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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Highfructosecornsyrup (talk | contribs) at 02:57, 7 December 2006 (→‎title change). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

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Neutrality in "Non-Scientologists and space opera"

If one crefully reads the only paragraph in this article that talks about outside scientology opinion one finds that it is written in a way that disguises its lack of neutrality: out of roughly 1500 characters of this paragraph only 100 deal with non scientology opinion. one sentence of content is actually related to what the paragraph is about, while the remaining 11 sentences talk about other content, not related to Non-Scientologists in any way. i therefore mark this article with the Neutrality Disputed Flag.

Sheer waste of time

This does not even deserve to be called CHURCH..This is nothing but science fiction. It is surprising how many fools follow this.

The same could be said of any religion.
Most scriptures are better written. As sci-fi, this is some pretty inane (albeit trippy) stuff. It's like he wasn't even trying. At any rate, this isn't the forum for a critique; let's try and keep this article's talk page uncluttered, 'kay? 82.166.53.176 15:01, 8 June 2006 (UTC)[reply]

True Encyclopedic Format

Some of the order of the sections needs to be brought together for a logical focus. Right now it is somewhat haphazard, with juicy bits pushed out of sequence to the detriment of article integrity.

Also an analysis of the actual point of contention from a NPOV vs is important. See the version with the section (The Roots of Space Opera) that section is informative, logical, and should included.

Stating "Space Opera forms a major portion of Scientology beliefs" is an opinion. It is an opinion that might be well founded but it is an opinion and not an opinion that any qualified professional person has stated. Qualified professionals would be Scholars, Doctors of Divinity and such. Persons of that education and level of competence have been queried and they have written their professional opinions about Scientology. May I provide the link? None of their opinions include "Space opera forms a major portion (or even a minor portion) of Scientology beliefs" That statement is purely the opinion of the author of the article. It is not documented, it is not stated as an opinion and yet no one takes the slightest hint of responsibility for it. That's just wrong, whether supported by Wikipedia or not. It might even be legally actionable by the COS unless stated as an opinion. Terryeo 23:06, 13 December 2005 (UTC)[reply]
Please heed the advice given to you on Talk:Scientology and adhere to the official Wikipedia policy of not making legal threats. We can discuss this issue rationally without anyone trying to bully their POV into the article. If you are arguing that the Space Opera is neither a major nor a minor portion of Scientology beliefs, then are you saying that it isn't a belief at all? If that's the case, then what is it? -Silence 07:10, 14 December 2005 (UTC)[reply]
I have read and understand not making legal threats and thank you for once again restating what ChrisO earlier told me :) I mean to put space opera into a context because an understanding of what Scientology is would include things like this. Scientology has beliefs. Basically it believes that humans are capable of knowing. On this single starting point the rest of it rests. The controvery arises when people view informations which are bonafide Scientology informations, but take them out of context without understanding the significance of such bits and pieces. Yes, there is space opera and it comprises maybe 5000 words of text out of 25 million words of text. That's my rough guess at it. Terryeo 23:55, 14 December 2005 (UTC)[reply]

Title

Excellent article! The title may need some work ... it sounds silly. It comes from a POV that this is remarkable. How does "Space Opera in Scientology doctrine" sound to Scientologists? Is "Opera" normally capitalised? - David Gerard 6 July 2005 22:47 (UTC)

