Jump to content

Scientology: A History of Man

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 209.6.177.176 (talk) at 03:13, 12 February 2008 (restoring material erroneously removed from introduction under mistaken notion that the introduction should not summarize the subject). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Scientology: A History of Man is a book by L. Ron Hubbard, first published in 1952 under the title What To Audit. According to the author, it provides "a coldblooded and factual account of your last sixty trillion years." It has gone through many editions since its first publication and is a key text of the Church of Scientology. The book has, however, come in for considerable ridicule from critics of Scientology for its unusual writing style and pseudoscientific claims; it has been described as "a slim pretense at scientific method ... blended with a strange amalgam of psychotherapy, mysticism and pure science fiction; mainly the latter." [1]

Publication history

The book reportedly originated in Scientology auditing sessions held in Wichita, Kansas in early 1952, involving Hubbard and his personal auditor, Perry Chapdelaine. According to Chapdelaine, Hubbard would "settle himself on a couch with a tape recorder handy and an 'auditor' who would be expected to provide appropriate feedback. In no time a flow of introspection - like the free association characteristic of a psychoanalytic session - would begin." [2] Hubbard's son, L. Ron Hubbard Jr. (otherwise known as "Nibs") and Hubbard senior's medical officer, Jim Dincalci, have both stated that the book was written under the influence of amphetamines:

LRH gave his son Nibs some amphetamines, and Nibs started talking, he said, started really going talking fast, from the speed. And he kept talking, he kept talking, and his dad kept giving him speed and all of a sudden he was talking about his history, when he was a clam and all these different situations in early Earth. And out of that came History of Man. [3]

Hubbard's account of human evolution was first released as four lectures which Hubbard delivered to Scientologists on March 10, 1952. Further lectures followed in Phoenix, Arizona in April, and in July 1952 the book What to audit; a list and description of the principle incidents to be found in a human being was published by the Phoenix-based "Scientific Press" - an imprint established by Hubbard. The same book was published under the title A History of Man by the London-based Hubbard Association of Scientologists. It was reissued in two substantially modified editions, in 1968 (minus chapter 11 of the original book and under the current title of Scientology: A History of Man) in 1988, and again in 2007, this time with a set of lectures expanding on the content. [4]

Since 1968, the book's jacket has displayed a picture of a hirsute, unkempt "caveman" dressed in a fur eating the raw meat from a thigh bone of an animal. This appears to refer to one of the past-life "incidents" described by Hubbard in the book. Many Scientology books have similar curious pictures on their jackets; according to former Scientologist Bent Corydon, their purpose is to "restimulate" past-life memories and make the book irresistible to purchasers. After such symbols were first added to the jackets of Scientology books, writes Corydon,

A special "Book Mission" was sent out to promote these books, now empowered and made irresistible by the addition of these supposedly overwhelming symbols or images. Organization staff were assured that if they simply held up one of the books, revealing its cover, that any bookstore owner would immediately order crateloads of them. A customs officer, seeing any of the book covers in one's luggage, would immediately pass one on through. [5]

Synopsis

As the original title suggests, What to Audit / A History of Man was written as a guide for Scientologist auditors, pointing out various Space opera "incidents" that are said to have occurred in all of our "past lives". According to the Church of Scientology's promotional literature, the book provides

A list and description of the principal incidents to be found in a human being. Man's prehistoric past has been the subject of much myth and superstition. Here are the facts about that past scouted, mapped and meticulously verified. These are the results of the first ever E-Meter and its use in auditing; the discovery of incidents on the track common to every being. And found to exist on case after case as demonstrated on the meter. [6]

The benefit of this, according to Hubbard in the book's introduction, is that "the blind again see, the lame walk, the ill recover, the insane become sane and the sane become saner.'

The book sets out a description of the areas to be audited. It proposes that the human body actually houses two separate entities. The most important is a thetan, the spiritual being said by Hubbard to be the "true self" of a person. According to Hubbard, this is accompanied by a 'genetic entity', or GE, which is "a sort of low-grade soul" located more or less in the centre of the body, and which passes to another body when the current body dies.[1]

Hubbard claims in the book that the thetan and the genetic entity had existed for trillions of years, having experienced vast numbers of past lives between them. During the course of their existence they endured numerous and often traumatic "incidents", which Hubbard claimed were the cause of many present-day ailments. The book sets out to catalogue these incidents and provide advice on how to deal with them. The following is a summary of the thirteen chapters of the book.

