor. (SH Spec 113, 6202C20) 3 . the auditor who is afraid to find out, afraid to be startled, afraid to discover something, afraid of what they will discover. This phobia prevents the “auditor” from flattening anything. This makes missed withholds a certainty. (HCOB 3 Mar 62)

DANGEROUS ENVIRONMENT, see SCIENTOLOGY ZERO.

DATA, consists of the postulates or assignment of value of thetans; that’s data, that’s all data is. (15ACC-12, 5610C30)

DATA ALTITUDE, signifying that the individual has a fund of knowledge gathered from books and records, or sometimes from experience, with which others are not familiar. The college professor has a data altitude. (SOS Gloss)

DATE FLASH, the auditor says to the preclear, “When I snap my fingers, a date will flash. Give me the first response which comes into your mind,” (snap!). The preclear then gives the first date which comes into his mind. (SOS, Bk. 2, p. 51)

DATE/LOCATE, a process to date and locate a flat point in a process that appears overrun. (HCOB 24 Sept 71) Abbr. D/L.

DATUM, 1 . a piece of knowledge, something known. Plural, data. (BTB 4 Mar 65) 2 . anything of which one could become aware, whether the thing existed or whether he created it. (Scn 8-8008, p. 6) 3 . an invented, not a true, knowingness. (COHA, p. 151) 4 . anything which proceeds from a postulate. (PDC 14) 5 . a theta facsimile of physical action. (Scn 0-8, p. 78) 6 . a facsimile of states of being, states of not being, actions or inactions, conclusions, or suppositions in the physical or any other universe. (Scn 0-8, p. 67)

DB, degraded being. (Abil 272)

DCG, see DIANETIC COUNSELING GROUP.

DD, Doctor of Divinity. (HCOB 23 Aug 65)

DEAD BODY, physical universe matter, energy, space and time minus life energy. (SA, p. 27)

DEAD HORSE, Slang. 1 . a list which even with good auditing, failed for any other reason to produce a reliable item. (HCOB 5 Dec 62) 2 . if no slam occurs anywhere on a listing list with the mid ruds in for the session, that’s a dead horse. (SH Spec 219, 6211C27) 3 . an item listed from a non-reading question will give you a dead horse (no item). (HCOB 1 Aug 68)

DEAD-IN-’IS-’EAD CASE, Slang. a c a s e totally associating all thought with mass. Thus he reads peculiarly on the meter. As he is audited he frees his thinkingness so that he can think without mass connotations. (HCOB 17 Mar 60)

DEAD LIST, null list. (HCOB 29 Jan 70)

DEADLY QUARTET, these processes are four in number. They are designed as classes of processes to handle these four points:

(1) help factor, (2) control factor, (3) pc communication factor, (4) interest factor. Unless these four points are present in a session, it is improbable, in a great number of cases that any real, lasting gain will be made. (HCOB 21 Apr 60)

DEAD THETAN, 1 . doesn’t put out any current. Doesn’t react on a meter. Only the body reacts so it looks like a clear read (false read). An ARC break of long duration reads the same way. (LRH Def. Notes) 2 . a false clear read. (HCOB 17 Oct 69) 3 . clear read without tone arm motion and tight needle. That’s your lowest case range, save one. There is one below that. (SH Spec 300, 6308C28). 4 . he’s so “dead in his head” he thinks he’s elsewhere while he’s there. (SH Spec 1, 6105C07) 5 . he thinks of himself as dead and he is totally incapable of influencing the E-meter. (SH Spec 1, 6105C07)

DEAFNESS, the individual simply shutting out sounds. Some deafness is occasioned by entirely mechanical trouble with the recording mechanism but most deafness, particularly when partial, is psychosomatic or caused by mental aberration. (SA, p. 85)

DEAR ALICE, see TR-1 .

DEATH, 1 . a state of beingness rather than an action. It means a fellow’s no longer inhabiting a body. (SH Spec 15X, 6106C15) 2 . a separation occurs between the thetan and the body. However, he takes old facsimiles, energy phenomena and bric-a-brac that he feels he cannot do without, with him and attaches it to the next body he picks up. (PAB 130) 3 . cessation of creation. An individual becomes sufficiently morose on the idea of creationt hat he can actually bring about the condition of inability to create. (FOT, p. 67) 4. death equals life minus thought equals mest. (NOTL, p. 14) 5 . death is abandonment by theta of a life organism or race or species where these can no longer serve theta in its goals of infinite survival. (Scn 0-8, p. 75) 6 . life’s operation of disposing of an outmoded and unwanted organism so that new organisms can be born and can flourish. (SA, p. 30) 7 . a limited concept of the death of the physical part of the organism. Life and the personality go on. The physical part of the organism ceases to function. And that is death. (SA, p. 30) 8 . a name assigned to what is apparently the mechanism by which theta recovers itself and the bulk of its volume from the mest, so as to be able to accomplish a more harmonious conquest of the mest in a next generation. (SOS, Bk. 2, p. 249)

DEATH FACSIMILE BOP, a little hunt, a little nervous twitch of the needle. (5410CM21)

DEATH TALKER, at 1 .5 on the tone scale is the death talker who is going to save something from destruction by creating great havoc. This person will not listen to a creative and constructive plan unless he can see ways and means of using it to destroy. Warmongers and dictators are markedly in this band. (SOS, p. 145)

DEATH WISH, succumb postulates. (HCO PL 27 Apr 69)

 

DEATH ZONE, below 2 .0 on the tone scale is the death zone, and here as the tone lowers increasingly, more danger exists that all the remaining theta will suddenly at one fell swoop become entheta. (SOS, Bk. 2, p. 13)

DEBUG, to get the snarls or stops out of something. (HCO PL 29 Feb 72 II)

DE-CERTIFICATION, cancellation of an auditor’s certificates. Certificates “pulled” is a measure taken by HCO when these conditions exist: (a) the auditor has consistently refused supervised processing; (b) the auditor has committed antisocial acts liable for prosecution under criminal law, or (c) continues to associate with a de-certified auditor and balks efforts of HCO to bring the person into an HGC for auditing. (HCOB 22 May 60)

DECLARE, an action done in Qual after a pc has completed a cycle of action or attained a state. The pc or pre-OT who knows he made it must be sent to Exams and Certs and Awards to attest. A declare completes his cycle of action and is a vital part of the action. (HCOB 19 Jun 71 II)

DECLARE?, “Preclear has reached a grade or release. Please look at preclear and pass on to Certs and Awards.” (HCOB 23 Aug 65)

DED, 1 . an incident the preclear does to another dynamic and for which he has no motivator—i.e. he punishes or hurts or wrecks something the like of which has never hurt him. Now he must justify the incident. He will use things which didn’t happen to him. He claims that the object of his injury really DEserveD it, hence the word DED, which is a sarcasm. (HOM, p. 75) 2 . an overt act without having a justification for it in the first place. The motivator is on the wrong side of the overt act and that motivator on the wrong side of an overt act is called a DED. It’s a deserved action. (5206CM24C)

DED-DEDEX, 1 . the overt-motivator sequence went backwards. You hit Joe, then he hits you. Although it went this way you had it figured out that he must have hit you first. So you invented something that he did to you to motivate your hitting him. (SH Spec 83, 6612C06) 2 . overt-motivator sequence; when somebody has committed an overt, he has to claim the existence of motivators—the Ded-Dedex version of Dn. (HCOB 7 Sept 64 II) 3 . where the preclear all out of his own imagination has done something to somebody else and then it has been done to him. (PAB 18)

DEDEX, 1 . an incident which happens to a preclear after he has a DED. It is always on the same chain or subject, is always after the DED. It means the DED EXposed. It is covered guilt. (HOM, p. 75) 2 . deserved action explained would be one interpretation of DEDEX. The deserved action. This is why the action was deserved. This is why he blew Joe Blink’s head off, because twenty years later a fellow by the name of Cuffbah tapped him on the temple. (PDC 29) 3 . motivator. (Scn 8-80, p. 32)

DEEP PROCESSING, deep processing addresses basic cause and locates and reduces moments of physical pain and sorrow. (SA, p. 61)

DEFINITION PROCESSES, t h e f i r s t t h i n g t o k n o w a b o u t definition processes is that they are separate and distinct and stand by themselves as processes. Remedy A and Remedy B. The purpose of definitions processing is fast clearing of “held down fives” (jammed thinking because of a misunderstood or misapplied datums) preventing someone getting on with auditing or Scn. (HCOB 21 Feb 66)

DEFINITIONS, TYPES OF, (a) differentiative defintion—one which compares unlikeness to existing states of being or not being. (b) descriptive definition—one which classifies by characteristics, by describing existing states of being. (c) associative definition—one which declares likeness to existing states of being or not being. (d) action definition—one which delineates cause

and potential change of state of being by cause of existence, inexistence, action, inaction, purpose or lack of purpose. (AP&A, pp. 65-66)

DEGRADATION, 1 . the lower harmonic of apathy. (SH Spec 70, 6110C24) 2 . an inability to handle force. (PDC 48) 3 . being big and getting small and not at your own request. (PDC 34)

DEGRADED BEING, 1 . the degraded being is not a suppressive as he can have case gain. But he is so PTS that he works for suppressives only. He is a sort of super-continual PTS beyond the reach really of a simple S&D and handled only at Section 3 OT Course. The degraded being is not necessarily a natively bad thetan. He is simply so PTS and has been for so long that it requires our highest level of tech to finally undo it after he has scaled up all our grades. (HCOB 22 Mar 67) 2. very degraded beings alter-is, refuse to comply without mentioning it. Find ANY instruction painful as they have been painfully indoctrinated with violent measures in the past. They therefore alter-is any order or don’t comply. A degraded being is not a suppressive as he can have case gain. But he is so PTS that he works for suppressives only. Degraded beings, taking a cue from SP associates, instinctively resent, hate and seek to obstruct any person in charge of anything. (HCOB 22 Mar 67) Abbr. DB.

DEI SCALE, Desire-Enforcement-Inhibit Scale. (PAB 50)

DELUSION, 1 . a belief in something which is contrary to fact or reality resulting from deception, misconception or misassignment. (HCOB 11 May 65) 2 . what one person thinks is, but others don’t necessarily. (SH Spec 72, 6607C28) 3 . the postulation by the imagination of occurrences in areas of plus or minus randomity. (Scn 0-8, p. 90) 4 . delusion is imagination out of control. (Scn Jollr, Iss. 14-G)

DEMO, abbreviation for demonstration. Usually refers to either a clay demo or to a demonstration done with a “demo kit.” (BTB 12 Apr 72R)

DEMO KIT, demonstration kit. Consists of various small objects such as corks, caps, paper clips, pen tops, batteries—whatever will do. These are kept in a box or container. Each student should have one. The pieces are used while studying to represent the things in the material one is demonstrating. It helps hold concepts and ideas in place. A demo kit adds mass, reality and doingness to the significance and so helps the student to study. (HCOB 19 Jun 71 III)

DEMON, Slang. a by-pass circuit in the mind, called demon because it was long so interpreted. Probably an electronic mechanism. (DMSMH Gloss) 2 . a bona-fide demon is one who gives thoughts voice or echoes the spoken word interiorly or who gives all sorts of complicated advice like a real, live voice exteriorly. (DMSMH, p. 88) 3 . Dn use of the word is descriptive slang. (EOS, p. 16)

DEMON CIRCUIT, 1. that mental mechanism set up by an engram command which, becoming restimulated and supercharged with secondary engrams, takes over a portion of the analyzer and acts as an individual being. Any command containing “you” and seeking to dominate or nullify the individual’s judgment is potentially a demon circuit. It doesn’t become a real live demon circuit until it becomes keyed-in and picks up secondary engrams and locks. (NOTL, p. 80) 2 . a heavily charged portion of the analytical mind which has been captured by the reactive mind and does its bidding, walled off by charge into a separate entity. (SOS, p. 67) 3, any circuit that vocalizes your thoughts for you. That’s not natural. It’s an installed mechanism from engrams and it slows up thought. (DASF)

DENYER, 1 . a phrase which obscures a part of track by implying it is not there or elsewhere or should not be viewed. (HCOB 15 May 63) 2 . any phrase that you could think of in any language that would deny a person knowledge of something would be classified as a denyer. (SH Spec 81, 6111C16) 3 . a

species of command which, literally translated, means that the engram doesn’t exist. “I’m not here,” “This is getting nowhere,” “I must not talk about it,” “I can’t remember,” etc. (DMSMH, p. 213) 4 . a command which makes the pc feel there is no incident present. (DMSMH, p. 213)

DEPARTMENT OF PERSONAL ENHANCEMENT, the Department of Personal Enhancement Division V, Qualifications is held responsible for these things. (1) That no misunderstood words exist amongst staff, Auditors or in the Church public. (2) That all training and auditing programs of staff, students, Auditors, internes or public are in correct sequence without skipped gradient and done. (3) That all staff cases are progressing satisfactorily with good OCA (APA) gains and that no no-casegain cases are on staff. (HCO PL 16 Feb 72)

DEPARTMENT OF SPECIAL CASES, the HCO PL which makes Dept 10 a Department of Special Cases is cancelled. Dept 10 must remain as the Department of Tech Services. Drug Cases (for whom the Department of Special Cases was primarily established) are audited in the HGC or Co-Audit on the HSDC Course. (HCO PL 26 Aug 72—Cancellation issue of HCO PL 2 Feb 72 II)

DEPLETION OF HAVINGNESS, the truth of something, even when arrived at by the route of subjection and force, will as-is the something and cause its vanishment, and thus it is no longer had. This is called by auditors the depletion of havingness. (5601C31)

DEPOSIT, a deposit is a confused solid ridge area in the body. (5206CM24B)

DEPT, department. (BPL 5 Nov 72RA)

DEPT 10s, see DEPARTMENT OF SPECIAL CASES.

DERAILER, a type of phrase in an engram which throws the preclear “off the track” and makes him lose touch with his time track. This is a very serious phrase since it can make a schizophrenic and something of this sort is always to be found in schizophrenia. Some of its phrases throw him into other valences which have no proper track, some merely remove time, some throw him bodily out of time. “I don’t have any time” is a derailer. “I’m beside myself” means that he is now two people, one beside the other. “I’ll have to pretend I am somebody else” is a key phrase to identity confusion, and many more. (DMSMH, p. 335)

DESCRIPTION PROCESSING, processing which uses as-isness in present time to remedy the restimulations beheld by the thetan. The total command content of description processing is the phrase “How does . . . seem to you now?” This is used over, and over, and over by the auditor. In the blank he puts any difficulty the preclear is having. (COHA, p. 85)

DESCRIPTIVE DEFINITION, see DEFINITIONS, TYPES OF.

DESTIMULATE, 1 . settle out. (HCOB 16 Aug 70) 2 . to take away the restimulation. Destimulate does not mean the erasure of the original incident, it means simply the knock out of the point of restimulation. (SH Spec 84, 6612C13)

DESTIMULATED, simply knocking out the key-ins of the original charge, you didn’t knock out the original incidents, you just knocked out the moments when the original incident was keyed in. (SH Spec 300, 6308C28)

DESTIMULATION, 1 . the action of deleting the moments of restimulation of the reactive mind or some portion of it, so that it moves away from the preclear and he is no longer connected to it. (Scn AD) 2 . to pull the pc out of the charge not try to erase the charge. To knock out the key-ins that keep the charge pinned to the individual. (SH Spec 9, 6403C10)

 

DESTROY, create-counter-create=to create something against a creation=to create one thing and then create something else against it=destroy. (FOT, p. 20)

DESTRUCTION, the apparent cycle of action contains destruction, but the actual cycle of action tells us what destruction is. Destruction, in terms of action, is a creation of something against a creation of something else. There is another type of destruction and this is no more creation. If one stops making something completely and ceases to be a party to its manufacture, it no longer exists for one. (FOT, pp. 21-22)

DETACHED, 1 . chronically out of valence to the point of no case gain. (HCOB 10 Sept 68) 2 . the person that you run into that takes no responsibility for anything in life and that sort of thing. He isn’t where he is looking from, see? He’s detached. We use that word advisedly. You see, he’s detached from existence, he hasn’t got anything to do with it. Existence is up here and he’s sitting back, “has nothing to do with me.” (SH Spec 48, 6411C04)

DETECTING METER, a meter which detects flows and ridges around your preclear. (PDC 29)

DFT, see DIANETIC FLOW TABLE.

DHARMA, the name of a legendary Hindu sage whose many progenies were the personification of virtue and religious rites. Dharma is a mythological figure and we have the word Dharma almost interchangeable with the word Dhyana. But whatever you use there you are using a word which means knowingness. That’s what that word means. (7ACC-25, 5407C19)

DHYANA, 1 . the word Dhyana is almost interchangeable with the word Dharma. But whatever you use, you are using a word which means knowingness. Dhyana—that’s knowingness. It means knowingness. It means lookingness. (7ACC-25, 5407C19) 2. Dhyana could be literally translated as Indian for Scn, if you want to say it backwards. (7ACC-25, 5407C19)

DIANAZENE, a formula combined with vitamins and other minerals to make the intake of nicotinic acid more effective. Dianazene runs out radiation—or what appears to be radiation. It also proofs a person up against radiation in some degree. It also turns on and runs out incipient cancer. (AAR, pp. 123-124)

DIANETIC ASSESSMENT LIST, a l i s t of somatic items given by a pc and written down by the auditor with the reads marked that occur on the meter. (BTB 7 Nov 72 IV)

DIANETIC ASSIST, 1 . the auditor may take an individual who has been injured and run the injury as an engram even though it contains extensive unconsciousness. The last engram on the case has had relatively little chance to become charged up by locks and secondaries, and so is available for auditing regardless of the pre-existing engrams on the case. (SOS, Bk. 2, p. 157) 2 . running out the physically painful experience the person has just undergone, accidents, illness, operation or emotional shock. This erases the “psychic trauma” and speeds recovery to a remarkable degree. (HCOB 2 Apr 69)

DIANETIC AUDITING, 1 . the application of Dn procedures to an individual to help him become well and happy. (DPB, p. 11) 2 . the tracing of experience. (SH Spec 70, 6607C21) 3 . Dianetic auditing includes as its basic principle, the exhaustion of all the painfully unconscious moments of a subject’s life. By eradicating pain from the life of an individual, the auditor returns the individual to complete rationality and sanity. (DTOT, p. 68)

DIANETIC AUDITOR, 1 . a person capable of resolving mental and physical problems by his ability to find and run engrams and secondaries. (HCOB 6 Apr

69) 2 . a Dhnetic auditor would use Dn to handle the lack of well-being of the pc. (HCOB 6 Apr 69 II) 3 . one who has had case gain on Dn, and has been able to administer Dn so as to give case gains with it and that is what a Dianetic auditor is. It is not somebody who has been through the checksheets a large number of times or somebody who knows the Director of Certs and Awards. (6905C29)

DIANETIC CASE COMPLETION, 1 . all somatic chains that were in restimulation have been traced to basic and blown. The pc is now happy and healthy. Other engrams and chains can exist back on the track but as they are not in restimulation they have no effect on the person. (Dn Today, p. 63) 2 . a healthy, happy, high IQ human being; freedom from those things which make a person susceptible to, or “hold in place” physical illness. (Scn 0-8, p. 137)

DIANETIC CLEAR, 1 . there is such a state. Only about two per cent actually go clear on Dn. A Dn Clear as any other Dn pc now goes on up through the grades of Scn and onto the proper Clearing Course. The Dn Clear of Book I was clear of somatics. The Book I definition is correct. This is the end phenomena of Dn as per the class chart and Book I. Two percent, no more, make Dn Clear accidentally. They still need expanded lower grades to make Scn Clear. (HCOB 25 Jun 70 II) See also DIANETIC CASE COMPLETION.

DIANETIC COUNSELING GROUP, the Dn Counseling Group consists of in full action, Hubbard Dn Counselors, the administrative few people, even if only part time, to handle the admin of the unit, and a Hubbard Dn Graduate in order to teach Hubbard Dn Counselors out in the field, and a Scn auditor to hold down review. (6905C29) Abbr. DCG.

DIANETIC FLOW TABLE, a chronological list of Dn items run, from earliest to latest, with the flows that have been run. (HCOB 3 Nov 72R)

DIANETIC INFORMATION GROUP, a group formed to provide information on the results of Dn and its applications. The membership is open to doctors, dental surgeons, pharmacists and qualified nurses. (STCR, p. 104) Abbr. D.I.G.

DIANETICIST, a skilled user of Dianetic therapy. (DTOT Gloss)

DIANETIC LIST, in Scn lists there’s only one item. On Dn lists there can be a dozen, for a Dn list isn’t really a list. It isn’t trying to isolate the mental troubles of the pc. A Dn list is simply the pc’s physical aches and pains. (HCOB 21 May 69)

DIANETIC PRECLEAR, one who is being processed toward the objective of a well and happy human being. (HCOB 6 Apr 69)

DIANETIC RELEASE, 1. the release has reached a point where he no longer has psychosomatic illnesses, where he has good stability and where he can enjoy life. If one simply took all the secondary engrams off a case, one would have a Dianetic Release. (SOS, p. 19) 2 . a preclear in whom the majority of emotional stress has been deleted from the reactive mind. Has had many large gains from Dn, is not yet a Dn Case Completion. (DTOT Gloss)

DIANETIC REVERIE, see REVERIE.

DIANETICS, 1 . DIA (Greek) through, NOUS (Greek) soul deals with a system of mental image pictures in relation to psychic (spiritual) trauma. The mental image pictures are believed on the basis of personal revelation to be comprising mental activity created and formed by the spirit, and not by the body or brain. (BPL 24 Sept 73 V) 2 . Dn addresses the body. Thus Dn is used to knock out and erase illnesses, unwanted sensations, misemotion, somatics, pain, etc. Dn came before Scn. It disposed of body illness and the difficulties a thetan was having with his body. (HCOB 22 Apr 69) 3 . a technology that runs and erases locks, secondarles

and engrams and their chains. (HCOB 17 Apr 69) 4 . Dn could be called a study of man. Dn and Scn, up to the point of stable exteriorization, operate in exactly the same field with exactly the same tools. It is only after man is sufficiently exteriorized to become a spirit that we depart from Dn; for here, considering man as a spirit, we must enter the field of religion. (PAB 42) 5 . a precision science. It stems from the study and codification of survival. (COHA, p. 148) 6 . a system of coordinated axioms which resolve problems concerning human behavior and psychosomatic illnesses. (5110CM08B) 7 . Dn is not psychiatry. It is not psycho-analysis. It is not psychology. It is not personal relations. It is not hypnotism. It is a science of mind. (DMSMH, p. 168) 8 . the route from aberrated or aberrated and ill human to capable human. (HCOB 3 Apr 66) Abbr. Dn.

DIANETIC SPECIALIST, HGDS. (HCOB 20 Apr 72)

DIANOMETRY, 1 . that branch of Dn which measures thought capacity, computational ability and the rationality of the human mind. By its axioms and tests can be established the intelligence, the persistency, the ability, the aberrations and existing or potential insanity of an individual. (DASF) 2 . “Thought measurement,” derived from the Greek for thought, and, unscholarly enough, the Latin for mensuration. (DASF)

DICHOTOMY, 1. can-can’t is the plus and minus aspect of all thought and in Scn is called by a specialized word, dichotomy. (FOT, p. 100) 2 . a pair of opposites, such as black-white, good-evil, love-hate. (COHA Gloss) 3 . opposites; two things which when interplayed, cause action. (5209CM04B)

DIFFERENTIATION, 1 . the ability to locate things in time and space. (5209CM04B) 2 . simply the distance between the particles. (PDC 28)

DIFFERENTIATIVE DEFINITION, see DEFINITIONS, TYPES OF.

D.I.G., Dianetic Information Group. (STCR, p. 104)

DILETTANTISM, is supposed to mean good at many things, but actually I would rather extend its meaning a little bit to saying unprofessional at everything. (SH Spec 33, 6408C04)

DIMENSION, the distance from the point of view to the anchor point that is in space. (Spr Lect 14, 5304CM07)

DIMENSION POINT, any point in a space or at the boundaries of space. As a specialized case, those points which demark the outermost boundaries of the space or its corners are called in Scn anchor points. (Scn 8-8008, p. 16)

DINKY DICTIONARIES, (dinky: small, insignificant); in learning the meaning of words small dictionaries are very often a greater liability than they are a help. The meanings they give are often circular. Like “CAT: an animal.” “ANIMAL: a cat.” They do not give enough meaning to escape the circle. The meanings given are often inadequate to get a real concept of the word. The words are too few and even common words are often missing. (HCOB 19 Jun 72)

DIP, a falling needle. (EME, p. 14) See FALL.