Let me tell you David Gerard, I am a Scientologist who is laughing uproariously. LOL. In maybe 25 million words of text, a stack of books higher than a basketball player's head there might be thirty or forty or even a hundred pages of space opera. But let me ask this. If anyone thinks for a moment any of LOL, any of space opera is true and important, just exactly how do you think Hubbard ever came up with it as real information? LOL Terryeo 14:55, 31 December 2005 (UTC)[reply]
Yes, I'll go along with that... "Opera" shouldn't be capitalised; Hubbard doesn't use it as a proper noun, more as a descriptive noun. -- ChrisO 6 July 2005 23:24 (UTC)
Excellent article, ChrisO! The title doesn't bother me a bit. Hubbard certainly used the term often and freely, so I think it's an appropriate, natural title. Calicocat 6 July 2005 23:32 (UTC)
I meant the original title, "Space aliens in Scientology doctrine". "Space opera" is indeed a term Hubbard used a lot - David Gerard 8 July 2005 09:55 (UTC)
The second line of the article states: "It forms a major element of the beliefs of Scientology." This is simply false information. Scientology's most basic belief is: "If it is true for you, it is true, period." This means that any information should not become a belief. You should weigh, measure and decide for yourself whether anything you read anywhere is true or false. This isn't even a belief, but only good sense. Scientology can be said to have beliefs and Doctors of Divinity and others have written their professional opinions on them, but those beliefs are not of this nature. Any individual might or might not find Space Opera to be information useful to him. It is not a major element of the beliefs of Scientology. May I refer you to Scientology's stated beliefs here? Terryeo 04:12, 12 December 2005 (UTC)[reply]
So you're saying that the "Space opera" beliefs cannot be beliefs because the Church of Scientology claims that if an adherent of Scientology doesn't believe in it, it's simply not true, and if an adherent does believe in it, it magically transforms into a hard, cold fact? Sadly, if true, all of this is just another belief of Scientology, and fails to change the definition of the word "belief" from "Something believed or accepted as true, especially a particular tenet or a body of tenets accepted by a group of persons." to "Something believed or accepted as true that is not the space opera in Scientology doctrine." Once that change in definition occurs, you'll have more ground to stand on. -Silence 07:15, 14 December 2005 (UTC)[reply]
Well, I see you are attempting to ask a serious question so I'll try to answer in the same vein. When a person reads they assimilate what the page says. Then when they have duplicated what the page says they can combine that with what they know. Example, a guy knows addition, reads about subtraction, adds it to his knowledge, and so on. There is this tiny step in there, after he has duplicated the information and before it becomes part of his knowledge. At that point he can classify the information he duplicated by reading as "immediately useable", "never going to be useable" or somewhere in between. Scientology's spells this very obvious situation out by saying frequently and often: "If it is true for you, it is true period." And the 20 million (however many) words that make up Scientology should be examined in that light, I think any Scientologist would agree with what I just said. One might believe an individual piece of information and the next Scientologist not believe that. A lot of Scientology information is immediately understandable and useable. Myself, I'm not able to easily look 75 millions of years ago and see what was going on. But I have talked with Scientologists able, at least for a while, who were able to do that sort of thing. What they perceived at the time was real for them. From my point of view it is information. I don't know it to be true and won't defend it. On the other hand, should I become able to look through time and space, it might be information helpful to me. I know this responds to you, but I'm not sure it makes sense to you. Can I be more direct or responsive? Terryeo 15:14, 31 December 2005 (UTC)[reply]

Featured Article push

Nice one. I think we can get this up to FAC status in a week if we try hard. Maybe run it past Peer Review as well - David Gerard 7 July 2005 00:51 (UTC)

Chris, this version of the article is even better - a featured article standard already. VWD :-) --NicholasTurnbull 7 July 2005 00:54 (UTC)

I've just nominated it for Wikipedia:Peer review. Let's see what the horrified masses make of it - David Gerard 8 July 2005 09:53 (UTC)

Good overview, though not as outrageously insane as Xenu (I was pulling my hair when I was reading that). I have two small comments to make: Do you think Space opera in Scientology would be a more concise title? Also, about the sentence beginning with, "Many science-fictional references...": Wouldn't Hubbard's view of these be more like similarities or parallels than references? CanadianCaesar 22:46, 10 July 2005 (UTC)[reply]
Maybe. I've made your title a redirect, fwiw. You can of course make that change yourself :-) - David Gerard 15:05, 11 July 2005 (UTC)[reply]
Yes, I know, but I know nothing of Scientology, or the terms they use. CanadianCaesar 01:31, 12 July 2005 (UTC)[reply]
Count yourself lucky. (/me sporks own brain out) - David Gerard 10:48, 12 July 2005 (UTC)[reply]