  • Chapter 1. Outlines the three areas to be audited: the subject's present life; the "genetic entity", a racial memory passed down through evolutionary history; and the "whole track" (entire history) and individual periods within the existence of the "theta being" or thetan.
  • Chapter 2. Identifies possible target areas within a person: "cellular injuries" relating to physical damage to the body's cells; matters affecting the genetic entity; "injected entities" which are synthetic spirits of some kind (this probably formed the basis of Hubbard's later doctrine of body thetans); and the "theta being" or thetan.
  • Chapter 3. Describes the present life and key incidents within it on which auditors should focus, such as the "constipation chain" and "crying chain" of traumatic incidents or engrams.
  • Chapter 4. Deals with painful memories recorded by the "genetic entity" during its lives as various creatures in earlier stages of evolution.
  • Chapter 5. Describes the "MEST Clear" as Homo Novis one step beyond Homo Sapiens.
  • Chapter 6. Sets out key characteristics of the "theta-being", explaining that a human being is a tripartite composite of a material body, its genetic entity and a theta-being trapped and degraded into association with them. Hubbard explains that the goal of Scientology is to rehabilitate the "theta-being" and restore its original, virtually unlimited, powers.
  • Chapter 7. Describes the complete history ("whole track") of the theta-being and its various "spirals of existence" each comprising many individual lives. The "whole track" contains numerous pictures or "facsimiles" of incidents which happened to the thetan and to other thetans.
  • Chapter 8. Details auditing methods for dealing with incidents that occurred on the "theta line", i.e. events that took place before the theta being occupied the current body: Attention Unit Running, the Theta Body, magnetic fields, force fields, retractors, Black Band waves, invalidation.
  • Chapter 9. Deals with the specific Space Opera incidents needed to attain "a voluntary and controlled separation between the MEST body and the theta-body": The Jack-in-the-Box, the Obsession, Borrowing, Nipping, Blanketing, The Halver, Fac One, the Coffee Grinder, Before Earth Incident, Before MEST Incident, the Joiner, the Ice Cube, Between Lives Incidents, the Emanator, the Double Body, Theta Traps, the Body Builder Incident, the Jiggler, the Whirler, the Bouncer, the Spinner, the Rocker, the Boxer, the Faller, the Education, and the Fly Trap (also known as the Bubble Gum Incident).
  • Chapter 10. Describes generalized incidents: the Motivator, the Overt Act, the DED, the DEDEX, the Misassist, and the Degrader.
  • Chapter 11. Describes incidents of "transfer" i.e. of leaving, or more usually of entering, a MEST body.
  • Chapter 12. Deals with "Additional Incident Descriptions": Glare Fights, Mirrors, Exploding Facsimiles, Implosions, The Capper Incident, The Iron Maiden Incident, and Theta Trap Posts.
  • Chapter 13. A step-by-step breakdown of Technique 88, involving "symbological processing" and exteriorization.

Key incidents

The book describes numerous "incidents" that, according to Hubbard, occurred to the thetan or the genetic entity in past lives. Although commonly misinterpreted as an alternative theory of evolution, the purpose of the incidents list is not to suggest that clams begat sloths who begat cavemen. What Hubbard claims is that we have buried memories of past lives as clams, sloths, and cavemen, and that those memories - or engrams - affect us today. Hubbard also presented the vague concept of the "genetic entity" which he claims progressed through each of these prehuman forms before finally ending up in a homo sapiens body.

These stages of biological history, some typified by an animal and others typified by other items, were marked by traumatic incidents which have to be "run out" using an E-meter.

Hubbard stressed that these incidents are not limited to the list below: for example, he notes "there are many steps and incidents between the Birds and the Sloth". The list simply arbitrarily names some incidents that Hubbard found particularly worth commenting on:

  • The Atom, "complete with electronic rings". According to Hubbard, "There seems to be a 'hole in space' immediately ahead of the Atom", which generates a particular state of mind in a person.
  • The Cosmic Impact, based on the premise that "As physicists tell us, cosmic rays enter the body in large numbers and occasionally explode in the body. Very early on the track the impact of a cosmic ray and its explosion is very destructive to the existing organism."
  • The Photon Converter, essentially an early photosynthetic organism such as an alga or plankton. Hubbard deemed the Photon Converter to be responsible for fears of "light and dark, the storms of the sea, the fight to keep from rolling into the surf."
  • The Helper, an incident of mitosis (cell division) in some unnamed organism which was "a confusing area for the [genetic entity] which therein has much cause for misidentification."
  • The Clam, one of a number of incidents between The Helper and The Weeper. The others include seaweed and "jellyfish incidents [which] are quite remarkable for their occasional aberrative force". Encounters between jellyfish and cave walls are held to be responsible for the emergence of "a shell as in the clam." The Clam itself is "a deadly incident" involving a "scalloped-lip, white- shelled creature" which suffered from a severe split personality or "double-hinge problem. One hinge wishes to stay open, the other tries to close, thus conflict occurs." According to Hubbard, the hinges of the Clam "later become the hinges of the human jaw" and the Clam's method of reproducing using spores is said to be responsible for toothache. In one of the most famous passages of the book, Hubbard advised that
Should you desire to confirm this, describe to some uninitiated person the death of a clam without saying what you are describing. "Can you imagine a clam sitting on the beach, opening and closing its shell very rapidly?" (Make a motion with your thumb and forefinger of a rapid opening and closing). The victim may grip his jaws with his hand and feel quite upset. He may even have to have a few teeth pulled: At the very least he will argue as to whether or not the shell stays open at the end or closed. And he will, with no hint of the death aspect of it, talk about the "poor clam" and he will feel quite sad emotionally.
He goes on to warn the reader that "your discussion of these incidents with the uninitiated in Scientology can cause havoc. Should you describe the "clam" to someone, you may restimulate it in him to the extent of causing severe jaw pain. One such victim, after hearing about a clam death, could not use his jaws for three days."
  • The Weeper/Boohoo incident deals with a mollusk that rolled in the surf for half a million years, pumping sea water out of its shell as it breathed, hence its name. Weepers had 'trillions of misadventures', prominent among them the anxiety caused by trying to gulp air before being swamped by the next wave. 'The inability of a pre-clear to cry,' Hubbard explained, 'is partly a hang-up in the Weeper. He is about to be hit by a wave, has his eyes full of sand or is frightened about opening his shell because he may be hit.'
  • The Volcanoes occurred at several points - violent volcanic eruptions which choked the genetic entity's host organism with choking sulphurous smoke. Hubbard suggests that these eruptions hastened the progress of evolution, "for there is a lack of real reason why this evolution should not be continuing on even today." Volcanoes, believed by Scientologists to be used by Xenu to murder billions of thetans, are a prominent symbol frequently used in Scientology.
  • Being Eaten is the next class of incident on the list. "In that so many fish and animals were equipped with so many teeth, it is inevitable that somebody somewhere on the track would have been eaten." And so it is. for there are a great many "being eaten" engrams. Technique 80 is recommended by Hubbard for dealing with these problems. "Few auditors, in the absence of Technique 80, have been able to run these incidents".
  • The Birds were a traumatic incident caused when "birds of a very crude construction developed a taste for clams". As a result of bird attacks on ancestral clams, modern man suffers from "falling sensations, indecision and other troubles."
  • "The Sloth", says Hubbard, "is a chain of incidents and misadventures" covered under this general name. According to Hubbard, the Sloth was "slow and easily attacked and he had bad times falling out of trees when hit by snakes, falling off cliffs when attacked by baboons."
  • The Ape is the name of the next incident, by which time the genetic entity was inhabiting an "agile and intelligent" host. "The Ape is usually an area of overt acts against animals and incidents of protecting young". (pg.54)
  • The Piltdown Man was "a creature not an ape, yet not entirely a Man." It was not "the real Piltdown Man" but had some similarities. It resulted in a variety of psychological conditions in modern humans, including "obsessions about biting efforts to hide the mouth and early familial troubles." The Piltdown Man was characterized by "freakish acts of strange 'logic,' of demonstrating dangerous on one's fellows, of eating one's wife and other somewhat illogical activities. The PILTDOWN teeth were ENORMOUS and he was quite careless as to whom and what he bit and often very much surprised at the resulting damage."
  • The Caveman was the final stage of evolution prior to modern man. The genetic entity's host still had marital trouble, though not quite on the level of "eating one's wife". Instead, "one crippled one's woman to keep her [at home] or poisoned one's man for having kept her there." Memories of this era were responsible, in Hubbard's view, for "any condition of interpersonal relationships" such as "jealousy and overt acts around it, strangling, smashing in heads with rocks, quarrels about homes, tribal rebukes, pack instincts."