DIR, director. (BPL 5 Nov 72RA)

DIR CERTS AND AWARDS, Director of Certi£icates and Awards. (HCOB 23 Aug 65)

DIRECTION-REVERSAL, confuses left and right. (PAB 12)

 

DIRECTIVE LISTING, that Routine 3 activity which directs the pc’s attention while listing to the form of the inevitable reliable item, providing it can be predicted. (HCOB 8 Apr 63)

DIRECT STYLE AUDITING, (Level IV style), by direct we mean straight, concentrated, intense, applied in a direct manner. By direct, we don’t mean frank or choppy. On the contrary, we put the pc’s attention on his bank and anything we do is calculated only to make that attention more direct. (HCOB 6 Nov 64)

DIRECT VALENCE, a valence by which the pc has transferred identity with someone who has directly confronted him. (PAB 95)

DIR EXAMS, Director of Examinations. (HCOB 23 Aug 65)

DIR REV, Director of Review. (HCOB 23 Aug 65)

DIR TECH SERVICES, Director of Technical Services. (HCOB 23 Aug 65)

DIRTY NEEDLE, 1 . symbol D.N.—erratic agitation of the needle which covers less than a quarter of an inch of the E-meter dial and tends to be persistent. (HCOB 8 Nov 62) 2 . ragged, jerky, ticking needle, not sweeping. (HC()B 15 May 69) 3 . a dirty needle is any needle which departs from the appearance of a clean needle. (SH Spec 224, 6212C13) 4. a dirty needle is only a little, tiny persistent rock slam. (SH Spec 184, 6208C14) 5 . one that jerks, tips, dances, halts, is stuck or has any random action on it with the auditor sitting looking at it doing nothing. (HCOB 30 Dec 62)

DIRTY READ, symbol D.R.—a more or less instant response of the needle which is agitated by a major thought; it is an instant tiny (less than a quarter of an inch) agitation of the needle and is in fact a very small cousin of a rock slam but is not a rock slam. It does not persist. (HCOB 8 Nov 62)

DIRTY 30, Opening Procedure by Duplication has been doing things to cases hitherto untouched by extensive and intricate auditing. Because this process is very arduous to run on people below boredom on the tone scale and because it has very often been used on people on whom it should not be used, it was early called “Dirty 30.” Actually “Dirty 30” is Procedure 30 which encompassed what is now R2-17 and two other steps. (PAB 48)

DISAGREEMENT REMEDY, a procedure for handling disagreements which is done by a Class III or above auditor. (BTB 22 Mar 72R)

DISASSOCIATION, mis-identification. (17ACC-4, 5702C28)

DISCHARGED, 1 . an incident which is discharged is no longer capable of restimulation. It is not now an inert incident, it is a gone incident. The batteries in it have been short-circuited. That’s the end of it. (SH Spec 300, 6308C28) 2 . where you get a condition of restimulation which is then let off, that is not discharged, it is destimulated. Discharged means that the incident is now incapable of being restimulated. (SH Spec 300, 6308C28)

DISCHARGING, erasing. (SH Spec 300, 6308C28)

DISHONESTY, one would not be dishonest unless he wished to seek advantage for himself or his group at the expense of some other self or group. That’s dishonesty. It is seeking an illigitimate advantage and it’s illegitimate just because it violates somebody’s survival too much. (5108CM13B)

DISINTEGRATING ROCKET READ, a read that starts out like a mad thing, and turns into a fall. (SH Spec 274, 6306C13)

DISPERSAL, a series of outflows from a common point. A dispersal is, primarily a number of flows extending from a common center. The best example of a dispersal is an explosion. There is such a thing as an in-dispersal. This would be where the flows are all traveling toward a common center. One might call this an implosion. Outflow and inflow from a common center are classified under the word dispersal. (Scn 8-8008, p. 17)

DISPERSED, hiding oneself, being vague, not there most of the time. (FOT, p. 29)

DISPERSION, theta turning into entheta and the inhibition of the flow of free theta. (SOS, p. 114)

DISSEMINATING SCN, getting the materials of Dn and Scn disseminated widely and by efficient presentation. (BPL 15 Mar 60)

DISTRACTION, a distraction is something that is not relevant to the pc’s case and is ineffective. (SH Spec 78, 6111C09)

DIVISION OF TA, one division of TA is from 1 to 2 or similarly from 2 to 3 . It doesn’t matter which way it moves. (SH Spec 1, 6105C07)

DIZZINESS, a feeling of disorientation and includes a spinniness, as well as an out-of- balance feeling. (HCOB 19 Jan 67)

D/L, date/locate. (HCOB 29 Oct 71R)

Dn, Dianetics. (HCOB 23 Aug 65)

D .N ., dirty needle. (HCOB 17 May 69)

DO A BUNK, 1 . an English slang term which meant “run away or desert.” (7204C07 SO III) 2 . the body goes collapse; the heart is still beating, the lungs are still breathing, because the G.E. runs those, but the thetan—he’s done a bunk. (PDC 9) 3 . that’s what we say colloquially, means on his way over the hills and far away and he’s just now passing Galaxy 18 . (PDC 46) 4 . the person shoots out of his head and he’s on his way. He hit the dispersal just adjacent to a ridge. (PDC 23)

DOCTOR OF DIVINITY, religion is basically a philosophic teaching designed to better the civilization into which it is taught. Backed fully by the precedent of all the ages concerning teachings, a Scientologist has a better right to call himself a priest, a minister, a missionary, a doctor of divinity, a faith healer or a preclear than any other man who bears the insignia of religion of the western world. I do not see any inconsistency of any kind in the issuance to those well-schooled and wellskilled in Scn the degree of Doctor of Divinity as a passport into those areas where they are needed. (PAB 32)

DOCTOR OF SCIENTOLOGY, 1 . the Doctor of Scn degree is senior to HGA. It is an honor award and may be made by nomination or selection for those who are consistently producing excellent results in their own field. (PAB 6) 2 . Doctor of Scn abroad [away from the USA] was equivalent to HGA in 1956 . (HCOTB 12 Sept 56)

DOCTRINE OF THE STABLE DATUM, a confusing motion can be understood by conceiving one thing to be motionless. Until one selects one datum, one factor, one particular in a confusion of particles, the confusion continues. The one thing selected and used becomes the stable datum for the remainder. A stable datum does not have to be the correct one. It is simply the one that keeps things from being in a confusion and on which others are aligned. (POW, pp. 23-24)

D OF ESTIMATIONS, Director of Estimations. In 1965, head of the Department of Estimations, now called Tech Services which is in charge of getting pcs to session, having auditing rooms and materials available for auditors, keeping up pcs’ status and scheduling boards, and taking care of and safeguarding pc folders and records. (PRD Gloss)

D OF P, Director of Processing. (HCOB 23 Aug 65)

D OF T, Director of Training. (HCOB 23 Aug 65)

DOG CASE, Slang. 1 . a case nobody can make anything out of. (HCOB 5 Mar 71 II) 2 . the pc is not running well. Such a case is the result of a flub always. (HCOB 19 Mar 71, C/S Series 30)

DOG PC, an auditor who cannot audit, whose TRs are out, whose metering is bad and who never keeps the code always says his pcs are “dogs.” (HCOB 15 Jun 72)

DOING, the action of creating an effect. An effect in creation is action. (FOT, p. 31)

DOING A BUNK, see DO A BUNK.

DOINGNESS, what one ought to be doing in order to get creation or do creation. (SH Spec 19, 6106C23)

DOING THE FOLDER, refers to the technical supervision of case reports. (ISE, p. 45)

DO-IT-YOURSELF PROCESSING, the HAS co-audit which seeks to improve cases and further interest people in Scn so that they will take individual HGC processing and individual training. (HCO PL 14 Feb 61)

DOMINATION, forcing the other person to do exactly what is desired with the mechanism of recrimination and denial of friendship or support unless instant compliance takes place. It seeks by anger and outright criticism, accusations, and other mechanisms to pound another individual into submission by making him less. (SA, p. 167)

DOMINATION BY NULLIFICATION, this is covert and quite often the person upon whom it is exerted remains unsuspecting beyond the fact that he knows he is very unhappy. This is the coward’s method of domination. The person using it feels that he is less than the individual upon whom he is using it and has not the honesty or fortitude to admit the fact to himself. He then begins to pull the other individual “down to size,” using small carping criticisms. The one who is seeking to dominate strikes heavily at the point of pride and capability of his target and yet, if at any moment the target challenges the nullifier, the person using the mechanism claims he is doing so solely out of assistance and friendship or disavows completely that it has been done. (SA, p. 167)

DOPE-OFF, 1 . the phenomenon of a person getting tired, sleepy, foggy (as though doped ). One of the phenomena of going past a misunderstood word. (BTB 12 Apr 72) 2 . a state of lessened awareness, still above unconsciousness, and manifested principally by communication lag. Dope-off is also caused by impaired havingness. (COHA Gloss)

DOUBLE ACKNOWLEDGMENT, 1. double acknowledgment is not, repeat not, the giving of more than one good or thank you. Double acknowledgment only occurs when the auditor assumes the cycle has ended but the preclear then draws the auditor’s attention to the fact that it didn’t end and the auditor has to acknowledge again in order to end that cycle. (BTB 29 Jun 62) 2 . this occurs when the pc answers up, the auditor then acknowledges, and the pc then finishes his answer, leaving the auditor with another acknowledgment to do. (HCOB 12 Nov 59) 3 . multiple acks (such as “OK Good.” and “All right Thank you OK.”) are not OK and must be knocked out by drilling the auditor so he learns to ack with one ack. TR 2 repeated makes an overack. (BTB 13 Mar 75)

DOUBLE ASSESS, (Expanded Dianetics term from tape 7203C30, “Expanded Dianetics”) the act of taking various parts or terminals of the pc’s environment as mentioned in worksheets or health form such as “home,” “job,” “Ohio,” etc., making it into a list, assessing it for best read (assessment number one ) and then taking that item (such as “home”) and listing out the pains, sensations, emotions and attitudes connected with it (assessment number 2) and running it with Dianetics, or otherwise using the result in processing. (LRH Def. Notes)

DOUBLE QUESTION, a type of Q and A. The auditor asks a question. The pc answers. The auditor asks a question about the answer. (HCOB 24 May 62)

DOUBLE TERMINALING, 1 . the process known as double terminaling is an assist. One double terminals as follows: he has the preclear mock up something or someone facing its duplicate, then he gets another such pair beside, in any position, the first pair. It will be noted that the mock-ups discharge one against the other like electrical poles. A double terminal may also consist of an unmatched pair such as a mock-up of a husband facing a wife and, parallel to this, the husband facing the wife again. Or a person facing an inanimate object, then, beside that pair, the same person as another mock-up facing the same object as another mock-up. It will be observed that when TWO pairs are used, there are, even so, only TWO COMMUNICATION LINES. The lines are more important than the terminals; one wants two communication lines, parallel to each other. This, of course, requires four terminals. (PAB 1) 2 . double terminaling simply puts up two pairs of matched terminals. The pairs may each be of two different things but each pair contains one thing the same as the other pair; in other words, husband and wife is one pair and husband and wife is the other pair. These, parallel, give the two terminal effect necessary for a discharge. (COHA, p. 213) 3 . there are a number of processes which could include double

terminals. One terminal made to face another terminal in terms of mock-up can be discharged one against the other in such a way as to relieve aberration connected with things similar to the terminal thus mocked up. One takes two pairs of such terminals and standing them in relationship to each other, discovers that he has now four terminals but these four terminals furnish only two lines. These two lines will discharge one against the other. (Scn 8-8008, p. 32)

DOUBLE TERMINALS, you mock up four of the same person or two of one person, two of another person, in such a way as to give you four terminals with an identical line. (Spr Lect 13, 5304CM07)

DOUBLE TICK, dirty needle. (HCOB 25 May 62)

DOUBT, doubting expresses the inability to find out. (SH Spec 39, 6108C15)

DOWN-BOUNCER, this type of phrase is one which tells the person to “get down” or “get back” and keeps the preclear below the actual incident in which he is held. (SOS, p. 106)

DOWN SCALE, on the tone scale to go down scale one must decrease his power to observe. (COHA, p. 200)

DOWN THE TRACK, not in present time. (HCOB 16 Jul 69)

D.R., dirty read. (HCOB 23 Aug 65)

DRAMATIZATION, 1 . to repeat in action what has happened to one in experience. That’s a basic definition of it, but much more important, it’s a replay now of something that happened then. It’s being replayed out of its time and period. (SH Spec 72, 6607C28) 2 . the duplication of an engramic content, entire or in part, by an aberree in his present time environment. Aberrated conduct is entirely dramatization. The degree of dramatization is in direct ratio to the degree of restimulation of the engrams causing it. (DTOT, p. 74) 3 . complete dramatization is complete identity. It is the engram in full force in present time with the aberree taking one or more parts of the dramatis personae present in the engram. (DTOT, p. 75) 4 . thinking or acting in a manner that is dictated by masses or significances contained in the reactive mind. When dramatizing, the individual is like an actor playing his dictated part and going through a whole series of irrational actions. (PXL Gloss)

DRAMATIZE, to go through the cycle of action demanded by an engram. (SOS, Bk. 2, p. 29)

DRAMATIZING PSYCHOTIC, the dramatizing psychotic is not always looked upon as insane. Whether or not he is classified as insane depends upon whether or not he is of obvious menace to other Homo sapiens. He is fixed in one facsimile which he plays over and over to the environment around him. He is controlled by his environment to the extent that anything in his environment turns on his dramatization. He is disastrous to have around. Inaccessible persons passing for normals are sometimes dramatizing psychotics who dramatize infrequently—perhaps only once or twice a day. The dramatizing psychotic lives mainly in the illusion of his own facsimile with its surroundings, not actual surroundings. He is definitely not in present time at any time. (AP&A, p. 38)

DREAM, 1 . a pretended knowingness about location. (SH Spec 50, 6109C06) 2 . the imaginative reconstruction of areas of randomity or the re-symbolization of the efforts of theta. (Scn 0-8, p. 90) 3 . a dream in its normal function is that powerful and original mechanism called the imagination compositing or creating new pictures. (DTOT, p. 89) 4 . a frantic effort to orient, just to locate himself so that he can feel secure, that’s what a dream is and a dream of course is pretended knowingness because he is at none of these places. (SH Spec 39, 6108C15) 5 .

dreams follow a sudden loss. It’s an effort to orient oneself and get something back. (HCOB 29 Mar 65)

DRIFT DOWN, not actual tone arm action. The pc is just drifting toward the read of an item. In this the tone arm does not go up or down, back and forth. It just drifts slowly and evenly down and stays there. (HCOB 11 Apr 62)

DRIFT UP, occurs during prepchecking or listing. The constantly rising needle gradually raises the tone arm up to a high read which finally just stays there. This drift up is not actually tone arm motion. It is just the pc’s refusal to confront. (HCOB 11 Apr 62)

DRILLS, exercises, processes. (PAB 82)

DRIVE, the dynamic thrust through time toward the attainment of the goal. (DTOT, p. 29)

DROP, a falling needle. (EME, p. 14) See FALL.

DRUG CASES, cases who seek in processing the delusions or madness which exhilarated them on drugs. (HCOB 25 Nov 71 II)

DRUG REHAB, see CHEMICAL RELEASE. See REHABBING DRUGS .

DRUG RUNDOWN, the drug rundown consists of: (1) TRs 0-4, 6-9 FLAT. (2) Full C/S 1, where not done, to fully educate the pc. (3) Objectives—full battery to full EPs per basic books and early HCOBs on them. (4) Class VIII Drug Handling—list and rehab all drugs, 3-way recalls, secondaries and engrams of taking and giving drugs. (5) AESP’s on each reading drug listed separately and handled with R3R, each drug to full F/N assessment of drug list. (6) “No interest” drug items—all reading ones run where they exist. (7) Prior assessment— AESP’s listed separately and run R3R, prior to first drug or alcohol taken. (HCOB 31 Aug 74)

DRUGS, 1. by drugs (to mention a few) are meant tranquilizers, opium, cocaine, mariguana, peyote, amphetamine and the psychiatrists’ gift to Man, LSD which is the worst. Any medical drugs are included. Drugs are drugs. There are thousands of trade names and slang terms for these drugs. Alcohol is included as a drug and receives the same treatment in auditing. (HCOB 15 Jul 71 III) 2 . drugs essentially are poisons. The degree they are taken determines the effect. A small amount gives a stimulant. A greater amount acts as a sedative. A larger amount acts as a poison and can kill one dead. This is true of any drug. (HCOB 28 Aug 68 II)

DRY RUN, a no-auditing situation. You’re running an electrical circuit with no current. (SH Spec 295, 6308C15)

D . SCN, Doctor of Scientology, honorary award for the application of Scn processes, principles, books or literature. (HCOB 23 Aug 65) See DOCTOR OF SCIENTOLOGY.

D . SCN. ABROAD, see DOCTOR OF SCIENTOLOGY.

DTS, Director of Tech Services. (HCOB 23 Aug 65)

DUB-IN, 1 . any unknowingly created mental picture that appears to have been a record of the physical universe but is in fact only an altered copy of the time track. (HCOB 15 May 63) 2 . the phrase out of the motion picture industry of putting a sound track on top of something that isn’t there . ( SH Spec 78, 6608C25) 3 . a recording which is being manufactured by a recording. (5811C07) 4 . imaginary recall—there is no pain dub-in. (DASF)

DUB-IN CASE, this guy is manufacturing incidents and saying they’re real. (5206CM24F)

DUNNAGE, Slang. 1 . the stuff you put around the cargo to keep it straight in a ship. (PXL, p. 244) 2 . extra and relatively meaningless talk. (PAB 38) 3 . irrelevant remarks aimed solely to stay in communication with the preclear. (COHA, p. 88)

DUPLICATION, 1 . cause, distance, effect, with the same thing at effect as is at cause. (5411CM01) 2 . the flow of creation. DupUcation is the process by which a thing persists. (2ACC-13A, 5311CM30)

DUPLICATIVE QUESTION (TR-3), a drill to teach a student to dupUcate without variation an auditing question. Each time newly, in its own unit of time, not as a blur with other questions, and to acknowledge it. (HCOB 16 Aug 71 II)

DWINDLING ROCK SLAM, one which diminishes item by item, written thing by written thing. It’s less and less and less and less, and finally a dirty needle. Then there isn’t even a dirty needle and it’s gone. (SH Spec 194, 6209C25)

DWINDLING SANITY, a dwindling ability to assign time and space. (Scn 8-80, p. 44)

DWINDLING SPIRAL, 1 . one commits overt acts unwittingly. He seeks to justify them by finding fault or displacing blame. This leads him into further overts against the same terminals which leads to a degradation of himself and sometimes those terminals. (HCOB 21 Jan 60, Justification) 2 . as life progresses, more and more theta becomes fixed as entheta in locks and secondary engrams, and less and less theta is available to the organism for purposes of reason. This is called the dwindUng spiral. It is so called because the more entheta there is on the case, the more theta will be turned into entheta at each new restimulation. It is a three-dimensional vicious circle which carries the individual down the tone scale. (SOS, Bk. 2, p. 26)

DYNAMIC, 1 . any one of the eight subdivisions of the dynamic principle of existence—SURVIVE. (PXL, p. 49) 2 . dynamic is the ability to translate solutions into action. (HFP, p. 171) 3 . the tenacity to life and vigor and persistence in survival. (DMSMH, p. 38)

DYNAMIC ASSESSMENT, you run on the E-meter a dynamic assessment and pick up any dynamic that gives a change of needle pattern or take any dynamic which makes needle drop no matter how slight. Having located the dynamic we now ask the pc for any terminal he or she thinks would represent that dynamic. (HCOB 4 Feb 60)

DYNAMIC ASSESSMENT BY ROCK SLAM, listing and assessing to find the rock slam on the pc. (SH Spec 204, 6210C30)

DYNAMIC DEFINITION, a c t i o n d e f i n i t i o n . (5110CM08B) See DEFINITIONS, TYPES OF.

DYNAMICS, there could be said to be eight urges (drives, impulses) in life. These we call dynamics. These are motives or motivations. We call them the eight dynamics. The first dynamic —is the urge toward existence as one’s self. Here we have individuality expressed fully. This can be called the self dynamic. The second dynamic—is the urge toward existence as a sexual or bisexual activity. This dynamic actually has two divisions. Second dynamic (a) is the sexual act itself and the second dynamic (b) is the family unit, including the rearing of children. This can be called the sex dynamic. The third dynamic—is the urge toward existence in groups of individuals. Any group or part of an entire class could be considered to be a part of the third dynamic. The school, the society, the town, the nation are each part of the third dynamic, and each one is a third dynamic. This can be called the group dynamic. The fourth dynamic—is the urge toward existence as mankind. Whereas the white race would be considered a third dynamic, all the races would be considered the fourth dynamic. This can be called the mankind dynamic. The fifth dynamic—is the urge toward existence of the animal kingdom. This includes all living things whether vegetable or animal. The fish in the sea, the beasts of the field or of the forest, grass, trees, flowers, or anything directly and intimately motivated by life. This could be called the animal dynamic. The sixth dynamic—is the urge toward existence as the physical universe. The physical universe is composed of matter, energy, space and time. In Scn we take the first letter of each of these words and coin a word, mest. This can be called the universe dynamic. The seventh dynamic—is the urge toward existence as or of spirits. Anything spiritual, with or without identity, would come under the heading of the seventh dynamic. This can be called the spiritual dynamic. The eighth dynamic—is the urge toward existence as infinity. This is also identified as the Supreme Being. It is carefully observed here that the science of Scn does not intrude into the dynamic of the Supreme Being. This is called the eighth dynamic because the symbol of infinity oo stood upright makes the numeral “8 .” This can be called the infinity or God dynamic. (FOT, pp. 36-38)

DYNAMIC STRAIGHTWIRE, do a survey, one time on the pc, not every session, to discover any errors in his dynamics. On pcs not familiar with Scn terms use the following words: self, sex, family, children, groups, mankind, the animal kingdom, birds, beasts, fish, vegetables, trees, growing things, matter, energy, space, time, spirits, souls, gods, God. Assess with this question only, “Tell me something that would represent (each of the above, one after the other).” When one changes the pattern of the needle action or when it is definitely balmy, write it down. When list is completed take these items written down and run: “Think of something you have done to (selected terminal you wrote down).” “Think of something you have withheld from (selected terminal, same one).” Run these terminals one each, one after the other, until pc seems flat. (HCOB 16 Feb 59)

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EARLIER SIMILAR, 1 . whenever an auditor gets a read on an item from rudiments or a prepared list it must be carried to an F/N. If you know bank structure you know it is necessary to find an earlier item if something does not release. What has been found as a read on a prepared list would F/N if it were the basic lock. So if it doesn’t F/N, then there is an earlier (or an earlier or an earlier) lock which is preventing it from F/Ning. Example: auditor asks for an earlier similar ARC Break. (HCOB 14 Mar 71R)

E/B, earlier beginning. (7203C30)

ECHO INVALIDATION, pc names an item and auditor says, “That isn’t it.” This is not just bad form but a very vicious practice that leads to a games condition. The invalidation of each item makes the pc very dizzy and very desperate. (HCOB 13 Apr 64, Scn VI Tone Arm Action)

ECHO METERING, the pc says, “You missed a suppress. It’s . . .” and the auditor reconsults the meter asking for a suppress. That leaves the pc’s offering an undischarged charge. Never ask the meter after a pc volunteers a button. Example: You’ve declared suppress clean, pc gives you another suppress. Take it and don’t ask suppress again. That’s echo metering. If a pc puts his own ruds in, don’t at once jump to the meter to put his ruds in. That makes all his offerings missed charge. (HCOB 13 Apr 64, Scn VI Part One Tone Arm Action)

ED-1, -2, etc., Expertise Drill. (BTB 20 Jul 74) See AUDITOR EXPERTISE DRILLS

EDUCATION, 1 . the conveyance of ideas, patterns and creations from one person to another for knowing retention and conscious use by the second person. (HCOB 27 Apr 71) 2 . basically, fixing data, unfixing data and changing existing data, either by making it more fixed or less fixed. (BTB 14 Sept 69 I) 3 . learning, knowing or accomplishing the knowingness of a certain subject, and would be in the direction of accomplishing certain actions professionally. One expects an educated person to be able to accomplish certain things in the subject he is educated in. He should be able to accomplish the actions and results that are taught in the subject. (Abil 190) 4 . the activity of relaying an idea or an action from one being to another, in such a way as not to stultify or inhibit the use thereof and that’s about all it is. You could add to it that it permits, then, the other fellow to think on this subject and develop. (SH Spec 33, 6408C04) 5 . the process by which the individual is given the accumulated data of a long span of culture. It can, no less validly than personal experience, solve many of his problems. (SOS, Bk. 2, p. 9)

EDUCATIONAL DIANETICS, contains the body of organized knowledge necessary to train minds to their optimum efficiency and to an optimum of skill and knowledge in the various branches of the works of man. (DMSMH, p. 152)

EFFECT, 1 . receipt point and what is received at the receipt point. (PAB 30) 2 . a potential receipt of flow. (COHA, p. 258)

EFFECT GOALS, ambition to be an effect rather than a cause. (COHA, p. 200)

EFFECT SCALE, a scale which tells you how much cause the individual dare be by measuring how much effect he’s willing to suffer. At the top of the scale the individual can give or receive any effect, and at the bottom of the scale he can receive no effects but he still feels he must give a total effect. (5904C08)

EFFORT, 1 . the physical force manifestation of motion. A sharp effort against an individual produces pain. A strenuous effort produces discomfort. Effort can be recalled and re-experienced by the preclear. No preclear below 2 .5 should be called upon to use effort as such as he is incapable of handling it and will stick in it. The essential part of a painful facsimile is its effort, not its perceptions. (HFP Gloss) 2 . directed force. (Scn 0-8, p. 75) 3 . making two things coincide at

one point or stop coinciding at a point or change coincidence at a point. (2ACC-31B, 5312CM22) 4 . condensed feeling. (2ACC-21A, 5312CM11)

EFFORT-POINT, that area from which a person exerted effort, and that area into which that person received effort. (PXL, pp. 257-258)

EFFORT PROCESSING, 1 . the bank can be considered to have three layers. Effort-Emotion-Thought. Effort buries emotion. Emotion buries thought. A physical aberration or physical disability is held in place by a counter-effort. Effort processing removes the effort which uncovers the pc’s own emotion and removes the emotion which uncovers and blows the pc’s thoughts and postulates about the disability as these are the aberrative source of it. (BTB 1 Dec 71R IV) 2 . processing which lifts up for emphasis the fact that only one’s self-determinism is important, and that the efforts and the counter-efforts against it are the aberrative factor. Rediscovering times for the preclear when he gave up his self-determinism, and erasing the efforts involved in these postulates and incidents is giving back that individual’s happiness and assisting him to move again in a survival direction. (DAB, Vol. II, p. 105)

8-C, 1. control (Routine 8-Control). (HCOB 20 Aug 71 II) 2 . essentially and intimately the operation of making the physical body contact the environment. (5410CM08) 3 . name of a process. Also used to mean good control. (HCOB 23 Aug 65)

8D, Standard Operating Procedure 8D, 1954 . Primarily for heavy cases the goal of this procedure was “to bring the preclear to tolerate any viewpoint.” (PXL, p. 205)

8-80, see TECHNIQUE 8-80.

8-8008, see SCIENTOLOGY 8-8008 .

EIGHT, the symbol of infinity oo stood upright makes the numeral “8 .” (PAB 83)

EIGHTH DYNAMIC, see DYNAMICS.

8 LEVELS OF CASES, see STATE OF CASE SCALE.

8RB, word clearing series 8RB, the standard C/S for word clearing Method 1 in session. (HCOB 30 Jun 71R II)

EJECTOR, species of command. These are colloquially called “bouncers.” They include such things as “Get out!” “Don’t ever come back,” “I’ve got to stay away,” etc. etc., including any combination of words which literally mean ejection. (DMSMH, p. 213)

ELAN VITAL, theta, life force, life energy, divine energy, the energy peculiar to life. (SOS, Bk. 2, p. 21)

ELECTRICAL, is the bridge between sensation and pain and is difficult to classify as either pain or sensation when it exists alone. (HCOB 8 Nov 62) [This definition of electrical is a specialized definition of the word in terms of how it applies in the field of perceptics. Only the technical usage of the word as it is used in Dn and Scn is defined here.]

ELECTRICITY, a flow manifestation of force. (5312CM17)

ELECTRONICS, lower and cruder manifestations of the same order of actuality as thought. (Scn 8-8008 Gloss)

 

ELECTROPSYCHOMETER, it’s an electrical means of measuring the spirit. It’s exactly what its name says, electropsychometer. It’s called for short, E-meter. (Class VIII, No. 7) See also E-METER .