Cross your fingers. I've nominated it for the front page. -- Anonymous

Did it ever make the front page?--218.223.193.144 11:14, 7 September 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Intro

I've moved a general para on space opera from Xenu to the intro. Could do with some untangling, though - David Gerard 15:07, 11 July 2005 (UTC)[reply]

Consider it untangled. :-) -- ChrisO 22:15, 11 July 2005 (UTC)[reply]

Article title

Would Space opera (Scientology) be a better title? Note that Category:Scientology beliefs and practices already includes several examples of common words with "(Scientology)" added to point out that we're talking about the Scientology term - David Gerard 10:48, 12 July 2005 (UTC)[reply]

The article might work if it didn't state a completely false and misleading statement in its introduction. Space opera does not compose a major portion of Scientology's beliefs. Mr. Hubbard makes a few statements about space opera. in a stack of material 10 feet high, maybe 100 pages mention space opera. Whether an individual believes it or not is not in any way important in day to day, nor does it direct an individual in any way. Further, those Professional religious persons who have written professional opinions about Scientology do not view it as an important nor central belief and don't mention its value in their opinions. Terryeo 06:23, 14 December 2005 (UTC)[reply]
But all this space opera stuff is actually the meat of what you're paying for at higher levels. It makes sense that Scientology's major revenue generator = a lot of their core beliefs. Honestly, this really is the basis for pretty much everything Scientologists believe in - why else are there e-Meters? I think you're confusing the fact that it costs a boatload of money to find this stuff out with "does not compose a major portion." This is the BEDROCK of Scientology. Nice try though :)

Peer review suggestions

[below was content of Wikipedia:Peer review/Space opera in Scientology doctrine as at 21:51, 18 July 2005 (UTC)]

A new article started by User:ChrisO, and already a masterpiece of understatement. Xenu (already a feature) is just the start of it. I'll probably go through housekeeping (detailed list of references at the end, etc.), but we're very interested in hearing of larger structural problems anyone can see. - David Gerard 8 July 2005 09:49 (UTC)

  • Buhhh... literally science-fictology. Almost like reading the old E. E. "Doc" Smith books. What can I say, it's entertaining and slightly amusing to read, but also a little sad. The trillion trillion years bit threw me a tad. Are those dates for real? Structurally it looks fine to me. :) — RJH 8 July 2005 15:49 (UTC)
    • Yes, those dates are real. Scientology believes that the universe has moved in cycles, existing for much longer than the 8 to 20 billion years proposed by scientists; while this is often hypothesized by theoreticians in the field of astronomy (Big Bang to Big Crunch to Big Bang again?), Scientologists apparently accept it as a hard-and-fast tenet of their faith. - Anonymous, 2.24 pm MST 15 July 2005
  • I'm glad to see all of the references, because I'd have a hard time believing anyone proposed this stuff was true otherwise. Some minor issues:
  • If I remember the relevant parts of Wikipedia's Manual of Style, quotations should not appear in italics, unless the words are italicized in the original.
  • The way Hubbard used "Space opera" in Scientology needs elaborating on -- including the fact that while this formed part of his secret Advanced Teachings, I believe he also used this as the plot for a movie script he tried to sell.
  • (Less seriously) Has anyone ever commented on the similarity between the implanting of "engrams" in the thetas & the premise behind Mystery Science Theater 3000? (The chief host is the unwilling subject of a mad scientist, who is subjected to endless exposure to a series of bad B-movies to determine how these can drive the subject mad, & use this information to make himself ruler of the world.) -- llywrch 8 July 2005 20:54 (UTC)
"unconscious recollection of events" ... "unconscious recollection of events" It's jarring to read the same four words again after only 150 words of space in between. Could one set be rephrased? lots of issues | leave me a message 22:46, 14 July 2005 (UTC)[reply]
Ooh crikey, that one's my fault. Fixed - David Gerard 21:44, 18 July 2005 (UTC)[reply]