Hubbard also described numerous incidents of "implanting" by hostile alien races which caused traumatic memories in the thetan. This formed part of what soon became an elaborate cosmology of alien civilizations, interstellar dictators and brainwashing implants - collectively, matters that Hubbard described as "Space opera".

The book's role in Scientology

As Hubbard himself said in the book, A History of Man was written as a technical aid for experienced Scientologists. It is available from the Church's online bookstore [1] along with a History of Man Extension Course and Pack designed to supplement the book. According to ex-Scientologist Jon Atack, "The material in the book is hardly encountered in contemporary auditing, but is still required reading for the second secret "OT" level of Scientology." [1] Christopher Evans notes that the book "marks a transition point at which the technically oriented Dianetics became the philosophically oriented Scientology." [2]

Critical views

A History of Man has attracted a good deal of comment from critical reviewers and analysts of Scientology. As Marco Frenschkowski notes, it is a "very strange book easily ridiculed" [7] and, indeed, many have done just this. Ex-Scientologist Jon Atack describes it as "among the most bizarre of Hubbard's works, [which] deserves the cult status that some truly dreadful science fiction movies have achieved".[1] The Anderson Report of 1965 comments that "To say it is an astonishing document does not adequately convey the peculiar qualities or contents of "The History of Man ... For compressed nonsense and fantasy it must surpass anything theretofore written".[8] Hubbard's unofficial biographer Russell Miller describes it in similar terms as "one of Hubbard's most bizarre works and possibly the most absurd book ever written", which "invited the derision which was inevitably forthcoming." [9] Bent Corydon, a former Scientologist, criticises A History of Man on Scientological grounds, pointing out that Hubbard's "imaginings, opinions, or observations" are presented as established facts - in effect, instructing the Scientologist in what he should remember, rather than letting him find out for himself. [10]

Apart from the unusual style of narration, which Miller describes as having "wobbled uncertainly between schoolboy fiction and a pseudo-scientific medical paper",[9] many of Hubbard's claims in A History of Man are incompatible with established scientific knowledge. Particular problems include:

  • According to Hubbard's introduction to the book, it puts forward "a coldblooded and factual account of your last sixty trillion years." Sixty trillion years would be roughly 4,300 times the general scientific consensus on the age of the universe.
  • In his description of the Volcanoes incident, Hubbard suggests that evolution is no longer continuing and that there is a "lack of real reason why this evolution should not be continuing on even today." In fact, human evolution is still occurring. [11]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b c d Jon Atack, A Piece of Blue Sky, p. 131. Lyle Stuart, 1990
  2. ^ a b Christopher Evans, Cults of Unreason, pp. 42-43. Farrar, Straus and Giroux (1974)
  3. ^ "Secret Lives: L. Ron Hubbard". Channel 4 Television, November 19, 1997. online version
  4. ^ Church of Scientology, "Complete List of Scientology and Dianetics Books and Materials of 1952".
  5. ^ Corydon, Bent. L. Ron Hubbard: Madman or Messiah?, p. 361. Lyle Stuart, Inc. (1987)
  6. ^ Church of Scientology online store. Retrieved August 19, 2006
  7. ^ Marco Frenschkowski, L. Ron Hubbard and Scientology: An annotated bibliographical survey of primary and selected secondary literature. Marburg Journal of Religion, Volume 4, No.1 (July 1999)
  8. ^ Anderson Report, chapter 11
  9. ^ a b Russell Miller, Bare-Faced Messiah, p. 203 (Michael Joseph, 1987)
  10. ^ Bent Corydon, L. Ron Hubbard: Messiah or Madman?, p. 300 (Lyle Stuart Inc, 1987)
  11. ^ The Talk.origins Archive - Claim CB928.2: Humans still evolving

References

  • Hubbard, L. Ron (1952). What to Audit. Phoenix, Arizona: Scientific Press.
  • Hubbard, L. Ron (1968). Scientology: A History of Man (reprint ed.). Los Angeles: American Saint Hill Organization.
  • Hubbard, L. Ron (1988). Scientology: A History of Man (reprint ed.). Los Angeles: Bridge Publications. ISBN 0-88404-306-1.

External links

Template:Scientologyfooter