EMERGENCY AUDITOR, this person is the person called upon by the group auditor to assist a preclear in the group who has hit a sudden “grief charge” or who is consistently “boiling-off.” (GAH, p. iii)

EM, E-meter. Where EM is followed directly by a number (e.g. EM 16) it refers to the E-meter drill of that number. (BTB 12 Apr 72R)

E-METER, l. the E-meter is a religious artifact used as a spiritual guide in the church confessional. It is an aid to the auditor (minister, student, pastoral counselor) in two-way communication locating areas of spiritual travail and indicating spiritual well-being in an area. (HCO PL 24 Sept 73 VII) 2 . Hubbard Electrometer. An electronic instrument for measuring mental state and change of state in individuals, as an aid to precision and speed in auditing. The E-meter is not intended or effective for the diagnosis, treatment or prevention of any disease. (Scn AD) 3 . used to verify the preclear’s gain and register when each s e p a r a t e a u d i t i n g a c t i o n i s e n d e d . (H C O B 5 A p r 6 9 R ) 4 . Electropsychometer. (HCOB 23 Aug 65) 5 . the meter tells you what the preclear’s mind is doing when the preclear is made to think of something. The meter registers before the preclear becomes conscious of the datum. It is therefore a pre-conscious meter. It passes a tiny current through the preclear’s body. This current is influenced by the mental masses, pictures, circuits and machinery. When the unclear pc thinks of something, these mental items shift and this registers on the meter. (EME, p. 8)

E-METER CALIBRATION, see CALIBRATION.

E-METER CHECK, see METER CHECK.

EMOTION, 1. a response by a wave-length affecting an individual or another which produces a sensation and a state of mind. (SH Spec 83, 6612C06) 2. emotion is three things—engramic response to situations, endocrine metering of the body to meet situations on an analytical level and the inhibition or the furtherance of life force. (Scn 0-8, p. 66) 3 . a manifestation, a condition of beingness which is the connector between thought and effort. The tone scale is a direct index of emotion. (5203CM05B) 4 . the intention to exert effort bridges into the body by emotion. In other words, the physical-mental bridge is emotion. Emotion is motion. (5203CM04B) 5. emotion could be called the energy manifestation of affinity. As used in Dn, emotion could be called the index of the state of being. In the English language, “emotional” is often considered synonymous with “irrational.” This would seem to assume that if one is emotional one cannot be reasonable. No more unreasonable assumption could possibly be made. (SOS, p. 48) 6 . this word is redefined in Dn and is given an opposite for comparison, “misemotion.” Previously the word emotion was never satisfactorily defined. Now it is defined as an organism manifestation of position on the tone scale which is rationality appropriate to the present time environment and which truly represents the present time position on the tone scale. Rational effect. (SOS Gloss)

EMOTIONAL CHARGE, emotional charge may be contained in any engram: the emotion communicates, in the same tone level, from the personnel around the “unconscious” person into his reactive mind. Anger goes into an engram as anger, apathy as apathy, shame as shame. Whatever people have felt emotionally around”an unconscious” person should be found in the engram which resulted from the incident. (DMSMH, p. 251)

EMOTIONAL CURVE, 1 . the drop from any position above 2 .0 to a position below 2 .0 on the realization of failure or inadequacy. It is easily recovered by

preclears. (AP&A, p. 24) 2 . the drop or rise from one level of emotion to another. (HFP, p. 120)

EMOTIONAL SCALE, refers to the subjective feelings of the individual, in relation to his position on the tone scale. (NOTL, p. 102)

EMOTIONAL TONE SCALE, see TONE SCALE.

EMOTION-POINT, that point from which a person emotes, and at which he emoted. (PXL, p. 257)

EMPIRICAL FACT, one that is established by observation, not established by theory or reason. (SH Spec 61, 6110C03)

END OF CYCLE, a finite stop. (5311CM24)

END OF CYCLE PROCESSING, in end of cycle processing you merely keep mocking up a finished, completed task, a goal, and so on up to a point where you’ve obtained that goal. (5312CM21)

END PHENOMENA, those indicators in the pc and meter which show that a chain or process is ended. It shows in Dn that basic on that chain has been erased and in Scn that the pc has been released on that process being run. Any Dn auditing below power processing has four definite reactions in the pc which show the process is ended. (1) floating needle, (2) cognition, (3) very good indicators, (pc happy), (4) erasure of the final picture audited. The 0 to IV Scn end phenomena are (1) floating needle, (2) cognition, (3) very good indicators, (4) release. (HCOB 20 Feb 70) Abbr. EP.

END RUDIMENTS, rudilnents to make the pc feel ok by session end. They are to clean up additional residual charge left by reason of the session and they are to put the pc in a frame of mind to end the session. (SH Spec 121, 6203C01)

END WORD, 1 . the common denominator to the whole of a GPM. (SH Spec 50, 6412C22) 2 . the final word of a goal. (HCOB 17 Aug 64)

ENERGY, 1. energy would simply mean a potential of motion or power. It’s potential or actual motion or force. (SH Spec 84, 6612C13) 2. energy derives from imposition of space between terminals and a reduction and expansion of that space. (COHA, p. 256) 3 . there are three kinds of energy. There’s a flow, and then there’s a dispersal, and then there’s a ridge. (PDC 18) 4 . a mass of particles which is a mass of motion. (5203CM04B) 5 . postulated particles in space. (PXL, p. 150) 6. energy is subdivisible into a large motion, such as a flow, a dispersal, or a ridge, and a small motion which is itself commonly called a “particle” in nuclear physics. Agitation within agitation is the basic formation of particles of energy, such as electrons, protons and others. (Scn 8-80, p. 43)

ENFORCED AFFINITY, the demand on the individual that he experience or admit affinity when he has not felt it. People lower toned than the preclear commonly

command his affinity; and when affinity is given but not felt locks are formed which are quite enturbulative should engrams underlie such an enforcement. (SOS, Bk. 2, p. 72)

ENFORCED COMMUNICATION, the demand on the individual that he experience or admit communication when he has not felt it. Enforced communication is productive of all manner of aberration and physiological changes in the individual. When the individual is forced to listen to something he would not ordinarily listen to if left to his own self-determinism, his hearing to that degree is impaired. When he has been forced to touch something which he would not ordinarily touch, his tactile is thus impaired. When he has been forced to talk when his self-determinism says he should remain silent, his speech communication is impaired. (SOS, Bk. 2, pp. 72-73)

ENFORCED HAVE, making someone accept what they didn’t want. (HCOB 3 Jun 72R)

ENFORCED OVERT HAVE, forcing upon another a substance, action or thing not wanted or refused by the other. (HCO PL 12 May 72)

ENFORCED REALITY, the demand on the individual that he experience or admit reality when he has not felt it. Any time a person is made to agree by force or threat or deprivation, to another’s reality and yet does not feel that reality himself, an aberrative condition exists. (SOS, Bk. 2, pp. 72-73)

ENGRAM, 1 . a mental image picture which is a recording of a time of physical pain and unconsciousness. It must by definition have impact or injury as part of its content. (HCOB 23 Apr 69) 2 . a specialized kind of facsimile. This differs from other mental pictures because it contains, as part of its content, unconsciousness and physical pain. (Dn 55 .1, p. 12) 3 . a complete recording, down to the last accurate detail, of every perception present in a moment of partial or full unconsciousness. (Scn 0-8, p. 11) 4 . a theta facsimile of atoms and molecules in misalignment. (Scn 0-8, p. 81) 5 . a unit of force which is held in because one has chosen force itself for his randomity. (5312CM13) 6 . the word engram is an old one borrowed from biology. It means simply, “a lasting memory trace on a cell.” It may be engraved on more than the cell, but up against Dn processing, it is not very lasting. (SOS, p. 10) 7 . physical pain, enmest and entheta held at a specific point on the time track. (SOS, Bk. 2, p. 25) 8 . a severe physical pain causes considerable analytical attenuation, shutting off the analyzer thoroughly for a period of time. This, technically, is an engram, although any incident, painful or not, contained in the reactive mind, and occluded by anaten can be considered an engram. (SOS, p. 80) 9 . a recording which has the sole purpose of steering the individual through supposed but usually nonexistent dangers. (SOS, p. 10) 1 0 . a severe area of plus or minus randomity of sufficient volume to cause unconsciousness. (Scn 0-8, p. 81) 1 1 . a moment when the analytical mind is shut down by physical pain, drugs or other means, and the reactive bank is open to the receipt of a recording. (DMSMH, p. 153) 1 2 . simply moments of physical pain strong enough to throw part or all the analytical machinery out of circuit; they are antagonism to the survival of the organism or pretended sympathy to the organism’s survival. That is the entire definition. Great or little unconsciousness, physical pain, perceptic content, and contra-survival or pro-survival data. (DMSMH, p. 68) 1 3 . not a sentient recording containing meanings. It is merely a series of impressions such as a needle might make on wax. These impressions are meaningless to the body until the engram keys-in, at which time aberrations and psychosomatics occur. (DMSMH, p. 131) 1 4 . a bundle of data which includes not only perceptics and speech present but also metering for emotion and state of physical being. (DMSMH, p. 245)1 5 . an apparent surcharge in the mental circuit with certain definite finite content. That charge is not reached or examined by the analytical mind but that charge is capable of acting as an independent command. (DTOT, p. 43)

 

ENGRAM BANK, a colloquial name for the reactive mind. It is that portion of a person’s mind which works on a stimulus response basis. (PXL Gloss)

ENGRAM CHAIN, a basic engram and a series of similar incidents. (DTOT, p. 112) See CHAIN.

ENGRAM COMMAND, any phrase contained in an engram. (DMSMH Gloss)

ENGRAMIC THOUGHT, 1 . thought that demands immediate action without examination by the analytical mind. (Scn Jour 28-G) 2 . irrational identity thought by which the mind is made to conceive identities where only vague similarities may exist. Engramic thinking can be stated by A equals A equals A equals A equals A. (DTOT, p. 64)

ENMEST, 1 . another word meaning enturbulated mest. (SOS, p. 5) 2 . below 2 .0 on the tone scale mest is considered to be confused and enturbulated and is referred to as enmest. Mest, in a life form, is an orderly array above 2 .0 on the tone scale. (SOS, p. 41) 3 . enmest could be considered mest with a somehow reversed polarity. It is fighting to get free from theta. The entrapped enmest seeks to fight away from anything which even closely resembles entheta and so attacks all theta. (DAB, Vol. II, p. 136) 4 . mest which has been enturbulated by entheta or crushed too hard into theta and rendered less usable. (SOS Gloss)

ENTHETA, 1 . means enturbulated theta (thought or life); especially refers to communications, which, based on lies and confusions, are slanderous, choppy or destructive in an attempt to overwhelm or suppress a person or group. (Scn AD) 2 . theta which has been confused and chaotically mixed with the material universe and which will lie in this confusion until death or some other process disenturbulates it. Theta, below 2 .0 on the tone scale, we call entheta. (SOS, p. 41) 3 . anger, sarcasm, despair, slyly destructive suggestions. (HTLTAE, p. 88)

ENTITIES, ridges on which facsimiles are planted. Each one of those things can be a thinking entity. It thinks it’s alive. It can think it’s a being, as long as energy is fed to it. (PDC 36)

ENTRAPMENT, the opposite of freedom. A person who is not free is entrapped. He may be trapped by an idea; he may be trapped by matter; he may be trapped by energy or space or time; or he may be trapped by all of them. The more thoroughly a person is trapped, the less free he is. He cannot move, he cannot change, he cannot communicate, he cannot feel affinity and reality. Death itself could be said to be man’s ultimate in entrapment; for when a man is totally entrapped, he is dead. (Abil 254)

ENTURBULATE, cause to be turbulent or agitated and disturbed. (Scn AD) [The mechanics of enturbulation can be found in SOS Chapter One.]

ENVIRONMENT, 1 . the physical universe, security, it’s right there, it’s solid. This is the space of the room, the floor, the ceiling, the walls, the objects there, and if we happen to be looking through these things, then it’s the walls in the next room, and up through the roof, the air about the house and down through, it’s the earth underneath the house. (PXL, pp. 218-219) 2 . the surroundings of the preclear from moment to moment in particular or in general, including people, pets, mechanical objects, weather, culture, clothing or the Supreme Being. Anything he perceives or believes he perceives. The objective environment is the environment everyone agrees is there. The subjective environment is the environment the individual himself believes is there. They may not agree. (HFP Gloss)

ENVIRONMENTAL ABERRATION, the result of aberrated persons and situations in the individual’s present-time environment. This is normally temporary, but cumulative environmental entheta has a chronic effect in the case. (SOS, Bk. 2, p. 103)

EO, Ethics Officer. (HCO PL 7 Mar 72R)

EP, end phenomena. (HCOB 20 Feb 70)

EPICENTER, the epicenters would be such parts of the body as the “funny bones” or any “judo-sensitive” spots: the sides of the neck, the inside of the wrist, the places the doctors tap to find out if there is a reflex. Those things are sub-brains picked up on the evolutionary line probably. They have a monitoring effect on the body and the individual. (PAB 2)

EPICENTER THEORY, the theory of epicenters merely states that there is an evolution of command posts and that those command posts remain structurally visible in the organism. They can be found in the organism and they still behave as lower echelon command posts, control centers in other words. (5110CMllB) See also EPICENTER.

EPISTEMOLOGY, a philosophical term meaning “the study of knowledge.” (Abil Ma 270)

E. PURP, (Ev Purp) evil purpose. (HCOB 28 Mar 74)

ERASE, to recount an engram until it has vanished entirely. There is a distinct difference between a reduction and an erasure. If the engram is early, if it has no material earlier which will suspend it, that engram will erase. (DMSMH, p. 287)

ERASED, the words “vanished” or “erased,” when applied to an engram which has been treated mean that the engram has disappeared from the engram bank. It cannot be found afterwards except by search of the standard memory. (DMSMH, p. 207)

ERASING AUDITING, treating the session as an incident and erasing it as a lock. (SH Spec 70, 6607C21)

ERASURE, 1 . the act of erasing, rubbing out, locks, secondaries or engrams. (HCOB 23 Apr 69) 2 . apparent removal of the engram from the files of the engram bank and refiling in the standard bank as memory. (DMSMH, p. 286) 3 . erasure, in essence, is a knowingness process rather than an energy rub-out process. It teaches somebody that he can duplicate the experience and is still alive. (5312CM16)

E/S, earlier similar. (HCOB 14 Mar 71R)

ESPINOL, this society belongs nominally to the Espinol United Stars. This is sun twelve and it is one little tiny pinpoint. Their whole title is “Espinol United Stars, moons, planets and asteroids this part of the Universe is ours—this quarter of the Universe is ours”—it translates better. (SH Spec 281, 6307C09) [Note on SH Spec 297, 6308C21 LRH refers to this as the Espinol Confederacy a civilization, duration of which was probably on the order of a few hundred thousand years and which engaged in implanting.]

ESTO, Establishment Officer. An ESTO is a third dynamic auditor who deaberrates a group by cleanly organizing it so it can produce. (FSO 529)

ETH?, “This precleaF may be an ethics case, roller coaster or no case gain.” (HCOB 23 Aug 65)

ETHICAL CODE, an ethical code is not enforceable, is not to be enforced, but is a luxury of conduct. A person conducts himself according to an ethical code because he wants to or because he feels he is proud enough or decent enough, or civilized enough to so conduct himself. An ethical code, of course, is a code of certain restrictions indulged in to better the manner of conduct of life. (PAB 40)

ETHICAL CONDUCT, conduct out of one’s own sense of justice and honesty. When you enforce a moral code upon people you depart considerably from anything like ethics. People obey a moral code because they are afraid. People are ethical only when they are strong. (Dn 55!, p. 25)

ETHICS, 1. the term is used to denote ethics as a subject, or the use of ethics, or that section of a Scientology Church which handles ethics matters. (BTB 12 Apr 72R) 2. ethics actually consist, as we can define them now in Dn, of rationality toward the highest level of survival for the individual, the future race, the group, and mankind, and the other dynamics taken collectively. Ethics are reason. The highest e t h i c l e v e l would be long-term survival concepts with minimal destruction, along any of the dynamics. (SOS, p. 128) 3 . ethicB has to do with a code of agreement amongst people that they will conduct themselves in a fashion which will obtain to the optimum solution of their problems. (5008C30) 4 . the rules or standards governing the conduct of the members of a profession. (HCO PL 3 May 72) 5 . ethics is a personal thing. By definition, the word means “the study of the general nature of morals and the specific moral choices to be made by the individual in his relationship with others.” (AND) When one is ethical or “has his ethics in” it is by his own determination and is done by himself. (HCOB 15 Nov 72 II) 6 . that which is enforced by oneself, his belief in his own honor, and good reason, and optimum solution along the eight dynamics. (PDC 37)

ETHICS BAIT, a person in continual heavy ethics or who is out ethics. (HCO PL 4 Apr 72)

ETHICS CASES, SPs and PTSes. (HCOB 3 Apr 66)

EUPHORIA, gleeful happiness about something. (SH Spec 59, 6504C27)

EVALUATION, 1 . telling the pc what to think about his case. (HCOB 4 Aug 60) 2 . evaluation for a person could be defined as the action of shaking his stable data

without giving him further stable data with which he can agree or in which he can believe. (PAB 93) 3 . the reactive mind’s conception of viewpoint. (COHA, p. 208) 4 . the shifting of viewpoints or the effort to do so. (PAB 8)

EVALUATION OF DATA, a datum is as understood as it can be related to other data. (SOS Gloss)

EVIL, 1 . that which inhibits or brings plus or minus randomity into the organism, which is contrary to the survival motives of the organism. (Scn 0-8, p. 92) 2 . may be classified as those things which tend to limit the dynamic thrust of the individual, his family, his group, his race, or life in general in the dynamic drive, also limited by the observation, the observer and his ability to observe. (DTOT, pp. 20-21) 3. evil is the opposite of good, and is anything which is destructive more than it is constructive along any of the various dynamics. A thing which does more destruction than construction is evil from the viewpoint of the individual, the future, group, species, life, or mest that it destroys. (SOS, Bk. 2, p. 34)

EVIL PURPOSE, destructive intentions. (7203C30SO) Abbr. Ev purp.

EVOLUTION, t h e r e a r e f o u r evolutionary tracks, evidently. Organism evolution, through natural selection, accident and (evidence suggests) outright planning. Mest evolution, brought about through the agency of life organisms. Theta evolution, a postulated process of learning in theta as a whole or as entities. And present time ladder-of-support evolution, in which less complicated organisms support more complicated organisms. (SOS Gloss)

EXAGGERATERS, engramic commands which give the aspect of too much pain and too much emotion. (DMSMH, p. 347)

EXAMINER, that person in a Scientology Church assigned to the duties of noting pc’s statements, TA position and indicators after session, or when pc wishes to volunteer information. (HCO PL 4 Dec 71 V)

EXAM REPORT, a report made out by the Qual Examiner when the pc goes to Exams after session or goes on his own volition. It contains the meter details, pc’s indicators and the pc’s statement. (BTB 3 Nov 72R)

EXCALIBUR, 1. “Excalibur” was an unpublished book written in the very late 1930’s. Only fragments of it remain. (HCOB 17 Mar 69) 2 . an unpublished work most of which has been released in HCOBs, PLs and books. (HCO PL 26 Apr 70)

EXCHANGE BY DYNAMICS, a person who doesn’t produce becomes mentally or physically ill. For his exchange factor is out. The remedy is rather simple. First one has to know all about exchange as covered in the product clearing policy letters. Then he has to specially clear this up with people who do not produce. Clear up the definitions of dynamics then have the person draw up a big chart and say what he gives the first dynamic and what it gives him. And so on up the dynamics. Now, have him consider “his own second dynamic.” What does his second dynamic give his first dynarnic. What does his second dynamic give the second dynamic and what does it give him. And so on until you have a network of these exchange arrows, each both ways. Somewhere along the way he will have quite a cognition. That, if it’s a big one is the end phenomena of it. And don’t be surprised if you see a person now and then change his physical face shape. (HCO PL 4 Apr 72) [The above is a brief summary of the action. Full data can be found in the referenced HCO PL. l

EXCHANGED VALENCE, 1 . one has directly superimposed the identity of another on his own. Example, daughter becomes own mother to some degree. (FOT, p. 95) 2 . a direct assumption of another valence. (HCOB 14 Jul 56)

 

EX DN, Expanded Dianetics. (BTB 20 Aug 71R II)

EXHIBITIONISTIC, displaying himself too thoroughly, being too much there at all times. (FOT, p. 29)

EXISTENCE, 1 . an existing state or fact of being; life; living; continuance of being; and occurrence; specific manifestation. (HCOB 11 May 65) 2 . apparency, reality, livingness. (FOT, p. 26) 3 . a test or perception of existence. (PDC 5)

EXOGENETIC, there are two kinds of illness: the first could be called autogenetic, which means that it originated within the organism and was self-generated, and exogenetic, which means that the origin of the illness was exterior. The Pasteur germ theory would be the theory of exogenetic—exteriorly generated —illness. (DMSMH, p. 92)

EXPANDED DIANETICS, that branch of Dn which uses Dn in special ways for specific purposes. It is not HSDC Dn. Its position on the grade chart would be just above Class IV. Its proper number is Class IVA. It uses Dn to change an Oxford Capacity Analysis (or an American Personality Analysis) and is run directly against these analysis graphs and the Science of Survival “Hubbard Chart of Human Evaluation.” Expanded Dianetics is not the same as Standard Dn as it requires special training and advanced skills. The main difference between these two branches is that Standard Dn is very general in application. Expanded Dn is very specifically adjusted to the pc. Some pcs, particularly heavy drug cases, or who have been given injurious psychiatric treatment or who are physically disabled or who are chronically ill or who have had trouble running engrams (to name a few) require a specially adapted technology. (HCOB 15 Apr 72) Abbr. Ex Dn, XDn.

EXPANDED DIANETIC SPECLALIST, a n HGDS (Hubbard Graduate Dianetic Specialist). (HCOB 15 Apr 72R)

EXPANDED GITA, an extension of Give and Take processing. Expanded Gita remedies contra-survival abundance and scarcity. (COHA, p. 227)

EXPANDED LOWER GRADES, pcs won’t like being told they “have to have their lower grades rerun.” Actually that’s not a factual statement anyway. The lower grades harmonic into the OT levels. They can be run again with full 1950-1960 to 1970 processes as given on the SH courses all through the 1960’s. These are now regrouped and sorted out and are called Expanded Lower Grades. (HCOB 25 Jun 70 II)

EXPERIENCE, the doingness of a beingness . ( SH Spec 107, 6201C31)

EXPLOSION, an outflow of energy usually violent but not necessarily so, from a more or less common source point. (Scn 8-8008, p. 49)

EXT, 1. extended. (Class VIII No. 11) 2 . exterior. (HCOB 5 Apr 71)

EXTENDED HEARING, 1 . too high an alertness to sounds. This accompanies, quite ordinarily, a general fear of the environment or the people in it. (SA, p. 85) 2 . able to hear much more acutely. (DMSMH, p. 94)

EXTENSION COURSE, consists of a textbook and a series of lessons done on a glued-top table, one sheet per lesson, eight questions or exercises per lesson. The extension course should give the taker a passing knowledge of Dn and Scn terminology, phenomena and parts. (HCOB 16 Dec 58)

EXTERIOR, the fellow would just move out, away from the body and be aware of himself as independent of a body but still able to control and handle the body. (Spec Lect 7006C21)

EXTERIORILY DETERMINED, compelled to do or repressed from doing without his own rational consent. (DMSMH, p. 229)

EXTERIORIZATION, 1 . the state of the thetan, the individual himself, being outside his body. When this is done, the person achieves a certainty that he is himself and not his body. (PXL Gloss) 2 . the phenomenon of being in a position in space dependent on only one’s consideration, able to view from that space, bodies and the room, as it is. (PAB 125) 3 . the act of moving out of the body with or without full perception. (HCOB 22 Oct 71)

EXTERIORIZATION RUNDOWN, a remedy designed to permit the pc to be further audited after he has gone exterior. The Ext Rundown is not meant to be sold or passed off as a method of exteriorizing a pc. (HCOB 2 Dec 70, C/S Series No. 23, Exteriorization Summary) [NOTE: the above HCOB has since been revised to HCOB 17 Dec 71R, C/S Series 23RA, Interiorization Summary. All references to Exteriorization Rundown in the former HCOB have been changed to Interiorization Rundown in the latter HCOB. This is also known as Interiorization Rundown, Int Rundown, Int-Ext Rundown, Ext-Int Rundown.] Abbr. Ext RD or Int RD.

EXTRAORDINARY SOLUTIONS, extraordinary solutions are only required when the basics of auditing are violated, and that is an extraordinary solution, definition of—that activity which somebody thinks he ought to do because all the basics of auditing have been flubbed. (SH Spec 60, 6109C28)

EXTRAPOLATING, getting some more and some more and some more application of the same datum. Theoretical adding up of data. (5211C10)

EXT RD, Exteriorization Rundown. (HCOB 12 Apr 71, C/S Series 35, Exteriorization Errors) [NOTE: The above HCOB has since been revised to HCOB 16 Dec 71RA, Revised 19 Sept 74, C/S Series 35RA Interiorization Errors. All references to Ext RD in the former HCOB have been changed to Int RD in the latter HCOB. ]

EXTROVERSION, 1. extroversion means nothing more than being able to look outward. An extroverted personality is one who is capable of looking around the environment. A person who is capable of looking at the world around him and seeing it quite real and quite bright is, of course, in a state of extroversion. (HCOB 23 Jan 74RA) 2 . the preclear ceasing to put his attention on his mind, but putting his attention on the environment. We see this happen often in the Opening Procedure of 8-C where the preclear has the room suddenly become bright to him. He has extroverted his attention. He has come free from one of these communication tangles out of the past and has suddenly looked at the environment. (Dn 55 .!, p. 94)

EXTROVERT, n. one whose available energy is being applied to the world and people around him rather than being applied to the past, or even to any great degree, the present. He does a lot of future planning, a lot of action. Every effort is into the future. (51 12CM29B)

f

F , fall. (HCOB 29 Apr 69)

F , female; the E-meter basically registers the female body at 2 .0 on the tone arm. When a preclear is Clear he may occasionally get some tone arm motion due to purely body electronics but in the main reads at male or female on the tone arm (3 or 2) according to his or her sex. (EME, pp. 8 and 11)

FABRICATOR, see LIE FACTORY.

FAC, Foundation Auditor’s Course. (HCOB 29 Sept 66)

FAC ONE, see FACSIMILE ONE.