OK, I'm nominating this one for FAC now. Peer Review has been most helpful. Thank you! - David Gerard 21:49, 18 July 2005 (UTC)[reply]

Featured Article comments

[below was content of Wikipedia:Featured article candidates/Space opera in Scientology doctrine as at 21:40, 25 July 2005 (UTC)]

Another masterpiece of understatement from ChrisO (who wrote about half of Xenu). It's a fairly obscure subject ... but Xenu, which one FAC objection thought would be "too obscure", is now enormously popular in the blogosphere [1] [2] and is quoted in most of the recent press about Tom Cruise's proselytising behaviour (unattributed, but the phrasings are pretty distinctive). I think this has potential for enormous popularity. So it's a good thing it's well-written and has its references, isn't it. It went through peer review just recently, which helped a lot. I now open it to you to tell us what shrubberies (nice ones, mind you) it needs to be a feature. We've just started WikiProject Scientology too, by the way, so expect more of these - David Gerard 22:09, 18 July 2005 (UTC)[reply]

  • Support. Excellent, comprehensive, well-referenced, the mechanical gorilla is a high point. Sadly, there is only one really good illustration—the DC-8—but that problem is inherent in the subject, no doubt. Great stuff! Bishonen | talk 23:42, 18 July 2005 (UTC)[reply]
  • Support, would do well with better illustrations, but it is indeed comprehensive and well referenced. Phoenix2 23:46, July 18, 2005 (UTC)
  • Object. The image Image:Fangio moss monza.jpg is claimed as fair use, but I don't think it can be used in the article under fair use. --Carnildo 17:53, 19 July 2005 (UTC)[reply]
    • It was probably fair use in the original article it was uploaded for, but yeah, it's been removed now. Images were a particularly difficult one for this article (though the gorilla is a good photo, and the Himalayas shot is spectacular - click on the image and check it out!) - suggestions are most welcomed - David Gerard 12:46, 20 July 2005 (UTC)[reply]
  • Support. Great work. The only thing I can say is really? You've really got all those sources and they really say all that? It all more or less falls in the category of the Fishman affidavits stuff I have read, so I believe you, but this stuff is still really hard to believe that people would really buy into it. Specifically the intro could use some citations, especially for this "It forms a major element of the beliefs of Scientology" and the next sentence. That may be really obvious to you, but it seems a central point in the article. Keep up the good work. - Taxman Talk 18:38, July 19, 2005 (UTC)
  • Support. Agree with Taxman. Anville 02:02, 20 July 2005 (UTC)[reply]
  • Weak Support, although the article itself is good, sections are of good size, there are too few pictures coming with the article. Deryck C. 09:18, 20 July 2005 (UTC)[reply]
  • Suport, for all the reasons listed above. WegianWarrior 09:37, 20 July 2005 (UTC)[reply]
  • Suport. pamri 03:50, July 23, 2005 (UTC)
  • comment Could audio pronunciations be added? lots of issues | leave me a message 23:56, 23 July 2005 (UTC)[reply]
  • weak object. Some of this is good stuff, but some of the sections (e.g. most of the "goals") are so short that they should be combined, expanded, or removed altogether. Right now, some of them have virtually no useful information. Incidentally, it should be explained what a "goal" is. Dave (talk) 15:27, July 24, 2005 (UTC)
    • I don't recommend combining the goals and incidents - the article effectively provides a catalogue of the principal such events that Hubbard describes. However, I agree with your point about explaining what the goals are, and I've done this now. -- ChrisO 20:58, 24 July 2005 (UTC)[reply]

Clarify the goals (FA request)

Just after the FA request was closed, Dave above added:

  • Could you add a descriptions of the confusion the goals allegedly cause? For example, if I'm supposed ""To End", "To be Dead", "To be Asleep", "To be Solid", "To be Sexual" and so on," what problems would that cause in me today? Why is it important to "clear" all of these? If this is added, I think I'll be ready to support. Dave (talk) 14:00, July 26, 2005 (UTC)