FACSIMILE, 1. any mental picture, that is unknowingly created and part of the time track is a facsimile, whether an engram, secondary, lock or pleasure moment. (HCOB 15 May 63) 2 . a theta recording. All physical perceptions, all effort, emotion and thought which a person experiences are recorded continuously, and these recordings are called “facsimiles.” They are not dependent upon an organism for their continued existence. Any facsimile which has been recorded is there to be recalled—when the individual has risen high enough on the tone scale, when he has regained enough of his self-determinism. (Abil 114A) 3 . an energy picture made by a thetan or the body’s machinery of the physical universe environment. It is like a photograph. It is made of mental energy. It means copy of the physical universe. (PAB 99) 4 . the pictures contained in the reactive mind. (Dn 55 .!, p. 12) 5 . a full facsimile is a sort of three-dimensional color picture with sound and smell and all other perceptions plus the conclusions or speculations of the individual. (HFP, p. 27) 6 . a simple word meaning a picture of a thing, a copy of a thing, not the thing itself. (HFP, p. 25) 7. a facsimile is an energy picture which can be reviewed again. A facsimile contains more than fifty easily identified perceptions. It also contains emotion and thought. (Scn 8- 8008, p. 37) 8 . means the physical universe impression on thought and it means that section of thought which has a physical universe impression on it and it has a time tag on it. (5203CM03B)

FACSIMILE BANK, mental image pictures; the contents of the reactive mind; colloquially, “bank.” (PXL, p. 52)

FACSIMILE ONE, 1 . the basic on the service facsimile chain. (HCL 15, 5203CM10) 2 . it is called facsimile one because it is the first proven-up whole track incident which, when audited out of a long series of people, was found to alleviate such things as asthma, sinus troubles, chronic chills and a host of other ills. (HOM, p. 64) 3 . the one basic engram on top of which all this life engrams are mere locks. (HYLBTL? Gloss) Abbr. Fac One.

FACTORS, the Factors are the summation of the considerations and examinations of the human spirit and the material universe completed between A.D. 1923 and 1953 . (COHA, p. 183)

FACTUAL HAVINGNESS, purpose: to remedy havingness objectively. To bring about the preclear’s ability to have or not have, his present time environment and to permit him to alter his considerations of what he has, what he would continue and what he would permit to vanish. (HCOB 3 Jul 59)

FADE-AWAY QUESTIONS, questions to which, because of the characteristics of the mind, there is no possible answer. One of these is “Give me an unknown time.” As soon as the preclear starts to answer such a question, he of course has as-ised a certain amount of unknownness and will know the time. The answer to a fade-away question is measurable, however, it could be said arbitrarily to be answered when the preclear has as-ised enough unknownness to give a known time. There are relatively few of these questions. (PAB 43)

FAILED CASE, 1. a case in which thought can always be overpowered by mest. The pc’s inability to make his thinkingness prevail against mest has failed too often and cannot change. Only mest changes, therefore. This is usually the below zero on the APA pc. (HCOB 9 Sept 57) 2 . medically ill or injured cases. (HCOB 12 Mar 69)

“FAILED” SESSIONS FORMULA, when you have an auditor giving a failed session, you ASK THE PC WHAT THE AUDITOR DID. Then you get a hold of the auditor and get it corrected. You send the pc to review. (LRH ED 18 INT)

FAILURE, 1 . at 0.0 on the tone scale, we have failure. It’s an emotion. It’s just a little bit below apathy. It’s a realization that one has failed. (5904C08) 2 . a cycle of action which one thinks he has completed which suddenly is demonstrated not to have been completed. (2ACC-31B, 5312CM22) 3 . the inability to handle that which has been started after that course of action is entered. (PDC 5)

FALL, 1 . a type of E-meter read. (HCOB 23 Aug 65) 2 . a movement of the needle to your right as you face the meter. It can take place anywhere on the dial. It can be a short movement or a long movement even necessitating adjustment of the tone arm. The movement can be either fast or slow. (BIEM, p. 41) 3 . also called a drop, a dip, and a register. It denotes that a disagreement with life on which the preclear has greater or lesser reality has met the question asked. (EME, p. 14) 4 . fall (about one to two inches). (HCOB 29 Apr 69) Abbr. F.

FALL ON HIS HEAD, Slang. this refers to the fact of a person failing in one area or another. A pc “falls on his head” when he has been improperly audited or attests to grades or actions he has not really attained and then is continued on higher actions or levels of auditing. An administrator falls on his head by failing to handle situations and apply correct policy to an area he is responsible for thereby causing the area and himself to fail. A U.S. Western term meaning a person who has erred and fallen from grace such as a horseman who is bucked off a horse. (LRH Def. Notes)

FALSE, contrary to fact or truth; without grounds; incorrect. Without meaning or sincerity; deceiving. Not keeping faith. Treacherous. Resembling and being identified as a similar or related entity. (HCO PL 3 May 72)

FALSE CLEAR, a preclear whose circuits have been charged to the point where the auditor cannot find an engram and so assumes that he has a Clear, when he does not. (SOS, Bk. 2, p. 272)

FALSE CLEAR READ, see DEAD THETAN.

FALSE FOUR, the laughter and gaiety which the preclear exhibits when he has thoroughly exhausted an incident of charge. There is nothing really “false” about hlse four, except that it is often of very short duration. (SOS Gloss)

FALSE MOTIVATOR, when a person commits an overt or overt of omission with no motivator, he tends to believe or pretends that he has received a motivator which does not in fact exist. This is a false motivator. (HCOB 1 Nov 68 II)

FALSE OVERTS, the person has been hit hard for no reason. So they dream up reasons they were hit. (HCOB 1 Nov 68 II)

FALSE PIANOLA CASE, a case with dub-in circuitry. It is very highly supercharged control circuitry. This person will run on the track, go into this, or go into that, and can go on for years and years. Evidently has very good recall. Has visio and sonic. The only trouble is “I” isn’t even there. Sixty per cent of the material he gives you is strictly dub-in. (NOTL, p. 67)

FALSE READ, 1 . if a rud gets any comment, natter or protest or bewilderment, put in false and clean it. “Has anyone said you had a . . . when you didn’t have one?” is the answer to protested ruds. (HCOB 15 Aug 69) 2 . thinking something read which really didn’t. Protest can then give you a read. Clean up questions with “protest,” “suppress,” “invalidate” buttons where pc says there’s nothing there. (BTB 6 Jun 68R)

FALSE SOLUTIONS, the pretended knowingness that you see on the case. (SH Spec 43, 6108C22)

FALSE TA, two conditions in hands or feet can produce an incorrect TA position. The dry condition produces a false high TA. The overly wet condition produces a false low TA. The TA depends on normally moist hands. This does not mean the meter works on “sweat.” It does mean the meter works only when there is correct electrical contact. (HCOB 23 Nov 73)

FALSE TA CHECKLIST, normally done early in auditing, especially if TA high or low. Prevents unnecessary repair due to wrong cans or grip. Is usually only done once. Do not suddenly interject this action into the middle of a session nor change from cans to footplates mid session due to TA going high. (BTB 11 Aug 72RA)

FALSE III, an OT who gaily went up the grades without doing them. You don’t have to know more about it than that. (HCOB 24 May 69)

FALSE VALENCE, a personality which never existed. (PAB 95)

FAST FLOW, the student attests his theory or practical class when he believes he has covered the materials and can do it. There is no examination. (LRH ED 2 INT)

FAST FLOW STUDENT, the fast flow student passes courses by an attestation at Certs and Awards that he (a) enrolled properly on the course, (b) has paid for the course (or signed a no-charge invoice for 2l/2 or 5 year contracted staff), (c) has studied and understands all the materials on the checksheet, (d) has done the drills called for by the checksheet, (e) can produce the result required in the course materials. Twin checkouts are suspended. Examinations are not required. (HCO PL 31 Aug 74 II)

FAT FOLDER, a lengthily audited case. (HCOB 6 Oct 70)

F .C ., file clerk. (Hubbard Chart of Human Evaluation)

FC, Freedom Congres6. (HCOB 29 Sept 66)

FC, Founding Church of Scientology. (HCOB 23 Aug 65)

FCCI, Flag Case Completion Intensive. (BTB 22 Oct 72)

F .D ., Fellow of Dianetics. (Scn Jour, Iss. 31-G)

FDN, Foundation. (BPL 5 Nov 72RA)

FEAR, l. a condition of alertness for counter-efforts that threaten survival. (HCL 7, 5203CM06A) 2 . a fast uncontrolled flow. (PDC 8) 3 . the emotion of fear and the dispersal of energy are one and the same thing because the dispersal of energy makes one feel like he wants to run away. (5208CM07C)

FEAR MERCHANTS, see MERCHANTS OF FEAR.

FEELING SHUT-OFF, 1 . a case which manifests no emotion or cannot feel pain when emotion and pain should be present in some incident is suffering from a “feeling” shut-off. (DMSMH, p. 319) 2 . this most likely will be found in the prenatal area. The word “feeling” means both pain and emotion: thus, the phrase “I can’t feel anything,” may be an anesthetic for both. (DMSMN, pp. 319- 320) 3. a “feeling” shut-off can deny all somatics so that the patient does not feel them. If the patient seems insensible to trouble on the track, be sure that he has a feeling shut-off. (DMSMH, p. 326)

FELLOW OF SCIENTOLOGY, this is an honorary award for signal contributions to Scn technology beyond the scope of a new process. The work must be complete and approved. Usually reserved for a Class IV or V auditor. (HCO PL 12 Aug 63, Certs and Awards )

FES, folder error summary. (BTB 3 Nov 72R)

FFD, full flow Dn. (HCOB 4 Apr 71-IR)

FFT, full flow table. (HCOB 4 Apr 71-IR) See DIANETIC FLOW TABLE.

FIELD, l. anything interposing between pc (thetan) and something he wishes to see, whether mest or mock-up. Fields are black, grey, purple, any substance, or invisible. In any field a pc was effect in an incident where he was being kept from going away. As all fields are incidents, and as a pc is the one who mocks up these incidents, all fields can be cleared by attaining knowing cause. (HCOB 1 Feb 58)

FIELD AUDITOR, 1 . anyone who is active in the field, professionally, is classified as “field auditor.” (HCOB 26 Oct 56) 2 . a field auditor professionally processes preclears up to his classification but not power processes or above. He can run study courses. (HCO PL 21 Oct 66 II)

FIFTEEN, n. a designation to denote a finished case, solely for case recording to designate a case advanced to current completion. This was a number system for preclears. A case is noted on record by the act number to which it has been advanced. (HFP Gloss)

FIFTH DYNAMIC, see DYNAMICS.

FIFTH INVADER FORCE, a thetan from the fifth invader force believes himself to be a very strange insect-like creature with unthinkably horrible hands. He believes himself to be occupying such a body, but is in actuality simply a unit capable of producing space, time, energy and matter. (Scn 8-8008, p. 132)

FIFTH STAGE RELEASE, see STAGES OF RELEASE.

FIGURE-FIGURE CASE, Slang. 1 . somebody who will not ever admit to having done something to anybody. The person cannot face any terminal subjectively for fear of having ruined it or for fear of ruining it. (HCOB 3 Sept 59) 2 . a person who is firmly convinced he is a body and therefore is being a body always has to have a reason for or a significance. Hence we get figurefigure-figure. Given a fact there must always be a reason for the fact. (PAB 24)

FILE CLERK, 1 . Dn auditors’ slang for the mechanism of the mind which acts as a data monitor. Auditors could get instant or “flash” answers direct from the file clerk to aid in contacting incidents. (PXL, pp. 207-208) 2. the file clerk is the bank monitor. “He” monitors for both the reactive engram bank and the standard banks. When he is asked for a datum by the auditor or “I,” he will hand out a datum to the auditor via “I.” If we had a big computing machine of the most modern design, it would have a “memory bank” of punched cards or some such thing and it would have to have a selector and feeder device to thrust out the data the machine wants. The brain has one of these—it could not operate without it. This is the bank monitor—the file clerk. (DMSMH, p. 198) 3 . a response mechanism which is instantaneous. One could postulate that the file clerk is a group of attention units with ready access to the reactive mind and to the standard memory banks, and which in common mental operation forwards data through to “I” as memory. (SOS, Bk. 2, p. 162)

FIRE, 1 . v. rocket read. (HCOB 30 Mar 63) 2 . the auditor must be very sure of his rocket read. The correct RI will fire once when the pc says it. (HCOB 13 May 63)

FIREFIGHT, the action of a quarrel between an auditor and a pc is called a firefight. (HCOB 21 Apr 71RB)

FIRST DYNAMIC, see DYNAMICS.

FIRST GOAL CLEAR, one GPM run gives a first goal clear. (HCOB 9 Jul 63)

FIRST GPM, 1. the latest GPM on the track. (SH Spec 251, 6303C21) 2 . meaning the first one contacted by the auditor, always, not the earliest one on the track. (HCOB 30 Mar 63)

FIRST OVERT, would be the first overt on a chain of overts. (SH Spec 84, 6612C13)

FIRST PHENOMENON, when a student misses understanding a word, the section right after that word is a blank in his memory. You can always trace back to the word just before the blank, get it understood and find miraculously that the former blank area is not now blank in the bulletin. The above is pure magic. (HCO PL 24 Sept 64)

FIRST POSTULATE, not know. (PAB 66)

FIRST (lST) STAGE RELEASED OT, if a being is a 1st, 2nd, or 3rd stage release and has also become exterior to his body in the process, we simply add “OT” to the state of release. This is all that is meant when a person is called a First Stage Released OT. The person has not only come out of his bank but also out of his body. (HCOB 12 Jul 65) See also STAGES OF RELEASE.

FIRST VALENCE, the preclear’s “own valence,” which is his own concept of himself. (PAB 95)

FISH AND FUMBLE, cleaning a dirty needle. (HCOB 14 Jun 62)

FISHING A COGNITION, this is general ARC, answering the preclear’s origin process. When the preclear experiences a somatic, when he sighs, when he gives a reaction to a tone 40 process, the auditor repeats the process two or three more times (random number) and then pausing the process asks the preclear, “How are you doing now?” or “What is going on?” and finds out what happened to the preclear just as though the auditor has not noticed that the preclear had a reaction. The auditor does not point out the reaction but merely wants a discussion in general. During this discussion he brings the preclear up to at least a cognition that the preclear has had a somatic or a reaction and then merely continues the process without further bridge. This is done randomly. It is not always done every time the preclear experiences a reaction. (HCOB 11 Jun 57 Reissued 12 May 72)

5000 OHMS, the exact value for tone arm position 2 on the E-meter. Ohms is the term used for the unit used in measuring electrical resistance on a line. (EMD, p. 16A)

FIXED ATTENTION UNITS, attention units which are caught somewhere down the time track in one incident or another in the form of entheta. (HCOB 11 May 65)

FIXED IDEA, is something accepted without personal inspection or agreement. (HCO PL 19 May 70)

FIXED THETA, entheta. (SOS, Bk. 2, p. 10)

FLAG, the Church of Scn of California operates a marine mission aboard a chartered vessel. This marine mission is commonly referred to as Flag. It is operated under the aegis (protection, support) of the Church of Scientology of California (BPL 9 Mar 74)

FLASH ANSWER, 1 . the first flash response, the first impression a person receives in answer to a question. (SOS, Bk. 2, p. 51) 2 . instantaneous reply, the first thing that flashes into the preclear’s mind at the snap of the auditor’s fingers. (SOS, p. 104)

FLAT, meaning that the incident when “flat” has been discharged of all bad consequences to the preclear. (HYLBTL? Gloss)

FLAT BALL BEARING, Slang. 1 . a defective product; a nonoperational person or thing. (PRD Gloss) 2 . cases that don’t roll on the assembly line of the HGC. Qual is wholly in the flat ball bearing business. The HGC and Academy are wholly in the assembly line business, dealing in fairly round ball bearings. (HCOB 6 Aug 65)

FLAT BY TA, the test of “flat” is the TA moving only one-quarter to one-eighth of a division up or down in twenty minutes of auditing; not cumulative movement such as “the TA moves 1/16th twice so that’s 1/8th of a division—” This is wrong. If it moves from 2 .25 to 2 .50 to 2 .25 two or three times in twenty minutes, this is called flat and has moved only one-quarter of a TA division. This is right. (HCOB 23 May 61)

FLAT COMM LAG, 1 . the point at which the auditing question or command is no longer producing change of communication lag. (PXL, p. 45) 2. a comm lag is flat when it is consistent. A person may have an habitual lag of ten seconds. He may say everything after a ten-second pause. (Abil SW)

FLAT METER, a cadmium cell meter discharges very suddenly when it does go flat. In mid session the meter can run out of battery. If the needle doesn’t snap to the right hard or if it doesn’t quite get there on test, then that meter will go flat in mid session and give false TA and no reads or TA on hot subjects. (HCOB 24 Oct 71)

FLAT POINT (CCHs), three cycles with no change in comm lag, no physically observed change, and the pc doing it. (BTB 12 Sept 63R)

FLAT PROCESS, 1. a process is continued as long as it produces change and no longer, at which time the process is flat. (PXL p. 45) 2. a process is flat when 1) there is the same lag from the moment the command is given until the time the preclear answers the command at least three times in a row, 2) a cognition occurs, 3) the tone arm action is flat, 4) a major cognition occurs, 5) an ability regained. (SH Spec 290, 6307C25) 3 . a question is flat when the communication lag has been similar for three successive questions. Now, that’s a flat question. The comm lag might be five seconds, five seconds, and five seconds. We would still say with some justice that the question lag was flat. However, the process lag would not be flat until the actual normal exchange lag was present. The question would no longer influence the communication factors of the preclear when the process was flat. (Abil SW)

FLAT QUESTION, see FLAT PROCESS.

FLATTEN A PROCESS, 1 . to continue a process as long as it produces change and no longer. (Scn AD) 2. nattening something means to do it until it no longer produces a reaction. (HCOB 2 Jun 71 I) See also END PHENOMENA.

FLIP-FLOPPING, a process by which the preclear’s excess motion was taken off. We would say, “Mock up a man and make him nip-nop,” and then make him insist that the body nip-nop even further and even more wildly until he himself knew that he was making the body flip-flop. We would do this with a woman’s body and would eventually take the motion off the case that was inhibiting the preclear from controlling the body. This is actually a motionectomy. (SCP, p. 15)

FLOATER, an engram which has not been restimulated in the individual during the lifetime succeeding it. A floater has not accumulated locks since it has not been restimulated. (DTOT, p. 45)

FLOATING NEEDLE, 1 . the idle uninfluenced movement of the needle on the dial without any patterns or reactions in it. It can be as small as one inch or as large as dial wide. It does not fall or drop to the right of the dial. It moves to the left at the same speed as it moves to the right. It is observed on a Mark V E-meter calibrated with the TA between 2 .0 and 3 .0 with GIs in on the pc. It can occur after a cognition, blowdown of the TA or just moves into floating. The pc may or may not voice the cognition. (HCOB 7 May 69 V) 2 . floating needles, free needles are the same thing. Once you’ve seen one you’ll never make a mistake on one again. For it floats. It ceases to register on the pc’s bank. It just idly floats about or won’t stand up even at low sensitivity. The TA goes to any place between 2 and 3 and the needle floats. (HCOB 2 Aug 65) Abbr. F/N.

FLOATING TA, the pc is so released the needle can’t be gotten onto the dial. The needle is swinging wider than the meter dial both ways from center and appears to lay first on one side and then the other. The TA can’t be moved fast enough to keep the extreme floating needle on the dial. (HCOB 24 Oct 71)

FLOW, 1 . an impulse or direction of energy particles or thought or masses between terminals. (HCOB 3 Feb 69) 2 . the progress of particles or impulses or waves from point A to point B. Flow has the connotation of being somewhat directional. (SH Spec 84, 6612C13) 3 . a progress of energy between two points. The points may have masses. The points are fixed and the fixedness of the points and their opposition produce the phenomena of flows. (HCOB 1 Feb 62) 4 . a change of

position of particles in space. (PDC 30) 5 . any line of flow, whether contracting or lengthening, is called a f l o w . A common manifestation is seen in an electric light wire. (Scn 8-80, p. 43)

F-l, flow one, something happening to self. (HCOB 4 Apr 71-lR)

F-2, flow two, doing something to another. (HCOB 4 Apr 71-lR)

F-3, now three, others doing things to others. (HCOB 4 Apr 71-lR)

F-0, flow zero, self doing something to self. (HCOB 4 Apr 71-lR)

FLUB, Slang. n. 1 . an error. (HCOB 21 Aug 70)—v. 2 . to blunder or make a mess of. (BTB 3 Jul 73 I)

FLUBBED COMMANDS, commands used incorrectly. (HCOB 9 Aug 69)

FLUB CATCH, 1. to notice, intercept and handle after the fact of the motion or action, a blunder or mistake being made. (BTB 3 Jul 73 I) 2 . flub=to blunder or make a mess of. Catch=to intercept the motion or action of. It is a term coined and used to cover that exact action. Flub catch=to notice, intercept and handle after the fact of the motion or action, a blunder or mistake being made. (BTB 3 Jul 73 I)

FLUB CATCH SYSTEM, 1. on Flag, an FES is carefully done so as to detect areas of out tech in the world. This is called the “Flub Catch System.” Auditors and C/Ses so detected are sent to cramming in their areas to smooth out their tech, knowledge, or TRs, all to improve delivery of tech. (HCOB 6 Oct 70) 2 . flub catch means that system which detects, orders and gets corrected out tech. In other words, it catches the flub. (FO 2442R)

FLUNK, v. l. to make a mistake. Fail to apply the materials learned. Opposite of pass. (HCOB 19 Jun 7i III) —n. 1 . in the grading of sessions, a flunk is given when (1) the F/N did not get to examiner and didn’t occur at session end, (2) major errors or flubs occurred like no EP, multiple somatic, unflown ruds, etc. (3) the C/S was not followed or completed, (4) Auditors’ Rights listed errors occurred, (5) no F/N and BIs at examiner. (HCOB 21 Aug 70) 2 . in TRs, if the student falters, comm lags, fumbles a command or fails to get an execution on coach, coach says “flunk” and they start at beginning of command cycle in which error occurred. (HCOB 11 June 57)

FLYING NEEDLE, l . an F/N that is a real F/N and so forth, takes off, it flies. You can see it disconnect from the bank and start to function. So it’s just a colloquialism; ny a needle, float a needle, F/N, that’s all. (Class VIII No. 2) 2 . an earlier definition—a constant rise, constant rapid rise. (SH Spec 181, 6208C07)

F/N, floating needle or free needle. (HCOB 2 Aug 65)

F/NING AUDITOR, an auditor who is auditing well could be said to be F/Ning the whole time. (HCOB 5 Oct 71)

F/NING LIST, meaning the whole list (all items and any added ones) F/N throughout the assessment of the full list with no reads or slows in the F/N as all the items are called. (BTB 27 Jul 71 II)

F/NING STUDENTS, l. students who study well are said to be F/Ning students. (HCOB 5 Oct 71) 2 . one who is tearing along successfully in his studies. (BTB 7 Feb 72RA II)

FOLDER, l. a folded sheet of cardboard which encloses all the session reports and other items. The folder is foolscap size, light card, usually blue or green in

color. (BTB 3 Nov 72R) 2 . a compilation of data—the records kept by an auditor. (Abil 218)

FOLDER ERROR SUMMARY, a summary of auditing errors in a folder and on a pc’s case not corrected at the time the summary is done. (BTB 3 Nov 72R) Abbr. FES.

FOLDER SUMMARY, the folder summary is kept up every session by the auditor and is stapled to the left inside front cover of the folder as a running summary for C/S use. The folder summary is made up of all actions in consecutive date order and showing what was run plus the result at end of process, session time, admin time and exam result—F/N, VGIs or BER. (BTB 5 Nov 72R III) Abbr. F/S.

FOOTPLATES, metal footplates connected to the meter and the pc barefooted in session to handle false TA. (HCOB 24 Oct 71)

FORCE, l. random effort. (Scn 0-8, p. 75) 2 . energy with some direction. (PDC 56) 3 . force of course is made up of time, matter, energy, flows, particles, masses, solids, liquids, gasses, space and locations. (HCOB 16 Jun 70)

FORCE FIELD, actually nothing more or less than wave emanation like you get out of the headlight of a car. You change the wave-length of the headlight of a car and speed it up enough and hit somebody with it, it’ll knock him down. That’s an electronic field. That’s a force screen. (5206CM28A)

FORCE SCREEN, see FORCE FIELD. (5206CM28A)

 

FORGET, l. forget is a harmonic of not know. (SH Spec 14, 6106C14) 2 . an occlusion of observation. (SH Spec 58, 6109C26)

FORGETFULNESS, l. rapidity of change of state, unpredicted. (HCOB 17 Mar 60) 2 . an individual starts to forget when he’s lost too much. He just dramatizes loss, too bad to remember. (HCAP-8, 5411C29)

FORGETTER, l. a forgetter mechanism is “Put it out of my mind,” “If I remembered it I would go mad,” “Can’t remember,” and just plain “I don’t know,” as well as the master of the family of phrases, “Forget it!” All bar information from the analyzer. A whole case, freshly opened, may keep answering everything with one of these denyers. A forgetter, used by an ally, all by itself and with practically no pain or emotion present will submerge data which, in recall, would not be aberrative but which, so buried—by a forgetter—makes things said just before it aberrative and literal. (DMSMH, p. 270) 2 . any engram command which makes the individual believe he can’t remember. (NOTL Gloss)

FORGETTING, the process of not knowing the past. (FOT, p. 85)

FORMAL AUDITING, l. control by ARC. ARC formal auditing is not chatty or yap-yap, but it is itself. It has warmth, humanity, understanding and interest in it. (HCOB 2 Apr 58) 2 . auditing done by use of model session and exact TRs. (LRH Def. Notes)

FORMULA, a method of getting a case started. The numbers are in order of development, not case level. (HCOB 1 Dec 60)

FORMULA H, the effort to reach and withdraw, to grasp, and let go of oneself, of others for themselves, of oneself, for others and others for oneself and others for others: For force, perception and admiration when run resolve the tenacity of engrams. Formula H is called Formula H because the H stands for hope. (PAB 9)

FORMULA 19, F19 (a process name). (BTB 20 Aug 71 II)

FOUNDING SCIENTOLOGIST, if you were with Scn before 1964 you were an old-timer, a Founding Scientologist. (HCO PL 5 Feb 64)

4 0 (as in GF+40), the addition no. 40 items are the original seven resistive cases. (HCOB 10 Jun 71 I)

4 .0 , a 4 .0 on the tone scale is, by definition, one who has had all entheta in his current life converted to theta. (SOS, Bk. 2, p. 120)

FOUR FLOWS, see QUAD FLOWS.

IV RUNDOWN, originally developed to catch cases that had somehow gotten up to OT III and were falling on their heads. It is a collection of actions. [See the referenced HCOB for full explanation and use of this rundown.] (HCOB 30 Jun 70R)

FOURTH DYNAMIC, see DYNAMICS.

FOURTH DYNAMIC ENGRAM, l. the basic aberration of the planet. (LRH Def. Notes) 2 . the humanitarian objective is to make a safe environment in which the fourth dynamic engram can be audited out. By engram we mean the mental block that prevents peace and tolerance. By fourth dynamic we mean that impulse to survive as mankind instead of just individuals. (Ron’s Jour 68)

FOURTH FLOW, flow 0. (HCOB 7 Mar 71)

FOURTH POSTULATE, remember. (PAB 66)

FOURTH STAGE RELEASE, to obtain Fourth Stage Release one has to take the lock end words off the R6 bank. (HCOB 5 Aug 65)

FOUR UNIVERSES, the four are: thetan or spirit, mind or brain, body or male body or female body, and physical universe or earth or continent or town or house or dwelling. (HCOB 29 Sept 59)

FRAGILE TA, l. TA susceptible to being stuck high or stuck low or stuck dead thetan. (SH Spec 302A, 6309C03) 2 . just one wrong date or duration in R3R or just one wrong RI in R3N and tone arm action ceases, the TA going way up or down and staying there. (HCOB 28 Jul 63)

FRANCHISE, now termed mission; a group granted the privilege of delivering elementary Scn and Dn services. Does not have church status or rights. (B’rB 12 Apr 72R)

FRANCHISE HOLDER, a professional auditor with a classification to Level III or over who practices Scientology full or part time for remuneration, who conducts processing and training privately or to groups, whose understanding and experience of Dn and Scn is sufficiently broad for him to be publicized to others as a stable terminal, who has signed a franchise agreement, who receives bulletins, policy letters, advice, advertising, technical information, services and administrative data and who in return for same maintains regularly a weekly report and a weekly tithe to the church. (HCO PL 2 Jan 65)

FREEDOM, l. ability to create and position energy or matter in time and space. (Scn 8-8008 Gloss) 2 . the absence of barriers. (Dn 55!, p. 55) 3 . Iots of space, and ability to use it. (PDC 35) 4 . the component parts of freedom, as we first gaze upon it, are then: affinity, reality, and communicaton, which summate into understanding. Once understanding is attained freedom is obtained. (Abil Mag 258)

FREEDOM RELEASE, expanded Grade III release. (CG&AC) See GRADE IV RELEASE.

FREE NEEDLE, see FLOATING NEEDLE.

FREE NEEDLE-ITIS, Slang. the auditor who is so unsure of what a floating needle is and whose TRs and basics are out, calls floating needles all over the place on the pc, when the needle is in fact not floating is said to have free needle-itis. It means, properly, an inflammatory disease. It is used to indicate “obsession with” or a mental obsession. In this case, it would mean an auditor who is obsessed with calling free needles (floating needles) on the E-meter when they don’t exist. (LRH Def. Notes)

FREE THETA, attention units free enough to be directed of your own volition. (Scn Jour 18-G)

FREE THETAN, was somebody who was free of a body. He wasn’t free of organizational commitments or ethics but he was free of a body, he didn’t require any body. (SH Spec 268, 6305C23)

FREE TRACK, that part of the time track that is free of pain and misadventure is simply called the free track, in that the pc doesn’t freeze up on it. (HCOB 15 May 63)

FREEZE, stand completely still. (LRH Def. Notes)

FREEZES, in CCHs freezes may be introduced at end of cycle, this being after the “Thank you” and before the next command, maintaining a solid comm line, to

ascertain information from the coach or to bridge from the process. (HCOB 5 Jul 63)

F/S, folder summary. (BTB 23 Sept 71)

F . SCN, Fellow of Scientology. F . Scn is not an auditing degree. It is an honorary award extended by the HASI for spectacular contribution to the science itself. The F. Sen award carries with it the specific addition to the science for which the rating was awarded. An F. Sen is not necessarily a skilled or degreed auditor. (Scn Jour, Iss 31-G)

FULL FLOW DIANETICS, all former Dianetic items ever run are listed and what flows have been run on them and to what end phenomena. Such a list is then handled from the earliest forward by A) completing the bogged flow and B) completing the missing flow if it reads. (HCOB 7 Mar 71)

FULL RESPONSIBILITY, the willingness to mock or unmock barriers at will. (2ACC-4B, 5311CM18)

FUTURE, on the time track, that area later than present time. Perception of the future is postulated as a possibility. The creation of future realities through imagination is a recognized function. (SOS Gloss)

g

GAEs, gross auditing errors. (HCOB 21 Sept 65)

GAINS, see ABILITY GAIN, INTELLIGENCE GAIN and CASE GAIN .

GALACTIC CONFEDERACY, the former political unit of which the solar system was a part. (LRH Def. Notes)

GAME, 1 . any state of beingness wherein exist awareness, problems, havingness and freedom (separateness) each in some degree. (PAB 73) 2 . a contest of person against person, or team against team. (PAB 84) 3. all games are continuing by definition, since an unstarted game isn’t a game and a finished game isn’t a game. (PAB 101) 4. a game consists of freedoms, barriers, and purposes. (POW, p. 60)

GAME CONDITIONS, game conditions are: attention, identity, effect on opponents, no-effect on self, can’t have on opponents and goals and their areas, have on tools of play, own goals and field, purpose, problems of play, self-determinism, opponents, the possibility of loss, the possibility of winning, communication, non-arrival. (FOT, pp. 93-94)

GAMES CONDITION, 1 . when you say games condition you mean that somebody’s power of choice has been subjugated against his will into a fixated activity from which he must not take his attention. (SH Spec 32, 6107C20) 2 . the word games condition is a derogatory actually. There is a technical thing goes along. When you say games condition you mean a package, and the package has to do with this: It means a fixated attention, an inability to escape coupled with an inability to attack, to the exclusion of other games. There is nothing wrong with having games. There is a lot wrong with being in a games condition because it is unknown, it is an aberrated activity, it is reactive, and one is performing it way outside of his power of choice and without his consent or will. (SH Spec 32, 6107C20) 3 . have for self and can’t have for others; now that is a true games condition. (SH Spec 32, 6107C20) Abbr. G.C.

GAMES CONDITION PROCESS, when you say games condition process you mean that it is an interchangeable negative bracket. In other words, it’s interchanged between Person A and Person B, or Person B and Person C, and Person C and Person D. It is basically a denial of interchange. (SH Spec 32, 6107C20)

GARBAGE, Slang. 1 . the term garbage isn’t used much more but it meant dub-in. (5009CM23B) 2. garbage was technically called delusion in the philosophic work of Dn but the term is too harsh and critical, for who has not some misconception of a past incident? (DMSMH, p. 191)

G.C., games condition. (HCOB 20 Aug 56)

GE, genetic entity. (PDC 43)

GENERALITY, 1 . a general or nonspecific statement which is applicable to all and used in Scn to connotate a statement made in an effort to either hide cause or to overwhelm another person with the all-inclusive. (HCOB 11 May 65) 2 . any unspecifity or unspecific statement or indication tends toward a generality. It is the substitute of a plural for a singular. (SH Spec 84, 6612C13) 3 . multiple subject, not specific, such as “dogs” or “the public.” (BCR, p. A-4)

GENERAL O/W (OVERT-WITHHOLD), “What have you done?” “What have you withheld?” (HCOB 3 Jul 62)

GENERAL TRs, are for use in regular auditing. They are natural, relaxed, while fully controlling the session and the pc. (BTB 13 Mar 75)

GENETIC, by line of protoplasm and by facsimiles and by mest forms the individual has arrived in the present age from a past beginning. Genetic applies to the protoplasm line of father and mother to child, grown child to new child and so forth. (HFP Gloss)

GENETIC BEING, see GENETIC ENTITY.

GENETIC BLUEPRINT, 1. the facsimiles of the evolutionary line. (HFP, p. 28) 2 . the plans of construction of a new body in the orthodox manner of conception, birth, and growth. (HFP, p. 76)

GENETIC ENTITY, 1. that beingness not dissimilar to the thetan which has carried forward and developed the body from its earliest moments along the evolutionary line on earth and which, through experience, necessity and natural selection, hasemployed the counter-efforts of the environment to fashion an organism of the type best fitted for survival, limited only by the abilities of the genetic entity. The goal of the genetic entity is survival on a much grosser plane of materiality. (Scn 8-8008, p. 8) 2 . formerly referred to as the somatic mind. It has no real personality, it is not the “I” of the body. This is the “mind” of an animal, a dog or a cat or a cow. (HOM, pp. 13-14) 3. that entity which is carrying along through time, that is making the body through the time stream, through the action of sex and so forth. (5410ClOD) Abbr. GE.

GENETIC INSANITY, genetic insanity is limited to the case of actually missing parts. A very small percentage of insanity falls into such a category and its manifestation is mental dullness or failure to coordinate and beyond these has no aberrative quality whatever. (DMSMH, p. 134)

GENETIC LINE, 1. the genetic line consists of the total of incidents which have occurred during the evolution of the mest body itself. The composite of these facsimiles has the semblance of a being. This being would be called the genetic entity or the GE. The GE is not an actual individual but a composite, of individualities assumed in the single lives along the evolutionary track. (HOM, p. 23) 2 . protoplasm line. Its cycle is preconception, conception, birth, procreation, preconception and so on. That unending string of protoplasm goes through earth time. (HCL 15, 5203CMlOA) 3 . a series of mocked up automaticities which produce according to a certain blueprint from the earliest times of life on this planet through until now. (PAB 130)

GENETIC PERSONALITY, personal characteristics and tendencies derived from the three inheritance sources (mest, organic line, theta). This might be said to be basic personality, or the core of basic personality. (SOS Gloss)

GEN NON-REMIMEO, [designation on HCO Policy Letters and HCO Bulletins indicates dissemination and restriction as follows:] All Saint Hill Staff, eight duplicated copies only are sent to each organization. (HCO PL 25 Jan 66)

GEOGRAPHICAL ANTIPATHIES, pain and unconsciousness have taken place at some point on the globe, some city, some ocean, some altitude, some depth. Afterwards, he avoids such a point. (PAB 9)

GF, green form. (HCOB 6 Mar 71 I)

GF40RB, expanded green form forty revised. See GF40XRR.

GF40XRR, (green form forty expanded, revised, revised), a correction list used to handle resistive cases (TA in normal range but not responding well to auditing). Assess M3 with all reading items taken to F/N per instructions, then handled in depth with L&N and R3R processes. Normally done only once if done properly. EP is all reading items handled, pc no longer resistive and making good progress in auditing. Note that a pc can be made to appear resistive by poor basic auditing and failure to use the right correction list when needed. (BTB 11 Aug

72R) 2 . this correction list was further revised in December 1974 and renumbered as Expanded GF40RB (HCOB 30 Jun 71R)

GF MS, goals finder model session. (HCO PL 8 Dec 62)

GIs, good indicators. (HCOB 9 May 69 II)

GITA, give and take processing. Expanded Gita was developed from phenomena discovered after I developed creative processing. It was originally plain GIve and TAke processing, hence the Gita. (PAB 16)

GLEE, a kind of insanity. Glee is a special kind of embarrassed giggling. You’ll know it when you see it. When you see glee on some fellow on a post, realize it’s because he doesn’t understand what he’s doing. He’s ignorant about something and above that is confusion and above the confusion is glee. (HCOB 20 Sept 68)

GLEE OF INSANITY, 1. a specialized case of irresponsibility. A thetan who cannot be killed and yet can be punished has only one answer to those punishing him and that is to demonstrate to them that he is no longer capable of force or action and is no longer responsible. He therefore states that he is insane and demonstrates that he cannot possibly harm them as he lacks any further rationality. This is the root and basis of insanity. (Scn 8-8008, p. 55) 2 . also called the “glee of irresponsibility.” Manifestation which takes the form of an actual wave emanation resulting basically from the individual dramatizing the condition of “must reach—can’t reach, must withdraw—can’t withdraw.” (PXL Gloss)

GLIBIDITY, Slang. a condition in which a person gives very glib answers. (SH Spec 41, 6409C29)

GLIB STUDENT, one who can confront the words and ideas. He cannot confront the physical universe or people around him and so cannot apply. He does not see mest or people. The reason for this is that he is below nonexistence on one or more dynamics and so cannot align with the others. (HCOB 26 Apr 72)

GLUM AREA, that area which when the pc is supposedly “itsaing” about it, makes him glum and the TA rise, indicating that a service facsimile is doing the confronting on that area and not the pc. (HCOB 16 Oct 63)

GMTH, CCH-l is known as “Give me that hand.” (PAB 133)

GOAL, 1 . the prime postulate. It is the prime intention. It is a basic purpose for any cycle of lives the pc has lived. (SH Spec 160, 6206C12) 2 . a solution to the problems which have been given the person usually by terminals. (SH Spec 5, 6106C01) 3 . the signficance which surrounds the terminal. (SH Spec 5, 6106C01) 4 . a whole track long-term matter. (HCO PL 6 Dec 70)

GOAL OF DIANETICS, a world without insanity, without criminals and without war—this is the goal of Dn. (SOS, p. v)

GOAL OF LIFE, the goal of life can be considered to be infinite survival. Man, as a life form, can be demonstrated to obey in all his actions and purposes the one command: “SURVIVE!” (DMSMH, p. 19)

GOAL OF PROCESSING, to bring an individual into such thorough communication with the physical universe that he can regain the power and ability of his own postulates. (COHA, p. xi)

GOAL SERIES, the actual goals in their sequence and pattern that repeats over and over forward through time. (HCOB 13 Apr 64, Scn VI Part One Glossary of Terms)

 

GOALS FINDER, 1 . a person in an organization who has no other post or activity of any kind. He is simply Goals Finder and keeps more or less regular auditing hours. The Goals Finder finds goals of staff members when they are ready. (HCO PL 10 Sept 62) 2 . the title Goals Finder is changed herewith to “A Clearing Consultant.” (HCO PL 11 Apr 63) [The above are quoted from HCO PLs of the referenced date, however, the post of Goals Finder does not exist as such in today’s Church of Scientology.]

GOALS FINDER MODEL SESSION, where the pc has been well prepchecked and is well under auditor control, a goal finder in an R-3GA session may omit rudiments in model session, using only goals for session, and havingness, goals and gains at end and general O/W mid ruds and random ruds where needed in the session. (HCOB 15 Oct 62)

GOALS LIST, a full list of goals including childhood goals, withheld goals, antisocial goals, and (by meter reaction on question) “Any goal you have not told me about.” Auditor gets every possible g o a l until the meter is null on the question of goals the pc might have. (HCOB 6 Apr 61)

GOALS PLOT, the pattern of the pc’s actual goals. (HCOB 13 Apr 64, Scn VI Part One Glossary of Terms)

GOALS PROBLEM MASS, 1 . the goal has been balked for eons by opposing forces. The goal pointed one way, the opposing forces point exactly opposite and against it. If you took two fire hoses and pointed them at each other, their streams would not reach each other’s nozzles, but would splatter against one another in midair. If this splatter were to hang there, it would be a ball of messed up water. Call hose A the force the pc has used to execute his goal. Call hose B the force other dynamics have used to oppose that goal. Where these two forces have perpetually met, a mental mass is created. This is the picture of any problem—force opposing force with resultant mass. Where the pc’s goal meets constant opposition, you have in the reactive mind the resultant mass caused by the two forces— Goal=force of getting it done, Opposition=force opposing it getting done. This is the goal problem mass. (HCOB 20 Nov 61) 2 . is fundamentally founded on a goal. They’re a conglomeration of identities which are counter-opposed, and these identities are hung up on the postulate-counter- postulate of a problem. (SH Spec 243, 6302C26) 3 . constituted of items, beingnesses, that the person has been and has fought. (SH Spec 137, 6204C24) 4 . the problem created by two or more opposing ideas which being opposed, balanced, and unresolved, make a mass. It’s a mental energy mass. (SH Spec 83, 6612C06) 5 . items (valences) in opposition to one another. Any pair of these items, in opposition to each other, constitute a specific problem. (HCOB 23 Nov 62)

GOALS TERMINAL, something that epitomizes both the goal and the resistive modifier. (SH Spec 76, 6111C07)

GOES THROUGH 7, around the whole TA dial and back up. (HCOB 20 Aug 63)

GO IN, to go in; the act of the verb interiorizing. (HCOB 4 Jan 71 II)

GOING UP THE POLE, Slang. that’s when somebody doesn’t even begin to handle energy, but he just suddenly somehow or other latches onto about 40.0 and goes out the top and still holds onto the mest body on the bottom and he’s done the incredible thing of making a circle out of all this. He’s joined 0.0 up against 40.0 and to listen to the guy and to talk to the guy you couldn’t really tell whether he’s ecstatically alive or fatally dead. (PDC 27)

GOOD AUDITOR, one who knows Scn and its techniques and who audits with all basics in. (Aud 1 UK)

GOOD AUTOMATICITY, that which raised the self-determinism of others and let them more and more on a rising scale, think, act and provide for themselves. (PDC 21)

GOOD CASE CONDITION, attained the level of case for which the church is classified and now in training during staff study time for admin or tech certification. (HCO PL 21 Oct 73R)

GOOD CONDUCT, to do only those things which others can experience. (HCOB 1 Mar 59)

GOOD/EVIL, for the purpose of Dn and Scn good and evil must be defined. Those things which may be classified as good by an individual are only those things which aid himself, his family, his group, his race, mankind or life in its dynamic obedience to the command, modified by the observations of the individual, his family, his group, his race, or life. As e v i l , may be classified those things which tend to limit the dynamic thrust of the individual, his family, his group, his race, or life in general in the dynamic drive, also limited by the observation, the observer and his ability to observe. Good may be defined as constructive. Evil may be defined as destructive—definitions modified by viewpoint. (DTOT, p. 21)

GOOD INDICATORS, 1 . what you are treating is getting better, by which we mean, less present; betterness to us is less present, his bad ankle is getting better. We mean the badness of the ankle is less present so that’s a good indicator. How much less present, is the degree of the goodness of the indicator. (SH Spec 3, 6401C09) 2 . those indicators of a person (or group) indicating that the person is doing well, e.g. fast progress, high production statistics, person happy, winning, cogniting, are said to be good indicators. (BTB 12 Apr 72R) Abbr. GIs.

GOOD PHYSICAL CONDITION, not suffering from physical illness, not PTS, not currently physically damaged by accident. (HCO PL 21 Oct 73R)

GOVERNOR, mentioned in a lecture in the autumn of 1951 . The speed of a preclear is the speed of his production of energy. The most important step in establishing a preclear’s self-determinism, the goal of the auditor, is the rehabilitation of the preclear’s ability to produce energy. (Scn 8-80, p. 33)

G PLUS M, goal plus modifier. (SH Spec 90, 6112C07)

GPM, goals problem mass. (HCOB 23 Aug 65)

GRAD, Graduate. (BPL 5 Nov 72RA)

GRADATION, it means there are grades, as to a road, or steps which are a gradual grade up. (Aud 107 ASHO)

GRADATION CHART, see CLASSIFICATION GRADATION AND AWARENESS CHART.

GRADE, 1 . the word used to describe the attainment of level achieved by a preclear. Grade is the personal points of progress on the bridge. A preclear is Grade 0, I, II, III, IV, V, VA or VI depending on the technology successfully applied. (Aud 72 UK) 2 . a series of processes culminating in an exact ability attained, examined and attested to by the pc. (HCOB 23 Aug 71) 3. grade and level are the same but when one has a grade one is a pc and when one has a level one is studying its data. (HCOB 2 Apr 65)

GRADE 0, Communications Release. Ability to communicate freely with anyone on any subject. (CG&AC75)

GRADE I, Problems Release. Ability to recognize the source of problems and make them vanish. (CG&AC75)

GRADE II, Relief Release. Relief from hostilities and the sufferings of life. (CG&AC75)

GRADE III, Freedom Release. Freedom from the upsets of the past and ability to face the future. (CG&AC75)

GRADE IV, Ability Release. Moving out of fixed conditions and gaining abilities to do new things. (CG&AC75)

GRADE V, Power Release. Ability to handle power. (CG&AC75)

GRADE VA, Power Plus Release. Recovery of knowledge. (CG&AC75)

GRADE VI, Whole Track Release. Return of powers to act on own determinism. (CG&AC75)

GRADE VII, Clear. Ability to be at cause over mental matter, energy, space, and time on the first dynamic (survival for self). (CG&AC75)

GRADIENT, 1 . a gradual approach to something, taken step by step, level by level, each step or level being, of itself, easily surmountable—so that, finally, quite complicated and difficult activities or high states of being can be achieved with relative ease. This principle is applied to both Scn processing and training. (Scn AD) 2 . a steepening or an increasing from the slight to the heavy. (HCOB 3 Apr 66) 3 . the essence of a gradient is just being able to do a little bit more and a little bit more and a little bit more until you finally make the grade. (Scn 0-8, p. 15)

GRADIENT SCALE, 1 . the term can apply to anything, and means a scale of condition graduated from zero to infinity. Absolutes are considered to be unobtainable. (Scn 8-8008, p. 104) 2 . the tool of infinity-valued logic. It is a tenet of Dn and Scn that absolutes are unattainable. Terms like good and bad, alive and dead, right and wrong are used only in conjunction with gradient scales. On the scale of right and wrong, everything above zero or center would be more and more right, approaching an infinite rightness, and everything below zero or center would be more and more wrong, approaching an infinite wrongness. The gradient scale is a way of thinking about the universe which approximates the actual conditions of the universe more closely than any other existing logical method. (SOS Gloss)

GRADIENTS OF CASES, the degree to which the person is overwhelmed by the bank. (SH Spec 46, 6108C29)

GRAND TOUR, 1 . the process R1-9 in The Creation of Human Ability. (PXL Gloss) 2. Grand Tour is the Route 1 or exteriorized version of Spotting Spots. The allditor asks the preclear to be in a spot of a certain description, such as his home town, asks him to be in the auditing room, asks him to be in his home town, asks him to be in the auditing room. (PAB 51) 3 . a very simple process. What you do is run change of space with enough interesting locales in it, to show the pc that he can choose around a great deal of universe and look at a great many things. (5410CM10C) 4 . a process used on an exteriorized thetan to free him from the craving for mass and to bring into present time a greater portion of the mest universe. (COHA Gloss)

GRANT BEINGNESS, the ability to assume or grant (give, allow) beingness is probably the highest of human virtues. It is even more important to be able to permit (allow) other people to have beingness than to be able oneself to assume it. (FOT, p. 27)

GREASING THE TRACK, merely by running the preclear through various parts of his life, up and down the track, the auditor may relieve enough anaten and misemotion from the case to permit somatics to occur. This was once upon a time known as “greasing the track.” However one should not run a preclear into a somatic unless one intends to reduce it or to discover the basic on the chain and reduce that. (SOS, p. 84)

GREASY ON THE TRACK, Slang. attention of the pc hard to control. (SH Spec 302A, 6309C03)

GREEN FORM, 1 . used for general case cleanup particularly on an out-rud type pc or when ruds won’t fly. It is not used to handle high or low TA. Assessed M5 to provide data for the C/S then each read handled in accordance with C/S Series 44R. EP is each read handled to its EP. May be reassessed after handling all reading items if heavily charged on first assessment. Can also be done M3 to a good win and F/N VGIs. (BTB 11 Aug 72RA) 2 . in HGC the Green Form is done on the order of the case supervisor to detect reasons for case trouble; prepared list. (HCO PL 7 Apr 70RA) Abbr. GF.

GREEN SHEET, an Expanded Dianetics program is written on a green sheet. (BTB 6 Nov 72R II)

GR ENG INT, group engram intensive. (HCOB 5 May 70)

GRIEF, 1 . a ridge and is occasioned by loss. (Scn 8-8008, p. 21) 2 . 0.5 on the tone scale. (SOS, p. 57) 3 . Grief takes place where one recognizes his loss and failure as in the death of somebody he loved and tried to help. (HFP, p. 85)

GRIEF CHARGE, an outburst of tears that may continue for a considerable time, in a session, after which the preclear feels greatly relieved. This is occasioned by the discharge of grief or painful emotion from a secondary. (Scn AD)

GRINDING, 1. charge is held in place by the basic on a chain. When only later than basic incidents are run charge can be restimulated and then bottled up again with a very small amount blown. This is known as “grinding out” an incident. An engram is getting run, but as it is not basic on a chain, no adequate amount of charge is being relieved. (HCOB 8 Jun 63) 2 . going over and over and over and over a lock, secondary or engram without obtaining an actual erasure. The Dn auditor who puts the pc through an incident four or five times without erasure or appreciable reduction is encountering “grinding.” (HCOB 1 May 69) 3 . a level below ARC breaking. A pc who just sits there and grinds is very often not up to getting ARC broken. (SH Spec 66, 6110C12)

GROOVE IN THE QUESTION, there are a variety of ways to do this, e.g., ask what the question means, what period or time the question covers, what activities would be included, where the pc has been that might be something to do with the question. If any other people are likely to be involved. In other words, you are steering the pc’s attention to various parts of his bank and getting him to have a preliminary look. When this has been done using very good TR-1, you give him the question again. (BTB 18 Dec 72)

GROSS AUDITING ERRORS, the five gross auditing errors are: (1) can’t handle and read an E-meter; (2) doesn’t know and can’t apply technical data; (3) can’t get and keep a pc in session; (4) can’t complete an auditing cycle; (5) can’t complete a repetitive auditing cycle (including repeating a command long enough to flatten a process). (HCOB 21 Sept 65) Abbr. GAEs.

GROUP ANALYTICAL MIND, the true analytical mind of the group is the composite of the analytical minds of the members of the group as guided by the rationale and ethics which initially founded the group or which it has developed into a culture. (NOTL, p. 137)

GROUP AUDITOR, 1 . one who stands in front of, sits in front of, or relays by loudspeaker system to a group (and a group consists of two or more people), auditing, so as to improve their condition of beingness as thetans. (PXL, p. 284) 2. a group auditor is one who administers techniques, usually already codified, to groups of children or adults. (GAH, p. i)

GROUP AUDITOR’S HANDBOOK, this was a 1954 compilation of group auditing sessions resulting from the Advanced Clinical Courses of that year. (PXL, p. 288)

GROUP BANK, see GROUP ENGRAM.