- David Gerard 14:53, 27 July 2005 (UTC)[reply]

Image is on the Main page but doesn't show on the Article page. hydnjo talk 02:29, 10 September 2005 (UTC)[reply]

There was a problem with the image wiki-format. I have corrected it. Autopilots 02:46, September 10, 2005 (UTC)

Now it's on the article page and not the main page. RSpeer 06:20, September 10, 2005 (UTC)

User:Raul654 believes that there is a problem with the image servers. Hopefully, it will be resolved soon. Autopilots 06:48, September 10, 2005 (UTC)

After my thoughtless deletion which was reverted the image still does not appear (at least for me) either on the article page or on the main page. Lucifer(sc) 15:39, 10 September 2005 (UTC)[reply]

Keep reloading the page until it does :-) I've left an HTML comment in the source for the next person who think's it's just a dead image ... - David Gerard 20:07, 10 September 2005 (UTC)[reply]

Weird.

Gotta say, this is too strange for even the kookiest kook. - 211.30.181.143 02:39, 10 September 2005 (UTC)[reply]

Strange, yes. Keep in mind that the clams used to have to cough up about half a million bucks to get to the part where elron sprung this on 'em. Back when they first decided to RMGROUP alt.religion.scientology, I'm sure they weren't expecting that everybody in the world would be able to find out all about this pile of hogwash.
I'm not giving you support, I was just trying to draw attention to the image; now you'll deleted this whole page????207.214.244.139 07:59, 10 September 2005 (UTC)[reply]

If Scientology wasn't such a pernicious cult, and the logic behind the stories (or would they be myths since it's ostensibly religious) wasn't so silly and nonsensical, I'd say they have one of the most interesting and coolest religious histories of any other religion. Still it's sad that people actually spend their life savings (I heard it's the $500k level this is taught at?) to hear stories they could go pick up at a book store for $10, and if it makes the story more fun to actually believe it's true, just use L.R. Hubbard's reasoning: I mean it's much easier and makes just as much sense to say that a good non-scientology affiliated $10 Space Opera genre book is an unconcious manifestation of true events than having to hear Hubbard's 3rd rate sci-fi style story for $500k and believing it's true. Maybe it's just easier to believe in something you invested half a million dollars in. --Brentt 06:42, 28 September 2005 (UTC)[reply]

What a delightful article

I am so glad this article was featured. I might have missed it otherwise. It shows just how impressive the unvarnished facts can be -- much more effective than any argument against them. And, even more important, it shows how the beliefs of any religion look to a non-believer. Compare the beliefs of Scientology, for example, to the story about the big boat with all the animals in it. --Anonymous

Yeah, they're both silly myths, but promulgators of the flood myth have pretty much left their vicious adolescent history behind them a couple of centuries ago. These days, you only occasionally hear about the Xtians offing someone in an exorrcism when they should have consulted a competent psychiatrist instead. --Anonymous
The easiest way to discourage someone interested in scientology from getting into it is to get a hold of their advanced teachings and showing them what kind of kookiness they are actually getting into. The webmaster of skepdic.com made an intersting observation about these sorts of things, not an exact quote but the idea was this: at first these kinds of cults, or religions, or organizations, or whatever you want to call them, get people intersted by presenting knowledge, which most people who have a secondary education, and paid attention, learned as basic psychology and philosophy, as the religion's own ideas. So people are at first fascinated by these "insights" and think there must be something to the religion. When they get to the higher levels it makes it easier to swallow since a trust as already been established in the mosr mundane lower levels.
They also use another intersting tactic: I took the so called "IQ" test (which it is not really)at the CoS headquarters in Hollywood once. (I stayed the night with a friend who happened to live down the street and we were bored in the morning.) The questions they ask are full of Scientology jargon that nobody who hasn't taken the courses could expect to know ("wax enthusiastic" is one of the most often used ones).Inevitably anyone not already initiated into Scientology is going to be left with a lot of "room for improvement." People who don't know it's a real IQ test will think they are stupid because they think it's a real IQ test, so they take the courses, thier supposed "IQ" score improves and then they think Scientology is making them smarter, when really the courses just made the familiar with the jargon. --Brentt 07:07, 28 September 2005 (UTC)[reply]

Fun and tremendously informative, both as a discussion of Scientological views and as a historical slice of what ideas were cropping up in science fiction at the time Hubbard began writing about Scientology. One criticism though -- in the timeline, many of the date ranges are given from longest ago to most recent (which seems to me most logical for a timeline presented in chronological order), but almost half of them are given, and ordered, from most recent to longest ago. I'm reluctant to reorganize these myself as there may be a very good doctrinal reason for the disparity (was time travel involved in any incidents?) ... but I wonder if a more informed author could either make the list more consistent or else explain why the disparity exists? --207.216.237.40 05:17, 8 November 2005 (UTC)[reply]

Oh yeah!

Oh yeah, I fixed it! Now who's the man? I can't hear you, WHO IS THE MAN?! Thank you.

cool-RR.

Excellent article

This article is a shining example of NPOV and is about as good as an article could get. Much thanks to the writers. Paul 19:50, 10 September 2005 (UTC)[reply]

This article is one of the funniest things I ever read. Enough so I was pretty confident it was a joke at first. I'm still uncertain that it really isn't a joke, but I imagine when any belief is relatively new it looks peculiar. I know the Druze's actual beliefs seemed very weird to early Muslims. Anyway I just hope you guys don't get sued:)--T. Anthony 10:01, 18 September 2005 (UTC)[reply]

Great Article- I’d like more on the church’s financial structure.

I don’t know if it’s openly known but it would be great to have an article about how the money flows in the church of scientology. To answer questions along this line:

  1. Is there a central board of directors? If so who are they and what exactly do they do.
  2. I there a single individual on top or a family? Who?
  3. From what I understand the church has assets and investments worth in billions of dollars. Where or how is the money invested?
  4. With that kind of money there must be major financial planning. Who is in charge and how is it distributed thought out the organization?
  5. Does the money stay at the colleted church or is it centralized at a main location?
  6. Do they have collection goals? What things require members to pay and how much do they cost?
  7. As I understand there is a larger number of members on the payroll, who, why, and how much?

I am guessing with the amount of money they deal with it should not be to difficult to find out investments, who the people involved at the upper level are. Basically who is on top of scientology, a group of individuals? A family? A single person? Who are they and a little bit about them.

I'm assuming you've had a look at the articles on Scientology, Church of Scientology, Scientology controversy, and some of the others in Wikipedia's Scientology category. Those articles have some information about the church's finances and powerful figures such as David Miscavige. If you feel they're lacking in the information you're looking for it might be a good idea to bring it up on the talk pages of those particular articles, as this one concerns the role of space opera and isn't really the place for detail on some of the things you mention. Having said that, the people who work on our Scientology articles are bound to come across your comment here. — Trilobite 23:04, 10 September 2005 (UTC)[reply]
That's actually a fantastic idea for an article. Hmm ... - David Gerard 01:19, 11 September 2005 (UTC)[reply]

The Helatrobus Implants - misplaced comment?

This sentence is in the Scientology and science fiction section:

"Many science-fictional references can be found in Hubbard's Scientology-related works. Scientologists could find themselves living in "robot bodies" in past lives, being killed by "zap guns", living aboard spaceships or flying "space wagons" capable of travelling "a trillion light years per day". ("The Helatrobus Implants") "

What is the parenthetical reference at the end supposed to mean? It seems like it might be an orphan from some past edit, as it doesn't seem to connect at all to either the sentence before or after, nor does it look like a citation... . Blurble 15:34, 12 September 2005 (UTC)[reply]