GROUPED, meaning everything in the same place. (21ACC-5, 5901C30)

GROUP ENGRAM, 1 . each time instantaneous action is demanded of the group by compressed time situations, and commands are given by the selected individual or individuals to cope with those moments of emergency, it can be observed that an engram has been implanted in the group. The instantaneous orders and commands are indicators of an engram. The engram actually was received during a moment of shock when the ideals, ethics, rationale and general thought and energy of the group collided forcefully with mest. (NOTL, p. 132) 2 . a group is composed of individuals. If they have a group engram, it only has force because of basics on that subject in their banks. Thus, if they are cleaned up on the general subject, the general group engram should blow off and disappear. (HCOB 27 Feb 70)

GROUP ENGRAM INTENSIVE, this is a process run to help a Scientology Church. A group is composed of individuals. If they have a group engram it only has force because of basics on that subject in their banks. Thus, if they are cleaned up on the general subject, the general group engram should blow off and disappear. This is done on every member of the group. Listing, nulling and TRs must be flawless. (HCOB 27 Feb 70)

GROUPER, 1 . species of command which, literally translated, means that all incidents are in one place on the time track: “I’m jammed up,” “Everything happens at once,” “Everything comes in on me at once,” “I’ll get even with you,” etc. (DMSMH, p. 213) 2 . anything which pulls the time track into a bunch at one or more points. When the grouper is gone the time track is perceived to be straight. (HCOB 15 May 63) 3 . is a number of incidents becoming located apparently in one time instant. (SH Spec 56, 6109C20) 4 . action phrase which would tend to bunch all incidents in one place, creates the illusion that the time track is collapsed and that all incidents are at the same point in time. Example: “Pull yourself together,” “It all happens at once.” (SOS, p. 103)

GROUP PROCESSING, techniques, usually already codified, administered to groups of children or adults. The group (preclears) is usually assembled and seated in a quiet room where they will not be disturbed by sudden noises or entrances. The group auditor then takes his position in the front of the group and talks to them briefly about what he is going to do and what he expects them to do. The auditor then begins with his first command. (GAH, p. i)

GROUP REACTIVE MIND, could be considered to lie in the actions of those individuals set up for emergency status during compressed time emergencies, which is to say, the reactive mind is composed of the composite engrams of the group itself. (NOTL, p. 136)

GROUP THETA, the theta of a group would be its ideas, ideals, rationale and ethic. This is an actual force. The culture is an accumulated soul which flows over and through a number of individuals and persists after the death of those individuals via other individuals or even other groups. (DAB, Vol. II, p. 136)

GROUP THINK, the common denominator of the group is the reactive bank. Thetans without banks have different responses. They only have their banks in common. They agree then only on bank principles. Person to person the bank is identical. So constructive ideas are individual and seldom get broad agreement in a human group. (HCO PL 7 Feb 65)

GUARD OF THE LEFT, you’ve got suppress, you’ve got careful of, and you’ve got fail to reveal. These buttons: suppress, careful of and fail to reveal produce sensation. When the goal doesn’t fire it’s in the left-hand column. (SH Spec 195, 6209C27)

GUARD OF THE RIGHT, invalidate, suggest and mistake. These buttons produce pain. The goal fires falsely on the buttons on the right. (SH Spec 195, 6209C27)

GUIDING SECONDARY STYLE, 1 . steer plus itsa. You guide the guy into talking about something and get a tone arm blowdown and then you make him talk about it. You get the tone arm action out of it, and then while he’s talking about it he mentions several new things that give him tone arm action so you note those things down and you come back afterwards and talk about those things. (SH Spec 47, 6411C17) 2 . differs from proper guiding style and is done by: (1) steering the pc toward revealing something or something revealed; (2) handling it with itsa. (HCOB 21 Feb 66)

GUIDING STYLE AUDITING (LEVEL TWO STYLE), the essentials of Guiding Style Auditing consist of two-way comm that steers the pc into revealing a difficulty followed by a repetitive process to handle what has been revealed. (HCOB 6 Nov 64)

GUILT COMPLEX, before you felt sympathy, you offended in some way. You did something. Then you were sorry for it. The offense may have taken place years or only minutes before your sympathy came about. This is the emotional curve of sympathy. It goes from antagonism or anger down to sympathy. This used to be called a “guilt complex.” (HFP, pp. 125-126)

GUK BOMB, I have found that 600 milligrams of Vitamin E (minimum) assists Scn processing very markedly. It works by itself but is best taken with an old time “Guk Bomb.” The formula of the bomb is variable but is basically 100 mg. of Vitamin B1, 15 gr. of calcium and 500 mg. of Vitamin C. (HCOB 27 Dec 65)

h

HAA, 1. Hubbard Advanced Auditor: a Class IV auditor. This level teaches about service facsimiles and ability. Processes taught include certainty processing and overt justification processes. (CG&AC 75) 2 . an alternate name for HAA in 1956 was B Scn or Bachelor of Scn abroad. (HCOTB 12 Sept 56) [The term HAA is today used as in def. 1 above.]

HABIT, 1 . that stimulus-response reaction dictated by the reactive mind from the content of engrams and put into effect by the somatic mind. It can be changed only by those things which change engrams. (DMSMH, p. 39) 2 . simply something one cannot stop. Here we have an example of no control whatever. (PO W, p.46)

HABIT RELEASE, Grade IV Release. (HCOB 22 Sept 65) [The current name for Grade IV Release is Ability Release.] See GRADE IV.

HALF-ACKNOWLEDGEMENT, 1. a continue, an encouragement. (SH Spec 53, 6503C02) 2 . sometimes a pc gets scared or lonesome and you have to give him an uh-huh to encourage him. (SH Spec 70, 6607C21)

HALLUCINATIONS, 1. imagined realities with which nobody else agrees. (HFP, p. 41) 2 . we call a mental image picture an “hallucination” or more properly an automaticity (something uncontrolled) when it is created by another and seen by self. (FOT, p. 57) 3 . things seen that aren’t there. (7203C30SO) 4 . a person imagining and not knowing he was imagining would be a person who was hallucinating. (5203CM04B)

HALLUCINATORY CAUSE, the thetan considers that he is actually being more cause (going down the sub-zero scale). This is the exact reverse of the reality of the situation. He is becoming more and more effect. (BTB 6 Feb 60)

HANDLE, finish off, complete, end cycle on. Service and handling are the same thing. When you give service, you handle. Part of handling cases is handle N-O- W! One way or another, one gets the pc handled. (HCOB 15 Jan 70 II)

HANDLING AN ORIGINATION, handling an origination merely tells the person, “All right, I heard it, you’re there.” You might say it is a form of acknowledgement but it’s not. It is the communication formula in reverse; but the auditor is still in control if he handles the origin. (PAB 151) See TR-4 .

HANG-FIRE, delayed firing. After the trigger is pulled a gun sometimes doesn’t go off. This is called a “hang-fire” or delayed fire if it then goes off late. (LRH Def. Notes)

HANG-UP, stuck (on time track). (HFP, p. 101)

HAPPINESS, is not itself an emotion. It is a word which states a condition, and the anatomy of that condition is interest. Happiness, you could say, is the overcoming of not unknowable obstacles toward a known goal. (8ACC-4, 5410CM06)

HARD WAY TRs, demand for a start, two hours of no twitch, no blink, no eye redness, no unconscious, no wiggle TR Zero. Really real TRs beginning with Zero. Like the bulletin. (LRH ED 143 INT)

HAS, abbreviation for 1. Hubbard Apprentice Scientologist. (HCOB 23 Aug 65) 2 . Hubbard Association of Scientologists. (PAB 75) 3 . HCO Area Secretary. (HCOB 20 Nov 71)

HAS CO-AUDIT, using precise processes developed for this section only, the HAS Co-audit (do-it-yourself processing) seeks to improve cases and further interest people in Scn so that they will take individual HGC processing and individual training. (HCO PL 14 Feb 61) [Students in Scn academies do still co-audit,

however there is not currently a course specifically called the HAS Co-audit. Students are allowed to co-audit any level on which they have trained. There is also a basic course, the HQS, on which students co-audit.]

HAS COURSE, a course in elementary communication and control. Consists of training drills on communication and to put the student at cause over the environment. There are no prerequisites. The graduate is awarded the certificate of Hubbard Apprentice Scientologist. (CG&AC 75)

HASI, Hubbard Association of Scientologists, International. (PAB 74)

HAS SPECIALIST RUNDOWN, the HAS and establishment officers are peculiarly subject to efforts to unstabilize them. The HAS Specialist Rundown consists of processes which increase the ability to hold a position. (HCOB 20 Nov 71)

HASUK, Hubbard Association of Scientologists of the United Kingdom. (PAB 75)

HAT, 1 . slang for the title and work of a post in a Scientology Church. Taken from the fact that in many professions such as railroading the type of hat worn is the badge of the job. (HCO PL 1 Jul 65 III) 2 . term used to describe the write ups, checksheets and packs that outline the purposes, know-how and duties of a post. It exists in folders and packs and is trained in on the person on the post. (HCO PL 22 Sept 70)

HATE, 1. a total ridge. (5904C08) 2 . around 1 .5 on the tone scale affinity has almost reversed itself. Its dissonance has become hate, which can be violent and is so expressed. Here, actually, we have a factor of entheta repelling theta. (SOS, p. 56)

HATS, Hubbard Advanced Technical Specialist. A Class IX auditor. This level teaches advanced procedures and developments since Class VIII. It is available at Saint Hill organizations. (CG&AC 75)

HAV, havingness. (BTB 20 Aug 71 II)

HAVING, to be able to touch or permeate or to direct the disposition of. (PAB 83)

HAVINGNESS, 1. that which permits the experience of mass and pressure. (A&L, p. 8) 2 . the feeling that one owns or possesses. (SH Spec 84, 6612C13) 3 . can be simply defined as ARC with the environment. (SH Spec 294, 6308C14) 4 . that activity which is run when needed and when it will not violently deflect the pc’s attention. (SH Spec 85, 6111C28) 5 . the result of creation. (SH Spec 19, 6106C23) 6 . the ability to duplicate that which one perceives, or create a duplication of what one perceives, or to be willing to create a duplication of it. But it’s duplication. (lSHACC-10, 6009C14) 7 . ability to communicate with an isness. The ability to conceive an is-ness and communicate with it. ( 17ACC-4, 5702C28) 8. havingness is the concept of being able to reach or not being prevented from reaching. (SH Spec 126, 6203C29) 9 . the need to have terminals and things to play for and on. (Dn 55!, p. 137) Abbr. Hav.

HBA, Hubbard Book Auditor. (HCOB 23 Aug 65) See BOOK AUDITOR.

HC, Hubbard Consultant. (HCOB 19 Jun 71 III)

HCA, 1. Hubbard Certified Auditor. A Class II auditor. This level teaches about overt acts and withholds. Among the processes taught are responsibility processes and integrity processes. (CG&AC 75) 2 . an early course taught in Scientology Churches only. The certificate of HCA (or HPA, the British equivalent) was awarded by examination only. (HCOTB 12 Sept 56) [The current usage of HCA is as in def. 1 above.]

 

HCA/HPA, [At one time HCA and HPA were equivalent certificates, HCA being the American designation and HPA, the British. Data on this appears in HCOTB 12 Sept 56 and HCO PL 1 Oct 58 . The current usages of each of these designations are listed separately under each.]

HCA LECT, Hubbard Certified Auditors Course Lectures. (HCOB 29 Sept 66)

HCAP, Hubbard Certified Auditor Course, Phoenix. (HCOB 29 Sept 66)

HCI, Hubbard College of Improvement. (FSO 65) [The name of the Academy on Flag.]

HCL, Hubbard College Lectures. (HCOB 29 Sept 66)

HC LIST, 1. the arbitrary name of the Data Series Correction List. (FO 3179) 2 . it’s called an HC List because there was one time going to be something called a Hubbard Consultant and we’ve still got the l i s t . It’s an out-point/plus-point list and it’s simply assessed and handled. (ESTO 4, 7203C02 SO II)

HCO, Hubbard Communications Office. (BPL 5 Nov 72RA)

HCOB, Hubbard Communications Office Bulletin. (HCOB 4 Sept 71 III)

HCO PL, Hubbard Communications Offlce Policy Letter. (HCO PL 24 Sept 70R)

HCS, Hubbard Clearing Scientologist—formerly Level IV certificate. (HCOB 23 Aug 65)

HDA , Hubbard Dianetic Auditor. (HCOB 23 Aug 65) [An HDA is a graduate of the Dianetic Auditor’s Course, forerunner to the HSDC. A graduate of the HSDC is known as an HDC, which is the current certificate awarded to a Dn auditor.]

HDC, Hubbard Dianetic Counselor. A graduate of the HSDC. (CG& AC 75) See HUBBARD STANDARD DIANETICS COURSE.

HDG, Hubbard Dianetic Graduate. One who is trained to teach the Dianetic Course after graduating from the HSDC. (BTB 12 Apr 72R)

HDRF, Hubbard Dianetic Research Foundation, Elizabeth, New Jersey, U.S.A. The first organization, founded by others in 1950, May. Closed 1951 as I had no control of it and the directors mismanaged it. (LRH Def. Notes)

HEALTH FORM, 1. a form done by an auditor. It is metered. The end product of this form is entirely to pick out what to audit. (HCOB 19 May 69) 2 . as one needs a guide to know what to audit on a case, the Dn health form is an essential auditing action. You take up and audit each symptom or complaint one after the other. You audit the most available symptom first. Sooner or later the pc will have a well, healthy body, health, stability, and a sense of well-being. (HCOB 19 May 69, Health Form, Use of )

H , E & R, human emotion and reaction. (HCOB 3 Dec 73)

HEAT, the physical sensation associated with the release of energy in the form of heat which is attendent to actual GPMs, their RIs and associated locks. (HCOB 13 Apr 64, Scn VI Part One Glossary of Terms)

HEAVILY CHARGED CASE, by which is meant a c a s e with a very heavy burden of secondaries. (SOS, p. 82)

HEAVY FACSIMILE, a heavy facsimile is an experience, complete with all perceptions, emotions, thoughts and efforts, occupying a precise place in space and a moment in time. It can be an operation, an injury, a term of heavy physical exertion, or even a death. It is composed of the preclear’s own effort and the effort of the environment (counter-effort). (AP&A, p. 28)

HELATROBUS, an interplanetary nation. A little pip squeak government, didn’t amount to very much . ( SH Spec 268, 6305C23)

HELATROBUS IMPLANTS, 1. call them the heaven implants, they are the implants implanted by Helatrobus. (SH Spec 268, 6305C23) 2 . are actually a long chain of engrams, each of which has basics. (SH Spec 272, 6306Cll) 3 . imphnts which begin with the electronic clouds over planets, and the dichotomy, plus and minus, and so forth and sweep on through in a certain series. (SH Spec 266, 6305C21)

HELD-DOWN FIVES, jammed thinking because of a misunderstood or misapplied datums. (HCOB 12 Nov 64) See also HELDDOWN SEVEN.

HELD-DOWN SEVEN, Slang. 1 . an enforced wrong datum. (EOS, p. 52) 2 . jammed thinking because of a misunderstood or misapplied datum. (HCOB 12 Nov 64) [This term stems from an analogy made by LRH comparing the reactive mind to a computer or adding machine in which the number seven (or five) had been shorted out so that it was always added in in every computation. Of course it could not compute correctly or get correct answers from data as long as this condition existed.] (EOS, p. 51)

HELLO AND OKAY, a very basic process which resolves chronic somatics, eye difficulties, any specific item is to have the affected part or bad area of energy say “Hello” and “Okay” and “All right” until it is in good condition. (Dn 55!, p. 143) [“Hello” and “Okay” process commands can be found in HCOB 22 Mar 58, Clearing Reality. ]

HELP, help is the key button which admits auditing. Help is the make-break point between sanity and insanity. That a person cannot accept help along some minor line does not mean that he is insane, but it certainly means he has some neurotic traits. (HCOB 5 May 60)

HELP FACTOR, the willingness to assist. This also has to do with cause—what can the individual cause? An organization which cannot help anybody will have a tendency to fail. (ESTO No. 8, 7203C06SO)

HELP PROCESSING, there are probably thousands of ways help could be run. But the one general process on help that would rank high would be “What have you helped?” “What have you not helped?” alternated. This is the best way I know of to run the sense of what help one has given plus what help one has withheld. This lets the pc as-is his failures to help as well as his denials of help. (HCOB 12 May 60)

HEV, Human Evaluation Course. (HCOB 29 Sept 66)

HGA, 1. Hubbard Graduate Auditor. Class VII auditor. Only available to Sea Org or five year contracted Church staff. This level teaches the power processes and review auditing. It is not a prerequisite to Class VIII, however. It is delivered in Church of Scientology Saint Hill organizations. (CG&AC 75) 2 . in 1956, an HGA was also to be known as D. Scn or Doctor of Scientology abroad. (HCOTB 12 Sept 56) See DOCTOR OF SCIENTOLOGY. 3 . an honor award and may be made by nomination or selection; either way it is for those who are consistently producing excellent results in their own fields and to form a grade by which these recruits can be recognized. (PAB 6) [Current usage of the term HGA is as in def. 1 above.]

HGC, Hubbard Guidance Center. (HCOB 23 Aug 65)

HGC ADMIN, Hubbard Guidance Center AdminiBtrator. (HCOB 23 Aug 65)

HGDS, Hubbard Graduate Dianetic Specialist. An Expanded Dianetics auditor. (CG&AC 75) See also EXPANDED DIANETICS .

HIDDEN DATA LINE, some students have believed there was a “hidden data line” of tech in Scn, a line on which Scn tech was given out by me but not made known to students. This started me looking, for there is no such line. The whole of technology is released in HCO Bulletins and HCO Policy Letters and tapes I do and release. I don’t tell people anything in some private way, not even instructors. The apparency is somebody’s pretense to know from me more than is on the tapes and in books and mimeos, or, brutally, somebody’s alter-is of materials. This looks like a “hidden data line.” It surely isn’t. (HCO PL 16 Apr 65)

HIDDEN STANDARD, 1. a hidden standard is a problem a person thinks must be resolved before auditing can be seen to have worked. It’s a standard by which to judge Scn or auditing or the auditor. This hidden standard is always an old problem of long duration. It is a postulate-counter-postulate situation. The source of the counter-postulate was suppressive to the pc. (HCOB 8 Nov 65) 2 . is not just a physical or mental difficulty but one by which the pc measures his case gains. A case measurement thing used secretly by the pc. (BTB 18 Sept 72) Abbr. HS.

HIGH CRIME CHECKOUTS, 1 . starrated checkouts on all processes and their immediate technology and on relevant policy letters on HGC interns or staff auditors in the Tech Division or staff auditors or interns in the Qual Division for the levels and actions they will use before permitting them to audit church pcs and on supervisors in Tech and Qual who instruct or examine. (HCO PL 8 Mar 66) 2. high crime checkouts are done by auditors to their highest class. Any new procedure must be drilled on a doll in addition to the high crime checkout before the OK to audit chit is issued. (BTB 5 Sept 72RA) [High crime checkouts are so named because it is an ethics offense in the nature of a high crime for failing to insist upon this policy or preventing this policy from going into effect or minimizing the checkouts or lists. ]

HIGH CRIMES, suppressive acts. (ISE, p. 48)

HIGH SCHOOL INDOCTRINATION, an extremely precise activity which consists of teaching an auditor not to let a preclear stop him. (HCOB 4 Oct 56)

HI HI INDOC, tone 40 8-C. (PAB 113)

HIGH TA, 1. 3.5 or up at session start. (HCOB 3 Jan 70) 2. a high TA in Scn is always an overrun. In Dn it means an engram too late on the chain to erase is in restimulation. (HCOB 28 Apr 69) 3. high TA means the person can still stop things and is trying to do so. However, all one has to do is restimulate and leave unflat an engram chain to have a high TA. High TA is reflecting the force contained in the chain. (HCOB 16 Jun 70)

HIGH-TONE INDIVIDUAL, thinks wholly into the future. He is extroverted toward his environment. He clearly observes the environment with full perception unclouded by undistinguished fears about the environment. He thinks very little about himself but operates automatically in his own interests. He enjoys existence. His calculations (postulations and evaluations) are swift and accurate. He is very self-confident. He knows he knows and does not even bother to assert that he knows. He controls his environment. (AP&A, p. 37)

HI-LO TA, high low TA. (HCOB 1 Jan 72RA)

HI-LO TA ASSESSMENT FOR CONFESSIONALS. See HI-LO TA ASSESSMENT FOR INTEGRITY PROCESSING.

HI-LO TA ASSESSMENT FOR INTEGRITY PROCESSING, this list is used to get a TA in normal range before proceeding into an Integrity Processing session. It is used after any possible false TA has been checked for and handled, if TA is still below 2 .0 or at 3 .5 or above. (BTB 6 Dec 72R)

HIPS, Hubbard Integrity Processing Specialist. (HCO PL 24 Dec 72)

HIT, punished, hurt, etc. (HCOB 1 Nov 68)

HO-HUM, minus randomity. (Abil 56)

HOLDER, 1. any engram command which makes an individual remain in an engram knowingly or unknowingly. (DMSMH Gloss) 2 . a species of command. These include such things as “stay here,” “sit right there and think about it,” “come back and sit down,” “I can’t go,” “I mustn’t leave,” etc. (DMSMH, p. 213)

HOLLOW SPOT, a segment of the body which has such a hard impact in the center that all attention units in a mock-up will flow out from the center. It’s an outflow from a central point but the point is a counter-effort. (5206CM24B)

HOME UNIVERSE, the universe a thetan made for himself. (SH Spec 83, 6612C06)

HOMO NOVIS, 1. Homo man, novis new. (BCR, p. 12) 2 . a theta-animated mest body possesed of new and desirable attributes; a mest clear, a good, sane rational mest being about a skycraper higher than Homo sap~ens. (HOM, p. 40) 3 . the Second Stage Release is definitely Homo novis. The person ceases to respond like Homo sapiens and has fantastic capability to learn and act. (HCOB 28 Jun 65)

HOMO SAPIENS, 1. a mest body, whether it belongs to the race of man or the race of ants is yet but an animated vegetable. Given a theta being to guide it, it becomes part of a composite such as Homo sapiens. By itself, the body would live, walk around, react, sleep, kill, and direct an existence no better than that of a field mouse, or a zombie. Put a theta being over it and it becomes possessed of ethics and morals and direction and goals and the ability to reason; it becomes this strange thing called Homo sapiens. (HOM, p. 42)

HONEST COMPLETION, means a student who has studied all the materials of the course using full study tech. Has done the demonstrations and drills, and can effectively apply the materials of the course. (HCO PL 16 May 73R)

HOPE, the desire that sometime in the future one will cease to have something which he no longer wants but can’t seem to get rid of or that one will acquire something he wants. (2ACC-31A, 5312CM22)

HOPE FACTOR, 1. validating those good indicators that are present in the pc. When an auditor doesn’t he’s not really putting in a hope factor. Validating the good indicator is a lessening of the somatic or condition. (SH Spec 3, 6401C09) 2 . something can be done about it. (SH Spec 297, 6308C21)

HOT QUESTION, question with reaction on it. (SH Spec 63, 6110C05)

HOT SPUR LINE, where there is a senior review C/S there is a hot spur line from the C/S to the senior C/S and back to the C/S. This is not necessarily an instant line. It can be a 12-hour lag line. New tech in use, fantastic completions and “dog cases” nobody can make anything out of go on this senior C/S hot spur line. (HCOB 5 Mar 71)

HPA, Hubbard Professional Auditor. A Class III auditor. This level deals with ARC and ARC breaks. Listing and nulling and two-way comm are taught at this level, as well as change processes and ARC Break SW. (CG&AC 75)

HPC LECT, Hubbard Professional Course Lecture. (HCOB 29 Sept 66)

HPCS, Hubbard Professional Course Supervisor. (HCO PL 27 Oct 70)

HPCSC, Hubbard Professional Course Supervisor’s Course. (HCO PL 27 Oct 70 II)

HQS, Hubbard Qualified Scientologist. A basic Scn course which teaches about co-auditing and how to handle other people, with group auditing. It consists of, in part, TRs 0 to 4 and 6 to 9, plus students actually co-audit on CCHs, Op Pro by Dup and Self An~lys~s lists. There is no prerequisite for this course. (CG&AC 75)

HRS, Hubbard Recognized Scientologist. A Class 0 auditor. This level teaches about communication. Processes taught are Level O processes and ARC SW processes. (CG&AC 75)

HS, hidden standard. (HCOB 10 Jun 72 V)

HSCSC, Hubbard Senior Course Supervisor Course. The HSCSC covers the total expertise of the technology of supervising. (FBDL 328)

HSDC, Hubbard Standard Dianetics Course. (BTB 12 Apr 72R)

HSS, Hubbard Senior Scientologist. A Class VI auditor. An HSS is a graduate of the Saint Hill Special Briefing Course. This course consists of the full practical application of Scn grades, repair, setups, assists and special cases tech up to Class VI. (CG&AC 75)

HSST, Hubbard Specialist of Standard Tech, Class VIII Case Supervisor. (CG&AC 75)

HSTS, Hubbard Standard Technical Specialist. A Class VIII auditor. The Class VIII Course teaches exact handling of all cases up to 100 per cent result, as well as Class VIII procedures, all case setup actions, all processes and corrective actions, as well as flubless Class VIII auditing. (CG&AC 75)

HTS, Hubbard Trained Scientologist. A Class I auditor. This level teaches about problems. The processes taught include objective processes and Level I processes, such as help and control processes. (CG&AC 75)

HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE, purpose: to be the office of LRH. To handle and expedite the communication lines of LRH. To prepare or handle the preparation of manuscripts and other to-be-published material of Scn. To keep, use and care for LRH’s offlce equipment. To assist the Churches of Scientology and their people. To set a good example of efficiency to the Churches. (HCO PL 12 Oct 62)

HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE BULLETIN, HCOBs written by LRH only. These are the technical issue line. They are valid from first issue unless specifically cancelled. All data for auditing and courses is contained in HCOBs. They are distributed as indicated, usually to technical staff. They are red ink on white paper, consecutive by date. (HCO PL 24 Sept 70R)

HUBBARD COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE POLICY LETTER, HCO PLs written by LRH only. This is a permanently valid issue of all Third Dynamic, organization and administrative technology. These, regardless of date or age,

form the knowhow in running a Scientology Church, organization, group or company. The bulk of hat material is made up from HCO PLs. They are printed in green ink on white paper and are distributed to all staff or as indicated or as made up in packs. (HCO PL 24 Sept 70R)

HUBBARD CONSULTANT, A Hubbard Consultant is skilled in testing, two-way comm, consultation, programming and interpersonal relations. This is the certificate especially awarded to persons trained to handle personnel, students and staff. These technologies and special training were developed to apply Scn auditing skills to the field of administration especially. An HC is requisite for course supervisors and student consultants. (HCOB 19 Jun 71 III) Abbr. HC.

HUBBARD ELECTROMETER, is called an E-meter for short. Technically it is a specially developed Wheatstone bridge well known to electrically minded people as a device to measure the amount of resistance to a flow of electricity. (BIEM, p. 1) See E-METER.

HUBBARD GUIDANCE CENTER, that department of the technical division of a Scientology Church which delivers auditing. Department 12, Division 4 . (BTB 12 Apr 72R) Abbr. HGC.

HUBBARD STANDARD DIANETICS COURSE, teaches about the human mind, mental image pictures, the time track, locks, secondaries and engrams. The processes taught are Standard Dn auditing and Dn assists. (CG&AC 75) Abbr. HSDC.

HUMAN ENGINEERING, it’s adapting the machinery to fit the person. It’s adapting machinery and spatial arrangements and desks and chairs and things like that. The adjustment of the machinery and spatial arrangements to the people who are operating it is important. (ESTO No. 12, 7203C06 SO II)

HUMAN EVALUATION, a diagnosis of behavior. (5108CM13A)

HUMANITARIAN OBJECTIVE, the humanitarian objective is to make a safe environment in which the fourth dynamic engram can be audited out. By engram we mean the mental block that prevents peace and tolerance; by fourth dynamic we mean that impulse to survive as mankind instead of just individuals. Obviously we must do this. (Ron’s Jour 68)

HUMAN MIND, see MIND.

HUMOR, humor is rejection. The ability to reject. The ability to throw something away. That is humor. (8ACC-27, 5411CM05)

HURDY-GURDY SYSTEM, a “hurdy-gurdy” was a musical instrument played by turning a crank so that a wheel striking strings in turn caused music. The “hurdy-gurdy” system was so called because the auditor went round and round the points of the ARC triangle (A-R-C) plus enforced and dominate, inhibit and nullify on persons the pc had known, session after session to restore his memory. Mentioned on page 65, Book 2, Science of Survival and described in full later in that same chapter on pages 77-83 . (LRH Def. Notes)

HVA, 1. Hubbard Validated Auditor. A Class V auditor. This level is taught at Church of Scientology Saint Hill organizations and contains materials about the chronological development of Scn with full theory and application. (CG&AC 75) 2 . Class V reviews all the classes and retrains where necessary and awards permanent classification for all the lower certificates as well as Class V. (Aud 8 UK)

HYPER-SONIC, if a person hears voices which have not existed and yet supposes that these voices really spoke, we have “over-imagination.” In Dn imaginary sound recall would be hyper-sonic, (hyper=over). (DMSMN, p. 188)

 

HYPER-VISIO, if a person sees scenes which have not existed and yet supposes these scenes were real, we have “over imagination.” In Dn imaginary sight recall would be hyper-visio, (hyper=over). (DMSMN, p. 188)

HYPNOTISM, 1 . an address to the reactive mind. It reduces self-determinism by interposing the commands of another below the analytical level of an individual’s mind; it enturbulates a case markedly, and materially aberrates human beings by keying in engrams which would otherwise lie dormant. (SOS, Bk. 2, p. 220) 2 . a continuing inflow without an opportunity on the part of the subject to outflow. (Dn 55!, p. 63) 3 . the process of restimulating states of apathy by the introduction of additional engramic content which would thereafter be as compulsive as the other data in the incident. (5109CM17B) 4 . amnesia trance for the purpose of planting suggestions. (Exp Jour Winter-Spring 1950)

HYPO-HEARING, a condition in which a person has something he is afraid to hear. He plays the radio very loudly, makes people repeat continually and misses pieces of the conversation. Men and women are “hysterically” deaf without any conscious knowledge of it. Their “hearing just isn’t so good.” In Dn, this is being called hypo-hearing, (hypo=under). (DMSMN, p. 189)

HYPO-SIGHT, the person who is always losing something when it lies in fair view before him, who misses signposts, theater bills and people who are in plain sight is “hysterically” blind to some degree. He is afraid he will see something. In Dn this is being called, since the word “hysterical” is a very inadequate and overly dramatic one, hypo-sight, (hypo=under). (DMSMN, p. 189)

HYSTERIA, the phenomenon of being out of control. (AAR, p. 91)

i

“I”, 1. the will, the determining force of the organism, the awareness. (DMSMN, p. 87) 2 . the awareness of awareness unit. (NOTL, p. 69) 3 . the thetan, the center of awareness, that part of the total organism that is fundamentally cause. (CONA Gloss)

IATROGENIC, means illness generated by doctors. An operation during which the doctor’s knife slipped, and accidentally harmed the patient might cause an iatrogenic illness or injury since the fault would have been with the surgeons. (DMSMN, p. 172)

ICDS, International Congress of Dianeticists and Scientologists. (HCOB 29 Sept 66)

IDEAL STATE, what do we mean by an ideal state. A state somebody wanted to be in over which he had full power of choice. That would be an ideal state. (SH Spec 273, 6306C12)

IDENTIFICATION, 1. the inability to evaluate differences in time, location, form, composition, or importance. ( SOS, p. 153) 2. identification is a monotone assignment of importance. (SOS, p. 153) 3 . the lowest level of reasoning is complete inability to differentiate, which is to say, identification. (SOS, p.153) 4 . Duplicating in one space continually, is in itself identification. (2ACC-25B, 5312CM17)

ILL, being medically diagnosed as suffering from a known, well defined physical illness susceptible to medical care and relief. (HCO PL 6 Oct 58)

ILLUSION, 1. a surface manifestation which disappears when experience is consulted. (SH Spec 70, 6607C21) 2 . a product of the actual. (SH Spec 70, 6607C21) 3 . any idea, space, energy, object or time concept which one creates himself. (Scn 8-8008 Gloss)

IMAGINARY CAUSE, imagining they do or cause things bad or good. (HCOB 1 Nov 68 II)

IMAGINARY VISIO, the scenery imagination constructs. (SOS, p. 72) See DUB-IN.

IMAGINATION, 1. the recombination of things one has sensed, thought or intellectually computed into existence, which do not necessarily have existence. This is the mind’s method of envisioning desirable goals or forecasting futures. (DMSMH, p. 14) 2 . the ability to create or forecast a future or to create, change or destroy a present or past. (Scn 8-8008, p. 7) 3 . if you take the word imagination apart, you will discover that it means merely the postulating of images or the assembly of perceptions into creations as you desire them. (SA, p. 158)

IMMORTALITY, infinite survival, the absolute goal of survival. The individual seeks this on the first dynamic as an organism and as a theta entity and in the perpetuation of his name by his group. On the second dynamic he seeks it through children and so on through the eight dynamics. Life survives through the persistence of theta. A species survives through the persistence of the life in it. A culture survives through the persistence of the species using it. There is evidence that the theta of an individual may survive as a personal entity from life to life through many lives on earth. (SOS Gloss)

IMPACT, cause and effect simultaneously. (PAB 30)

IMPLANT, 1. a painful and forceful means of overwhelming a being with artificial purpose or false concepts in a malicious attempt to control and suppress him. (Aud 71 ASHO) 2 . an electronic means of overwhelming the thetan with a significance. (HCOB 8 May 63) 3 . an unwilling and unknowing receipt of a

thought. An intentional installation of fixed ideas, contrasurvival to the thetan. (SH Spec 83, 6612C06)

IMPLANT GOAL, an implanted goal—a goal the thetan himself has not decided upon—but which has been induced in him by overwhelming force or persuasion. (HCOB 13 Apr 64, Scn VI Part One Glossary of Terms)

IMPLANT GPM, an implanted goal problem mass. An electronic means of overwhelming the thetan with a signficance using the mechanics of the actual pattern of living to entrap the thetan and force obedience to behavior patterns. (HCOB 13 Apr 64, Scn VI Part One Glossary of Terms)

IMPLOSION, something that could be likened to the collapse of a field of energy such as a sphere toward a common center point, making an inflow. It can happen with the same violence as an explosion; but does not necessarily do so. (Scn 8- 8008, p. 49)

IMPORTANCE, is mass. In thinkingness when you say importance you mean mass. (SH Spec 39, 6108C15)

I N , things which should be there and are or should be done and are, are said to be “in”; i.e. “We got scheduling in.” (HCOB 19 Jun 71 III)

INACCESSIBLE CASE, that person who is bound and determined to stay sick, who won’t talk to you, will have nothing to do with being healed in any way, is an inaccessible case. (5011C22)

INADVERTENT WITHHOLD, 1. the pc thinks he is withholding because the auditor didn’t hear or acknowledge. (HCOB 13 Sept 65) 2 . he didn’t intend to withhold it, just nobody would acknowledge it. He never intended to withhold it at all. An inadvertent withhold will cause very near the same phenomenon as an actual withhold. (SH Spec 60, 6506Cll)

INCIDENT, an experience, simple or complex, related by the same subject, location, perception or people that takes place in a short and finite time period such as minutes, hours or days; also, mental image pictures of such experiences. (HCOB 12 Dec 71 IX)

INCREDIBLE CHAIN, it’s the things that have happened on his track which are, to him, incredible. And because they are so incredible he doesn’t believe them, and neither does anybody else. But it’s most because nobody else believed them. And he doesn’t believe them himself so the chain itself remains hidden because it’s incredible; the incredible chain. (ESTO 5, 7203C03 SO I)

IND, “Ind” for indicated to pc. (HCOB 26 Jun 71)

INDICATOR, a condition or circumstance arising in a session which indicates whether the session is running well or badly. (HCOB 28 Dec 63) 2 . the little flag sticking out that shows there is a possible situation underneath that needs attention. (HCO PL 15 May 70 II)

INDICATORS, those manifestations in a person or group that indicate whether it is doing well or poorly, signal an approaching change, or show that the auditing process has reached the desired end point. (HCOB 20 Feb 70)

IN-DISPERSAL, where the flows are all travelling toward a common center. One might call this an implosion. (Scn 8-8008, pp. 17-18)

INDIVIDUAL, 1. an individual is a collection of “memories” going back to his first appearance on earth. In other words, he is the composite of all his facsimiles plus his impulse to be. Individuality dependes upon facsimiles. (HFP, p. 111) 2 . somebody who is operating in coordination with himself twenty-four hours a

day. That’s an individual. An organism which is unhappy, aberrated, is an organism which is working at cross purposes with itself twenty-four hours a day. (5110CMllB) 3 . when we say the individual we are talking about something as precise as an apple. We are not talking about a collection of behavior patterns which we all learned about in the study of rats. We are talking about something that is finite. We are talking about somebody. The somethingness that you are and the capabilities you can be and this is what we are talking about. We are not talking about the color of your hair or the length of your feet. We are talking about you. (Abil Mi 5)

INDIVIDUATION, a separation from knowingness. (5203CMlOB)

INDOC, indoctrination. (HCOB 10 Apr 57)

INERT INCIDENT, 1. an incident which is an inert incident is not having any effect on the pc. It’s not part of his aberrative picture. (SH Spec 300, 6308C28) 2. an incident, unrestimulated. (SH Spec 300, 6308C28)

IN ETHICS, see ETHICS, Def. 5 .

INFINITY SYMBOL, oo. As seen in some Scientology books, stood upright—8 . (HCOB 23 Aug 65)

INFINITY-VALUED LOGIC, in Dn, there is a new way of thinking about things which underlies a great deal of its technology. Instead of two-valued logic or three-valued logic we have infinity-valued logic. Here is a gradient scale which permits no absolute at either end. In other words, there is not an absolute right and an absolute wrong, just as there is no absolute stillness and no absolute motion. Of course, it is one of the tenets of Dn that absolutes are not attainable but only approachable. (SOS, Bk. 2, pp. 249-250) See also LOGIC.

INSANE, 1. the truly insane cannot control or withhold their evil impulses and dramatize them at least covertly. The insane are not always visible. But they are visible enough. And they are malicious. (HCOB 10 May 72) 2 . having been pronounced insane by a psychiatrist or being incapable of any responsibility for social conduct. (HCO PL 6 Oct 58)

INSANE CERTAINTY, would be no certainty at all, or a certainty asserted by only one or two people and disagreed with by all others. (Cert, Vol. 10, No. 12)

INSANE PC, by insane pc is meant one who is subject to highly irrational and destructive behavior. (HCO PL 12 Jun 69)

INSANITY, 1. the overt or covert but always complex and continuous determination to harm or destroy. (HCOB 28 Nov 70) 2 . i n s a n i t y is most often the suppressed agony of actual physical illness and injury. (HCOB 2 Apr 69) 3 . the obsessive adaptation of a solution to the exclusion of all other solutions in the absence of a problem . ( SH Spec 27X, 6107C04) 4 . the inability to associate or differentiate properly. (Scn 8-8008, p. 44) 5. insanity is an emotion which is brought about by the compulsion to reach and the inhibition not to reach or the compulsion not to reach and the inhibition to reach. (2ACC-18A, 5312CM08) 6 . the best definition of which I know would be: the person widely believes that the symbols are the things. (PDC 20) 7. insanity is an individual assisting things which inhibit survival and destroying things which assist survival. (5109CM24A) 8 . if an individual is incapable of adjusting himself to his environment so as to

get along with or obey or command his fellows, or, more importantly, if he is incapable of adjusting his environment, then he can be considered to be “insane.” But it is a relative term. (DMSMH, p. 380) 9 . the point between where a person who is sane goes thereafter insane is very precise. It’s the exact point at which he begins to stop something. At that moment he is insane. At first he is insane on that one subject; then he can get another idee fixe and become insane on another subject, thus getting cumulative insanity. But there is no doubt of his insanity on that one subject, something that he is trying to stop. (6711C18SO) 10. insanity itself is simply must reack—can’t reach, must withdraw—can’t withdraw. (SH Spec 98, 6201C10)

IN-SCANNING, taking energy manifestations that were in the incident as they flowed in toward the preclear. That’s in-scanning. That’s environment to the preclear in the incident. (5203CM04B)

IN SESSION, the definition of in session is interested in own case and willing to talk to the auditor. When this definition describes the session in progress, then of course the pc will be able to as-is and will cognite. (HCOB 26 Apr 73 I)

INSTANT READ, 1. that reaction of the needle which occurs at the precise end of any major thought voiced by the auditor. (HCOB 25 May 62) 2 . if the needle reacts within 1/5 to 1/10 of a second after the question is asked, it is an instant read. This is valid. If it reacts 1/2 to 1 second after the question, this is invalid. (HCOB 28 Sept 61)

INSTANT ROCK SLAM, that “rock slam” which begins at the end of the major thought of any item. Symbol IRS. (HCOB 8 Nov 62)

INSTANT RUDIMENT READ, on rudiments, repetitive or fast, the instant read can occur anywhere within the last word of the question or when the thought major has been anticipated by the preclear, and must be taken up by the auditor. This is not a prior read. Preclears poorly in session, being handled by auditors with indifferent TR-l, anticipate the instant read reactively as they are under their own control. Such a read occurs in the body of the last meaningful word in the question. It never occurs latent. (EMD, p. 37)

INST CONF, Instructors’ Conference. (HCOB 29 Sept 66)

INSTITUTIONALIZED, having been committed to a public or private institution for the insane. (HCO PL 6 Oct 58)

IN TECH, when t e c h i s i n , we mean that Scn is being applied and is being correctly applied. (HCOB 13 Sept 65)

INTEG, Integrity. (BPL 5 Nov 72RA)

INTEGRITY, (1 .) the condition of having no part or element taken away or wanting; undivided or unbroken state; wholeness. (2 .) the condition of not being marred or violated; unimpaired or uncorrupted condition; soundness. (3 .) soundness or moral principle; the character of uncorrupted virtue, especially in relation to truth and fair dealing; uprightness, honesty, sincerity. (BTB 4 Dec 72)

INTEGRITY PROCESSING, that processing which enables a person, within the reality of his own moral codes and those of the group, to reveal his overts so he no longer requires to withhold and so enhances his own integrity and that of the group. (BTB 4 Dec 72) Abbr. IP.

INTELLIGENCE, 1 . is the ability to recognize differences, similarities and identities. (HCO PL 26 Apr 70R) 2 . the ability to perceive, pose and resolve problems. (Scn 0-8, p. 64) 3 . the ability of an individual, group or race to resolve problems relating to survival. (Scn 0-8, p. 61)

 

INTELLIGENCE GAIN, loss of restimulation by stupidity by reason of attempts to confront or experience the problems of life (intelligence appears when stupidity is keyed out or erased). Intelligence is a confronting ability. (HCOB 28 Feb 59)

INTENSIVE, an intensive is defined as any one single period of 12 1/2 hours or 25 hours of auditing delivered all within one single week or weekends on a set schedule. (HCO PL 20 Oct 71)

INTENSIVE PROCEDURE, the Standard Operating Procedure, 1954, given in The Creation of Human Ability, by L. Ron Hubbard. (PXL, p. 277)

INTENTION, 1. intention is the command factor as much as anything else. If you intend something to happen it happens if you intend it to happen. Verbalization is not the intention. The intention is the carrier wave which takes the verbalization along with it. (Abil 270) 2 . degree of relative beingness which an individual desires to assume as plotted on the tone scale. (5203CM04A)

INTENTIONAL WITHHOLD, one which is a withhold because he would be punished if he admitted it. (SH Spec 63, 6110C05)

INTEREST, 1. interest is more consideration than attention, and is therefore attention with intention. Interest, therefore, could be defined as this; attention with an intention to give or attract attention. (COHA, p. 103) 2. interest does not mean happiness and joy. Interest is only absorbed attention and a desire to talk about it. (HCOB 1 Jul 63)

INTERESTED/INTERESTING, 1 . a thetan is interested, and an object is interesting. A thetan is not interesting. He is interested. And when a person becomes terribly interesting he has lots of problems. That is the chasm that is crossed by all of your celebrities, anybody who is foolish enough to become famous. He crosses over from being interested in life to being interesting, and people who are interesting are really no longer interested in life. (PXL, p. 191) 2 . “A” has the intention of interesting “b.” “B” to be talked to, becomes interesting. Similarly “b,” when he emanates a communication, is interested and “a” is interesting. Cause is interested, effect is interesting. (Dn 55 .!, p. 66)

INTERIORIZATION, 1. interiorization means going into it too fixedly, and becoming part of it too fixedly. It doesn’t mean just going into your head. (SH Spec 84, 6612C13) 2 . if the havingness of the preclear is low, he is apt to close in tight to the body because this gives him more havingness and if the preclear fears that the body is going to go out of control he will also move in closer to the body. Thus we get interiorization as no more complicated than fear of loss of control and drops in havingness. (SCP, p. 18) Abbr. Int.

INTERIORIZATION RUNDOWN, 1 . a l s o k n o w n a s Int-Ext RD for Interiorization-Exteriorization Rundown. (HCOB 24 Sept 71) 2 . t h e Interiorization Rundown is a remedy designed to permit the pc to be further audited after he has gone exterior. The Int Rundown is not meant to be sold or passed off as a method of exteriorizing a pc. (HCOB 17 Dec 71R) See EXTERIORIZATION RUNDOWN.

INTERN(E), an advanced graduate or a recent graduate in a professional field who is getting practical experience under the supervision of an experienced worker. (HCOB 19 Jul 71)

INTERN(E)SHIP, serving a period as an intern, or an activity offered by a Church of Scientology by which experience can be gained. The apprenticeship of an auditor is done as a Scientology Church intern. A course graduate becomes an auditor by auditing. That means lots of auditing. (HCOB 19 Jul 71)

INTERROGATION, ( SILENT), how to read an E -meter on a silent subject. When the person placed on a meter will not talk but can be made to hold the cans, it is still possible to obtain full information from the person asking questions, one expects no reply, asks for no pictures. The auditor just watches the needle for dips when questions are asked. (HCOB 30 Mar 60)

INT-EXT, interiorization-exteriorization. (HCOB 30 May 70)

INT-EXT RD, Interiorization-Exteriorization Rundown. (HCOB 24 Sept 71)

IN THE WHITE, Slang. on an OCA, the center line of 00 is the critical point of the graph. A little bit into the lower gray-shaded area is not too bad. But when they go down into the white, like a minus 62 or a minus 76 or even a minus 26, they’re said to be “in the white.” (7203C30SO)

I N T R D , Interiorization Rundown also known as Int-Ext RD for Interiorization-Exteriorization Rundown. (HCOB 24 Sept 71)

INTRODUCTION OF AN ARBITRARY, an arbitrary may be considered as a factor introduced into a problem’s solution when that factor does not derive from a known natural law but only from an opinion or authoritarian command. A problem resolved by data derived from known natural laws resolves well and smoothly and has a useful solution. When a problem is resolved by introducing arbitraries (factors based on opinion or command but not natural law) then that solution, when used, will ordinarily require more arbitraries to make the solution applicable. The harder one tries to apply the solution corrupted by arbitraries to any situation, the more arbitraries have to be introduced. (SOS Gloss)

INTROSPECTION RUNDOWN, the essence of the Introspection Rundown is looking for and correcting all those things which caused the person to look inward, worriedly and wrestle with the mystery of some incorrectly designated error. The end phenomena is the person extroverted, no longer looking inward worriedly in a continuous self-audit without end. (HCOB 23 Jan 74RA)

INTROVERSION, 1. looking in too closely. (POW, p. 92) 2 . a manifestation of the analytical mind trying to solve problems on improper data, and observing the organism being engaged in activities which are not conducive to survival along the dynamics. (DTOT, p. 105)

INTROVERTED, he would look in on himself . ( SH Spec 84, 6612C13)

INT RUNDOWN CORRECTION LIST, used when Int-Ext reads on any repair list and the Int RD has already been done or corrected, when a bog occurs on the

Int RD itself, or if pc upset after Int RD and/or TA gone high or low immediately after. Don’t re-run Int RD—use the correction list. EP is all reading items handled to F/N, EP of Int RD, and INT-Ext no longer reading. (BTB 11 Aug 72RA)

INVADER FORCES, 1. an electronics people. The electronics people usually happen to be an evolutionary line which is on heavy gravity planeti and so they develop electronics. The reason you say invader force at all is because at some time along the line fairly early in its youth it took off to conquer the whole mest universe. You could expect almost anything in terms of physical form particularly physical form which matched the peculiar purpose of this group. They’ve usually got some gimmick like Fac One. Control has been the main thing. The way to control territory is control people. (5206CM27A) 2 . there are five invader forces active and one aborning, but the one aborning is not active. It will probably be several million years before you begin to see this one, some of you hit the track 60 trillion years ago mest universe and some of you didn’t get into the mest universe until about 3 trillion years ago that is invader force one and invader force two. This is E-meter data confirmed from preclear to preclear. Now we don’t see anything of invader force three here on earth. I just haven’t found any threes. Invader force four is really holding the fort someplace or other. Every little while, a few million years, some planet will get taken over by an invader force. (5206CM27A) See also FIFTH INVADER FORCE.

IN VALENCE, what we mean by “in valence” is simply in the valence he was in when the engram occurred. Now when we say out of valence we mean simply and entirely the pc was not in the body he was occupying during the incident . ( SH Spec 51, 6109C07)

INVALIDATION, 1. refuting or degrading or discrediting or denying something someone else considers to be fact. (HCOB 2 Jun 71 I) 2 . any thought, emotion or effort, or counter-thought, counter-emotion or counter-effort which denies or smothers the thought, emotion or effort of the individual. (NOM, p. 56) 3 . invalidation by words is the symbolic level of being struck. (2ACC-19B, 5312CM09) 4 . basically, non-attention. Attention itself is quite important for attention is necessary before an effect can be created. (PAB 8) 5. invalidation is force applied. You apply enough force to anybody and you’ve invalidated him. How invalidated can he get? Dead! (5207CM24B) Abbr. Inval.

INVALIDATION OF AUDITORS, could be defined as (a) letting an auditor lose, (b) correcting things he does right. (HCOB 1 Sept 71 I)

INVENTION PROCESSING, this is done by having the preclear invent various ideas or considerations by which he creates stable data to displace aberrated stable data, and to handle confusions. (Op. Bull. No. 1)

INVERSION, 1. a switch to an opposite obsessive consideration such as from compulsion to inhibition. There may be many inversions on any consideration, each leading further from self-determinism. (COHA Gloss) 2 . his resistance has been overcome so that when it tries to outflow, it inflows. That’s an inversion and that’s what’s meant by inversion. A person tries to outflow, he inflows— in other words, he exactly reverses his consideration on the thing. (8ACC-8, 5410CM12) 3 . the flows have exactly turned around and that’s what we know as an inversion and that’s exactly why we call it an inversion; because it’s a flow going backwards. (SH Spec 6, 6106C02)

INVERTED DYNAMICS, we can take a person and actually have him be someplace else when he is right there. See, he’ll still keep this body but he’ll actually be and operate someplace else and you’ll run into this every once in a while in a preclear. We call this inverted dynamics. (2ACC-lB, 5311CM17)

 

INVISIBLE CASE, cannot see mock-ups. They have no field and do not see anything when they close their eyes, everything is invisible, they have no facsimiles, no mock-ups. (PAB 154)

INVISIBLE FIELD, a part of some lock, secondary or engram that is “invisible.” It like a black field responds to R3R. (HCOB 23 Apr 69)

IP, see INTEGRITY PROCESSING.

IQ, 1. intelligence quotient. IQ ratings are a measure of an individual’s capacity for learning something new; they are scales based upon how old in years a person has become compared to how “old,” he is mentally. (SOS, p. xxi) 2 . the degree that a person can observe, understand actions. (SH Spec 100, 6201C16)

IRRATIONALITY, the inability to get right answers from data. (DMSMH, p. 16)

IRS, instant rock slam. (HCOB 8 Nov 62)

IS-ES, THE, S11mg. the four conditions of existence. (PXL, p. 214) [These four conditions are listed separately under AS-ISNESS, ALTER-ISNESS, IS-NESS, NOT-ISNESS.]

IS-NESS, 1. is-ness is an apparency of existence brought about by the continuous alteration of an as-isness. This is called, when agreed upon, reality. (PXL, p. 154) 2 . something that is persisting on a continuum. That is our basic definition of is-ness. (PXL, p. 91) 3 . i s -n e s s is an apparency, it is not an actuality. (PXL, p. 175)

“ISSUE I”, first issue of that date. [“issue” as seen on HCOBs and HCO PLs.] (HCOB 4 Sept 71 III)

ITEM, 1. any one of a list of things, people, ideas, significances, purposes, etc., given by a preclear to an auditor while listing; any separate thing or article; in particular, one placed on a list by a pc. (Dn Today, p. 1028) 2 . somatic or sensation etc. (HCOB 27 May 70) 3 . any terminal, opposition terminal, combination terminal, significance, or idea (but not a doingness, which is called “a level”) appearing on a list derived from the pc. (HCOB 8 Nov 62) Symbol IT.