It's a reference to the lecture in which those things are described by Hubbard. -- ChrisO 19:08, 12 September 2005 (UTC)[reply]

removing an uncited introduction sentence here for citing and discussion

The sentence: "It forms a major element of the beliefs of Scientology." isn't cited. According to WP:CITE#When_there_is_a_factual_dispute I have removed the factually disputed information to this discussion page for discussion and citing. According to the article: "space opera was the term used by Scientology founder L. Ron Hubbard to describe extraterrestrial civilizations and alien interventions." Which is fine, but to state that it forms a major element of the beliefs of scientology is False. I am disputing that second statement which appears as the first sentence of this subsection. By cutting it from the article here I am stating there is no published source of information which says: "Space opera is a major element of the beliefs of Scientology." Terryeo 20:56, 25 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Essentially the same sentence a second time, this time with a single secondary source which purports to verify the "major element" portion. If it IS a major element then it should be very easy to verifiy that it is a major element. On the other hand, if it is not a major element then it will not be easy to verifiy. I know it is not. Here is the sentence and the single, secondary and not primary source: "It forms a major element of the beliefs of Scientology [3]. " nonsense, it is not a major element. Find a primary source, support it with 3 secondary sources and you won't have arguement from me. Terryeo 20:50, 31 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]
This is one of those things a discussion page is for, gang. Yes, one secondary source might say, "central element" or "major element" or "core element" of Scientology beleifs. But it is appropriate to discuss the situation per WP:NOR#How_to_deal_with_Wikipedia_entries_about_theories because "major element" is a Theory. Scientology has major elements of its beliefs but that space opera is one of them is disputable. Scientology does not state it as a major element. Various Doctors of Divinity have published opinions about Scientology. None of them cite space opera as being a central tenent or a major element. Because a single secondary source publishes an opinion does not make it true, but it makes the idea citable. Whether the idea "major element" is actual, valid or not is up to us editors to discuss and arrive at a concensus about, then present. Can we talk about it? Terryeo 15:11, 1 February 2006 (UTC)[reply]
No one wants to waste their time discussing absurdities -- except of course people who stand to gain if they can sneak their absurdities in. "Find a primary source, support it with 3 secondary sources and you won't have arguement from me." And the corrolary, presumably, is that you will keep arguing until a "primary source" (in the sense which you understand that term to mean, which is unlikely to match what it actually means) and three "secondary sources" (same caveats apply) all confirm it for you? How interesting. Tell me, where did those figures of one primary sources and three secondary sources come from? Do you think that's appropriate behavior, to make your cooperation with others conditional upon their meeting a standard of verification and citation that I doubt any of your own edits have ever met? -- Antaeus Feldspar 17:24, 1 February 2006 (UTC)[reply]
At least you are communicating about it, that's something. My 1 primary and 3 secondary sources are a false standard, the statement is full of hot air and has little value. On the other hand, one secondary source does not a standard make, either. So, can we resort to communication? The statement in question, and it is the only one, is: "Space opera forms a major element of the beliefs of Scientology". Some very qualified people have published public opinions about Scientology. I haven't read them all, but none of the ones I have read yet make the above statement. Here is an at least neutral and conceivably considered hostile one. [4] While here is a Scn page with many such scholarly opinions: [5]. Myself, I Frank K Flinn (Ph.D)'s opinion. Warning! PFD format because his list of educational achievements is worthy and because I've seen him declare himself to be a practicing Catholic (not scientologist). In any event, your qualified professional doesn't support that statement this discussion is about. As you know, I have told you what I understand, Scientology doesn't consider space opera to be a belief. Terryeo 19:12, 1 February 2006 (UTC)[reply]
"As you know, I have told you what I understand, Scientology doesn't consider space opera to be a belief." There are two ways to interpret that statement. One of them is in clear contradiction to the definition of "space opera" in the Official Scientology and Dianetics Glossary[6]. The other is to separate "belief" from "knowledge", as you indicated that you would like to do at Talk:Clear (Scientology); unfortunately what you indicated at that page is that you want your own subjective experience to be what distinguishes one from the other. It's like the old joke about "conjugation of adjectives": "I am ebullient; you are tipsy; he is blotto." That's what you're proposing, pretty much. "Other religions have beliefs; my religion has knowledge." Wikipedia cannot privilege your religion's beliefs above those of other religions; even if Scientology does not want to consider "space opera" as they define it as a "belief", that is exactly what it is. -- Antaeus Feldspar 20:15, 1 February 2006 (UTC)[reply]