ITSA, 1. the action of the pc saying “It’s a this or it’s a that.” (HCOB 6 Nov 64) 2 . letting the pc say what’s there that was put there to hold back a confusion or problem. (HCOB 1 Oct 63) 3 . pc saying what is, what is there, who is there, where it is, what it looks like, ideas about, decisions about, solutions to, things in his environment. The pc talking continuously about problems or puzzlements or wondering about things in his environment, is not itsaing. (HCOB 16 Oct 63) 4 . a pc who is itsaing is simply looking at and identifying some thing. (SH Spec 320, 6310C31) 5 . TA comes from saying “It is . . .” Itsa isn’t even a comm line. It’s what travels on a comm line from pc to auditor, if that which travels is saying with certainty “It is.” (HCOB 1 Oct 63)

ITSA LINE, the pc’s line to the auditor. (HCOB 23 May 71 III)

ITSA MAKER LINE, the pc’s line to his bank. (HCOB 23 May 71

IVORY TOWER RULE, the case supervisor is most successful when he supervises in seclusion. This is called the Ivory Tower rule. (HCOB 8 Aug 71)

j

JAMMING THE TRACK, Slang. sticking, holding the time track. (PAB 106)

JEALOUSY, is basically an inability to confront the unknown. (SH Spec 43, 6108C22)

JIGGLE-JIGGLE, needle manifestation. A vibration. You’ve got somebody with an alternating current ridge. ( SH Spec 1, 6105C07)

JOBURG, a comprehensive security checklist developed in Johannesburg, South Africa. (Ab1,1218)

JOINT POSITION, the recall of bodily attitudes. (SOS Gloss)

JUDICIARY DIANETICS, covers the field of adjudication within the society and amongst the societies of man. Of necessity it embraces jurisprudence and its codes and establishes precision definitions and equations for the establishment of equity. It is the science of judgment. (DMSMH, p. 402)

JUMP CHAINS, the main liability (in Dn auditing) of pushing a pc past a win is that he may “jump chains” and begin another chain with no assessment. (HCOB 23 Jun 69)

JUNIOR CASE, if father was named George and the patient is called George, beware of trouble. The engram bank takes George to mean George and that is identity thought de luxe. A junior case is seldom easy. (DMSMH, p. 305)

JUSTICE, 1 . the action of the group against the individual when he has failed to get his own ethics in. (HCOB 15 Nov 72 II) 2 . could be called the adjudication of the relative rightness or wrongness of a decision or an action. (AP&A, p. 10)

JUSTIFICATION, explaining away the most flagrant wrongnesses. Most explanations of conduct, no matter how far fetched, seem perfectly right to the person making them since he or she is only asserting self-rightness and other-wrongness. (HCOB 22 Jul 63)

JUSTIFIED THOUGHT, the attempt of the analytical mind to explain the reactive, engramic, reactions of the organism in the ordinary course of living. Justified thought is the effort of the conscious mind to explain away aberration without admitting, as it cannot do normally, that it has failed the organism. (DTOT, p. 42)

JUSTIFIER, 1. the technical term we apply to the “mock-up” or overt act demanded by a person guilty of an unmotivated act. (COHA, p. 156) 2 . a mocked up motivator. (8ACC-16, 5410CM21)

JUSTIFIER-HUNGRY, an act must be considered harmful or evil to be an overt act. To need a justifier a person must have believed his act to have been harmful. In that a thetan cannot possibly, actually, be harmed, any harmful act he performs is an unmotivated act. As the thetan cannot experience a motivatorcvert act sequence, we have the dwindling spiral. He is always justifier hungry. Thus he punishes and restimulates himself. Thus he is always complaining about what others do to him. Thus he is a problem to himself. (COHA, p. 156)

k

KEEPER OF TECH, is the highest technically trained personnel in the field. He/she is usually located in a very specific area (Church), where they can be contacted and communicated with any time. The major duty of any Keeper of Tech is to ensure that the standard of Dn and Scn technology, processing and case supervision is applied and maintained as originated by LRH, as its 100 per cent rate, in the area they are keeping tech in. (FO 2354)

KERFUFFLE, Slang. an upset. (SH Spec 45, 6411C03)

KEYED-OUT CLEAR, 1. when you find what lock words have been tied into the GPMs in this or even an earlier lifetime and key them out (destimulate them) (untie them from the main mass) the GPMs sink back into proper alignment and cease being effective. This makes a key-out Clear. This condition is valuable because the GPMs are now confrontable one by one (not dozens by dozens) and Routine 6 can be run easily on the preclear. (HCOB 17 Oct 64 III) 2 . this is a simulated Clear, we call it a “keyed-out Clear” quite properly. But it isn’t a Clear, it’s a release. The person has been released from his reactive mind. He still has that reactive mind but he is not in it. He is just released from it. (HCOB 2 Apr 65)

KEYED-OUT OT, 1. released OT. (HCOB 30 Jun 65) 2 . the pc is still a pre-clear though a keyed-out OT. This really isn’t a thetan exterior. The thetan exterior is quite unstable and can be attained below an ordinary first stage release. Keyed-out OT is not done by routine auditing, being an offshoot of it that happens sometimes. (HCOB 28 Jun 65)

KEY-IN, v. 1. the action of recording a lock on a secondary or engram. (HCOB 23 Apr 69) —n. 1 . the first time an engram is restimulated is called a key-in. A key-in is merely a special kind of lock, the first lock on a particular engram. (SOS, Bk. 2, p. 29) 2 . a moment when the environment around the awake but fatigued or distressed individual is itself similar to the dormant engram. At that moment the engram becomes active. It is keyed-in and can thereafter be dramatized. (SOS, Bk. 2, p. 136)

KEY-OUT, v. 1. an action of the engram or secondary dropping away without being erased. (HCOB 23 Apr 69) —n. 2 . the person without knowing what the earlier instance was has had the lock vanish. That’s a kev-out. (SH Spec 122 . 6203C19)—adj. 3 . released from the stimulus-response mechanisms of the reactive mind. (PXL, p. 18) 4 . release or separation from one’s reactive mind or some portion of it. (PXL, p. 252)

KINESTHESIA, 1. by kinesthesia we perceive motion through space and time. (SOS, p. 59) 2 . weight and muscular motion. (DMSMH, p. 46)

KINETIC, something which has considerable motion. (Scn 8-80, p. 43)

KINETIC MOTION, something that’s moving. Or a potentiality of motion. (PDC 18)

KNOW BEST, a technical and admin term. In tech it refers to an auditor who in misapplying a process on a pc considers he knows more than is actually contained in the technical bulletins on the subject and uses this “know best” as a basis for altering technical procedure. In admin it refers similarly to a person who considers he has a better way of accomplishing something than is contained in the policy letters covering that subject and messes things up. Management then finds itself left with the task of correcting that person’s goofs by applying the correct standard policy to the area. In English, it is a derogatory term meaning the person is pretending to know while actually being stupid. (LRH Def. Notes)

KNOWING CAUSE, the person at cause is there because he knows he is there and because he is willingly there. The person at cause is not at cause because he does not dare be at effect. He must be able to be at effect. If he is afraid to be at effect, then he is unwilling cause and is at cause only because he is very afraid of being at effect. (SCP, p. 9)

KNOWINGNESS, 1. being certainness. (PAB 1) 2 . a capability for truth; it is not data. (PDC 47) 3 . knowingness would be self-determined knowledge. (5405C20)

KNOWLEDGE, 1. by knowledge we mean assured belief, that which is known information, instruction; enlightenment, learning; practical skill. By knowledge we mean data, factors and whatever can be thought about or perceived. (FOT, p. 76) 2 . knowledge is more than data; it is also the ability to draw conclusions. (DAB, Vol. II, p. 69) 3 . a whole group or subdivision of a group of data or speculations or conclusions on data or methods of gaining data. (Scn 0-8, p. 67)

KNOW-POINT, a know-point is senior to a viewpoint. An individual would not have dependency on space or mass or anything else. He’d simply know where he was. (PXL, p. 257)

KNOW-TO-MYSTERY SCALE, the scale of affinity from knowingness down through lookingness, emotingness, effortingness, thinkingness, symbolizingness, eatingness, sexingness and so through to not-knowingness-mystery. The know-to-sex scale was the earlier version of this scale. (PXL, p. 49)

KOT, Keeper of Tech. (FO 2354)

KRC TRIANGLE, the upper triangle in the Scn symbol. The points are K for knowledge, R for responsibility, and C for control. It is difficult to be responsible for something or control something unless you have knowledge of it. It is folly to try to control something or even know something without responsibility. It is hard to fully know something or be responsible for something over which you have no control, otherwise the result can be an overwhelm. Little by little one can make anything go right by: increasing

KNOWLEDGE on all dynamics, increasing RESPONSIBILITY on all dynamics, increasing CONTROL on all dynamics. (HCO PL 18 Feb 72)

KUCDEIOF, know, unknow, curious, desire, enforce, inhibit, none of it, false. (SH Spec 296, s308C20)

l

L , all lists have been in HCOBs as “L.” (HCOB 19 Aug 63) [In this dictionary, the Scn and Dn lists will be found under LIST.] See also CORRECTION LIST.

LACC, London Advanced Clinical Course. (HCOB 29 Sept 66)

LAM, London Auditors’ Meetings. (HCOB 29 Sept 66)

LAMBDA, 1. Dianetic Axiom 11: A life organism is composed of matter and energy in space and time, animated by theta. Symbol: Living organism or organisms will hereafter be represented by the Greek letter Lambda. (Dn Today, p. 968) 2 . a chemical heat engine existing in space and time motivated by the life static and directed by thought. (Dn Today, p. 969)

L & A, Logics and Axioms Lectures. (HCOB 29 Sept 66)

L & N, Listing and Nulling. (HCOB 20 Apr 72 II)

L&N LIST, a list of items given by a pc in response to a listing question and written down by the auditor in the exact sequence that they are given to him by the preclear. An L&N list is always done on a separate sheet. (BTB 7 Nov 72 III)

LANGUAGE, 1. the symbolization of effort. (Scn 0-8, p. 82) 2 . t h e communications of agreements and disagreements. (PDC 27) 3 . symbolized object or condition or state of being. (PDC 44)

LANGUAGE LOCKS, locks in which the main aberrative content is in terms of language. These may be considered symbolic restimulators of mest locks, which are more fundamental. (SOS Gloss)

LARGE READS, 1/3 of a dial or more at sensitivity 5 . (HCOB 24 Jan 65)

LARGE THETA BOP, a quarter of a dial to a third of the dial. (Cert, Vol. 5, No. 9, 1958)

LAST GPM, closest to PT. (SH Spec 307, 6309C17)

LATENT READ, 1 . a read which occurs later than completion of the major thought being expressed in words by the auditor. (HCOB 25 May 62) 2 . if the needle doesn’t fall or react for a second or more after the question is asked, and then reacts, this is a latent read. (HCOB 6 Jul 61)

LATER ON THE TRACK, closer to PT. (HCOB 8 Apr 63)

LAUDABLE WITHHOLD, if it’s laudable to have done it, then it’s not laudable to withhold it. All right, if it’s laudable to withhold it then it must be coupled with, “You shouldn’t ought to have done it, it shouldn’t be done.” So one of the pair of the overt or the withhold is always laudable and always desirable. And the other one is undesirable. A laudable withhold is an undesirable action. (SH Spec 100, 6201C16)

LAUGHTER, 1. Laughter plays a definite role in therapy. It is quite amusing to see a preclear, who has been haunted by an engram which contained great emotional charge, suddenly relieve it, for the situation, no matter how gruesome it was, when relieved, is in all its aspects a subject of great mirth. Laughter is definitely the relief of painful emotion. (DMSMH, p. 121) 2. this laughter is the reversing of charge residual in the locks which depended for their fear content or antagonistic content upon the basic engrams. (DTOT, p. 99)

LAW OF AFFINITY, the law of affinity might be interpreted as the law of cohesion; “affinity” might be defined as “love” in both its meanings. Deprivation of or absence of affection could be considered as a violation of the

law of affinity. Man must be in affinity with man to survive. (DMSMH, p. 106)

LAWS, the codified agreements of the people crystallizing their customs and representing their believed in necessities of conduct. (PAB 96)

LCHP, London Congress of Human Problems. (HCOB 29 Sept 66)

LCNRH, London Congress on Nuclear Radiation and Health. (HCOB 29 Sept 66)

LD, long duration. (HCOB 9 Aug 69)

LEARNING DRILL, THE, a drill used to improve the ability to study and increase the learning rate. (BTB 10 Dec 70R)

LEAVE OF ABSENCE, an authorized period of absence from a course granted in writing by a course supervisor and entered in the student’s study folder. (HCOB 19 Jun 71 III)

LECT, lecture. (HCOB 29 Sept 66)

LEFT-HAND BUTTON, a suppressor-type button. The nearlyfound-out is a left-hand button and does not necessarily read on the meter. Suppress, careful of, nearly found out, fail to reveal. They do not cause things to read, they prevent things from reading. All the other buttons cause things to read unnecessarily. Anxious about tends to be a left-hand button. Protest follows on a left-hand button so it tends to be the point where the left and right side tie together. (SH Spec 229, 6301C10)

LEG OF A PROCESS, in a process with more than one command, each command is called a “leg.” (HCOB 21 Jul 63)

L-11, New Life Rundown. (CG&AC 75) See also L9S.

L-11 EXPANDED, New Life Expansion Rundown. (CG&AC 75)

LETTING THE PC HAVE HIS WIN, a session that tries to go beyond a big dial wide drifting floating F/N only distracts the pc from his win. Big win. Any big win (F/N dial wide, cog, VGIs) gives you this kind of persistent F/N. You at least have to let it go until tomorrow and let the pc have his win. That is what is meant by letting the pc have his win. When you get one of these dial wide F/Ns, cog, VGIs, Wow! you may as well pack it up for the day. (HCOB 8 Oct 70)

LEVEL, 1. grade and level are the same thing but when one has a grade one is a pc and when one has a level one is studying its data. (HCOB 2 Apr 65) 2 . a segment of technical information or performance for any application of Scn. (Aud 72 UK) 3. Level means “that body of Scn data for that point of progress of the individual.” (Aud 72 UK) 4 . any doingness or not doingness on the pre-hav scale. Any word in the scale itself. (HCOB 7 Nov 62 III) Abbr. Lev.

LEVEL 0, see HRS.

LEVEL I, see HTS.

LEVEL II, see HCA.

LEVEL III, see HPA.

LEVEL IV, see HAA.

LEVEL V, see HVA.

LEVEL (5), STATE OF CASE, dub-in—some areas of track so heavily charged, pc is below consciousness in them. (HCOB 8 Jun 63) [For a complete list of the 8 levels of case of SOP 8-C, see STATE OF CASE SCALE.]

LEVEL VI, see HSS. [The SHSBC teaches to Level VI and results in a Class VI auditor. However Grade VI is a solo-audit grade and is not only done by a Class VI auditor but also by pcs who have attained Grade VA and have completed a special course which teaches them to solo audit.]

LEVEL VII, Level VII contains the materials necessary to totally erase the reactive mind. (SH Spec 71, 6607C26) [The Class VII Course is the course which teaches auditors to audit the power processes. Level VII or Clearing Course, as it is more often called, is done by pcs who have successfully solo audited to Grade VI Release, after which they may solo audit to Clear.]

LEVEL OF AWARENESS, by level of awareness is meant that of which a being is aware. There are about fifty-two levels of awareness from unexistence up to the state of Clear. A being who is at a level on this scale is aware only of that level and the others below it. (HCO PL 5 May 65)

LF, long fall. (HCOB 29 Apr 69)

LFBD, long fall blowdown. (HCOB 29 Apr 69)

LGC, London Group Course. (HCOB 29 Sept 66)

LIE, 1. a second postulate, statement or condition designed to mask a primary postulate which is permitted to remain. (PXL, p. 180) 2 . a statement that a particle having moved did not move, or a statement that a particle not having moved, did move. (PXL, p. 180) 3 . an alteration of time, place, event and form. (PXL, p. 187) 4 . invention with a bad connotation. (PAB 49)

LIE FACTORY, Slang. technically, a phrase contained in an engram demanding prevarication—it was originally called a fabricator. (DMSMH, p. 191)

LIE REACTION, questions originally used in Scientology only to study the needle pattern of the person being checked so that changes in it could then be judged in their true light. Some pcs for instance, get a slight fall every time any question is asked. Some get a fall only when there is heavy charge. Both can be security checked by studying the common pattern of the needle demonstrated in asking the lie reaction questions. (HCO PL 25 Mar 61)

LIFE, 1. (understanding), when we say “Life” we mean understanding, and when we say “understanding” we mean affinity, reality and communication. To understand all would be to live at the highest level of potential action and ability. Because life is understanding it attempts to understand. When it faces the incomprehensible it feels balked and baffled. (Dn 55 .!, p. 36) 2 . a fundamental axiom of Dn is that life is formed by theta compounding with mest to make a living organism. Life is theta plus mest. (SOS, Bk. 2, p. 3) 3 . a static, which yet has the power of controlling, animating, mobilizing, organizing and destroying matter, energy and space, and possibly even time. (HFP, p. 24) 4 . a thought or mind or beingness that conceives there are forms, masses, spaces, and difficulties. (HPCA-64, 5608C--) 5 . that which is posing and solving problems. (UPC 11) 6 . Life is a game consisting of freedom, barriers and purposes. (Scn 0-8, p. 119)

LIFE AND LIVINGNESS ENVIRONMENT, the workaday world of the pc. (HCOB 1 Oct 63)

LIFE CONTINUUM, 1. one individual attempting to carry on the life of another deceased individual or departed individual by means of generating in his own

body the infirmities and mannerisms of the deceased or departed individual. (9ACC-24, 5501C14) 2 . it is the restimulation of an individual’s desire to go on living when he’s dying. (5112CM28B) 3 . it is simply this: somebody fails, departs or dies and the individual then takes on the burden of this person’s habits, goals, fears, and idiosyncrasies. (5112CM28B)

LIFE REPAIR PROGRAM, handles Life areas. (HCOB 15 Jun 70) [Note the referenced HCOB outlines the steps for this type of program. ]

LIFE RUDS, as the person with out ruds makes no real gain it is wise to put ruds in “in Life.” This is done with, “In Life have you had an ARC break?” “In Life have you had a problem?” “In Life have you had a withhold?” (HCOB 16 Aug 69)

LIFE STATIC, 1. a Life static has no mass, no motion, no wave-length, no location in space or time. It has the ability to postulate and to perceive. (PXL, p. 146) 2 . the thought, soul, vital part of you which animates this mest, the body. (HCP, p. 75)

LIFE UPSET INTENSIVE, this is a five hour or so intensive. It is the ARC break routine mostly. (LRH ED 57 INT)

LIGHT OBJECTIVE PROCESSES, light objective (look outward, take attention off body) processes. (Abil Mi 244)

LIGHT PROCESSING, 1. Light processing deals with postulates and effects and can be done either on an individual or coauditing basis. (DAB, Vol. II, p. 173) 2 . includes analytical recall of conscious moments. It is intended to raise tone and increase perception and memory. (SA, p. 61)

LIMITED PROCESS, any process which makes the preclear create is a limited process. Such processes as “Tell a lie” are creative processes. (HCOB 11 Feb 60)

LIMITED TECHNIQUE, a technique which can be used only for a short time beneficially, and after a certain period of time will begin to cause deterioration. (2ACC 20B, 5312CM10)

LINE CHARGE, a prolonged spell of uncontrolled laughter or crying which may be continued for several hours. Once started a Line charge can usually be reinforced by the occasional interjection of almost any word or phrase by the auditor. The Line charge usually signals the sudden release of a large amount of charge and brings about a marked change in the case. (COHA, p. 281)

LINE LISTING, when a goal is found, you then have a number of lines. Called lines. And item by item you ask the question of these lines. You ask the question of the lines of the pc and he gives you the answer. And that is written down. And that is called line listing. And when you have finished all the lines completely there is a free needle on all of the lines. (SH Spec 195, 6309C27)

LINE PLOT, this consists of a heavy blue 13-inch (foolscap or legal) sheet of paper, kept in the pc’s folder and kept up to date every time a reliable item (or even last item “in”)is found. On this line plot one column, the left-hand one, is reserved for oppterms. The right-hand column is reserved for terms and LIne~ indicate whenever terms or oppterms are derived from each other. A reliable item is designated as such on this line plot with the symbol R.I. Nonreliable items are not designated. The date each line plot item was found is added after the item so it can be found again in the auditor’s reports without a scramble. (HCOB 8 Nov 62)

 

LINES, BASIC FOUR, (1) Who or what would want . . . ? (2) Who or what would not want . . . ? (3) Who or what would oppose . . . ? (4) Who or what would not oppose . . . ? (HCOB 7 Nov 62)

LIST, see CORRECTION LIST and L & N LIST.

LISTEN STYLE AUDITING, at Level 0 the style is Listen Style auditing. Here the auditor is expected to Listen to the pc. The only skill necessary is listening to another. Listen Style should not be complicated by expecting more of the auditor than just this: Listen to the pc without evaluating, invalidating or interrupting. (HCOB 6 Nov 64)

LISTING, 1. the auditor’s action in writing down items said by the pc in response to a question by the auditor. (HCOB 5 Dec 62) 2 . this is something Listed by the pc. The pc says it. It is from a question. The auditor asks the question, the pc then gives him items which the auditor then writes down from the pc. (Class VIII No. 11) 3 . a special procedure used in some processes where the auditor writes down items said by the preclear in response to a question by the auditor in the exact sequence that they are given to him by the preclear. (Scn AD) 4 . in Listing, today the correct L&N item must BD and F/N. (HCOB 20 Apr 72 II)

LISTING AND NULLING, 1. this is something Listed by the pc, the pc says it. It is from a question. The auditor asks the question, the pc then gives him items which the auditor then writes down from the pc. (Class VIII No. 11) 2 . you ask a question of the pc, the pc gives you item, item, item, item. The auditor writes them down and then he nulls the List. And there must only be one item which has any read in it of any kind whatsoever on that List. (Class VIII No. 11) Also see LISTING, see NULLING.

LISTING METER, a real cheap meter that was beautifully designed, but basically one that would do a power of good as far as Listing is concerned, so that you wouldn’t miss reads. (SH Spec 256, 6304C02)

LIST ONE, 1. a List of Scn items. This includes Scn, Scn organizations, an auditor, clearing, auditing, Scientologists, a session, an E-meter, a practitioner, the auditor’s name, Ron, other Scn persons, parts of Scn, past auditors, etc. This List is composed by the auditor, not the pc. (HCOB 23 Nov 62) 2 . this is the list one of Routine 2-1 2 . The Scn list is called List One. (HCOB 24 Nov 62)

LISTS, all lists have been in HCOBs as “L.” (HCOB 19 Aug 63) [Below are some of the lists which begin with L. Other Scn and Dn lists and their usages will appear alphabetically as they occur (e.g. WCCL will be found under W.)] (a) LCR=Confessional Repair List. (FBDL 245) (b) L1=List One. (HCOB 23 Aug 65) (c) L1C=List 1C, used by auditors in session when an upset occurs, or as ordered by the C/S. Handles ARC broken, sad, hopeless or nattery pcs. (HCOB 19 Mar 71) [Earlier numbered L1, L1-A and L1-B.] (d) LlR=Integrity Processing Repair List. The rule of Integrity processing is that it should always end on an F/N. When it does not F/N however (which includes F/Ning at the pc examiner) or pc is upset, gets sick, or not doing well after Integrity processing, this list must be used to repair the pc. (HCOB 8 Jan 72R) (e) LlX Hi-Lo TA List=this assessment has been developed to detect all the reasons for high and low TA. It is used when a C/S Series 53 has been done and the high or low TA persists. (HCOB 1 Jan 72RA) (f) L3B=[the Dn repair list prior to the L3RD, which revised it.] (g) L3EXD=this list includes the most frequent Dn errors and is amended for Expanded Dn only. (BTB 2 Apr 72RB II) (h) L3RD=this list includes the most frequent Dn errors. A high or low TA and a bogged case can result from failures to erase a chain of incidents. Take any read found to F/N by full repair of it per the instructions. (HCOB 11 Apr 71RA) (i) L4BR=used for assessment of all listing errors, when trouble occurs on a listing process, when TA goes high or pc gets sick or upset after a session which included listing action. (BTB 11 Aug 72RA) [Earlier numbered L4 and L4-A.] See CORRECTION LIST.

LIVE QUESTION, 1. unflat question. (HCOB 13 Dec 72R) 2. question unflat, needle reaction on a question. (HCOB 19 Oct 61)

LIVINGNESS, is going along a certain course impelled by a purpose and with some place to arrive. It consists mostly of removing the barriers in the channel, holding the edges firm, ignoring the distractions and reinforcing and re-impelling one’s progress along the channel. That’s Life. (SH Spec 57, 6504C06)

L9S, a process called L9-Short (originally called L10s but renamed for proper issue) The New Life Rundown. The New Life Rundown has exact steps. Well done it gives a new life in truth. (HCOB 17 Jun 71) [Now called L-11 per CG&AC 75 .]

LOC, locational. (BTB 20 Aug 71R II)

LOCATIONAL, 1. a process called locational. Command: “Have you got an auditing room?” Locational is only one of many spotting processes. (SCP, pp. 27-28) 2. “Locate the .” The auditor has the preclear locate the floor, the ceiling, the walls, the furniture in the room and other objects and bodies. (HCOTB 6 Feb 57) 3 . “Look at that object”. (HCOB 2 Nov 57RA)

LOCATIONAL PROCESSING, the object of locational processing is to establish an adequacy of communication terminals in the environment of the preclear. It can be run in busy thoroughfares, graveyards, confused traffic or anywhere there is or is not motion of objects and people. Commands: “Notice that (person).” (Op Bull No. 1) Abbr. Loc.

LOCATIONAL SPOTTING, one directs the pc’s attention with “You notice that (object)” all about the room and at first only occasionally includes the pc’s body and the auditor’s body in the spotting. Then the auditor, using the same process, concentrates less and less upon the room and more and more upon the auditor and the pc. It will be found that the pc will eventually find the auditor with his attention so directed. (SCP, p. 20)

LOCK, 1. an analytical moment in which the perceptics of the engram are approximated, thus restimulating the engram or bringing it into action, the present time perceptics being erroneously interpreted by the reactive mind to mean that the same condition which produced physical pain once before is now again at hand. Locks contain mainly perceptics; no physical pain and very little misemotion. (SOS, p. 112) 2 . a situation of mental anguish. It depends for its force on the engram to which it is appended. The lock is more or less known to the analyzer. It’s a moment of severe restimulation of an engram. (EOS, p. 84) 3 . those parts of the time track which contain moments the pc assoc~ates with key-ins. (HCOB 15 May 63) 4 . conscious level experiences which sort of stick and the individual doesn’t quite know why. (SH Spec 72, 6607C28)

LOCK END WORDS, words that are not in the GPMs but which, occurring later, are close in meaning to significances that are part of the GPMs and so loek into a GPM and restimulate it. They keep large parts of the reactive mind in restimulation. (LRH Def. Notes)

LOCKS, mental image pictures of non-painful but disturbing experiences the person has experienced. They depend for their force on secondaries and engrams. (HCOB 12 Jul 65)

LOCK SCANNING, one contacts an early loek on the track and goes rapidly or slowly through all such similar incidents straight to present time. One does this many times and the whole chain of locks become ineffective in influencing one. (HFP, pp. 99-100)

LOCK WORDS, words not in the GPMs but close in meaning. (HCOB 17 Oct 64 III)

LOE, London Open Evening Lectures. (HCOB 29 Sept 66)

LOGIC, 1. a gradient scale of association of facts of greater or lesser similarity made to resolve some problem of the past, present or future, but mainly to resolve and predict the future. Logic is the combination of factors into an answer. (Scn 8- 8008, p. 46) 2 . the gradient scale and comparisons of data which work out a smooth network of terminals and communication lines which deliver data in a prediction of future form or theta beingness. (Spr Lect 6, 5303CM25) 3 . primitive logic was one-valued. Everything was assumed to be the product of a divine will, and there was no obligation to decide the rightness or wrongness of anything. Most logic added up merely to the propitiation of the gods. Aristotle formulated