What we want for the article is verified information that "Space Opera is a central Scientology belief," right? And there is a single internet site that says so, right? My personal opinions and everyones are only as useful as they lead to citable information. That information to be contained in an article. This link [7] leads to a dozen experts whom spell out "central scientology beliefs". None of them mention "space opera" as a central belief, indeed, hardly mention it at all. I recognize your point, Feldspar, that I frequently attempt to pry blief and knowledge apart. That is true. But whatever I try to do, our standard for publication is "verifiability" and a single internet source balanced against a dozen expert sources makes a person question how central space opera is to scientology. Terryeo 20:28, 1 February 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Terryeo, the sentence in question is "[Space opera] forms a major element of the beliefs of Scientology", not "Space Opera is a central Scientology belief". Even if your "dozen expert sources" (all published on the Scientology site http://www.humanrights-germany.org/) were the final word on everything Scientology and overruled all "internet sources" and if it was logically safe to conclude that nothing not specifically named as a central belief by these expert sources could be a central belief (let me remind you, I am not saying that any of these premises are true, only if) -- it still would not justify your deletion, because the sentence you're repeatedly deleting isn't the sentence you claim has been disproven. -- Antaeus Feldspar 01:13, 2 February 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Fortunately, Feldspar, it is not you whom must be satisfied for my deletions to happen, it is instead the software as manifested by Wikipedia and Wikipedia's intent. I venture there is no source that can be cited to verify "Space opera forms a major element of the beliefs of Scientology" yet the sentence was included in the article. WP:V states what any editor should do with any information in any article which is uncited and which they know to be untrue. I do so. Terryeo 01:40, 2 February 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Fortunately, there are other editors around to correct your misapplications of policy and misrepresentations of fact. -- Antaeus Feldspar 03:59, 2 February 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I see what you mean Feldspar. You are saying it is fortunate that other POV editors feel as you do, editors whom likewise cannot justify their edits by WP:V but "just feel its right" and edit based on their feelings rather than on how Wikipedia say we should edit. Yeah, I understand what you mean all right. Terryeo 16:20, 2 February 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Again, all this space opera is the underpinning for why Scientologists use E-Meters...and I hope you're not arguing that e-meters aren't central to Scientology. Simple logic dictates that this makes space opera a major element of Scientology. Answer this: would you ever have to use one of those E-meters without this space opera excitement being around?161.225.129.111 21:34, 29 June 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Perhaps Terryeo has not made it to OT III yet, and is unaware of his own religon's core beliefs. Start saving your pennies!

Hoi polloi

It's the obvious source of Hubbard's usage, which may not be obvious to many people, so please put the link back. AnonMoos 20:35, 8 February 2006 (UTC)[reply]

If it's so obvious, then the link isn't necessary. Hubbard turned hundreds of words and phrases into his own, and we don't link to generic articles for Hubbardized words like "Clear" and "Hat". If you want to start a "Hoipolloi (Scientology)" article and link to that, that would be appropriate. wikipediatrix 20:39, 8 February 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Why did you misinterpret what I wrote above? Nevertheless, if "Clear" and "hat" were less-commonly used words whose traditional meanings were not necessarily understood by everybody, then there would indeed be links to those articles from the Scientology articles. AnonMoos 20:58, 8 February 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I guess it depends on your level of erudition. "Hoi Polloi" is a perfectly common term to me and it would never occur to me that it needed defining or clarifying. Nevertheless, the Hoi Polloi in Hoi polloi is not the same Hoipolloi that is being referenced in the article, so unless you want to create a disambiguation page, the link only creates confusion. wikipediatrix 22:04, 8 February 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Shouldn't there be some mention of the connection? If Hubbard is stipulating that Hoipolloi was in fact the name of a real pre-historic group, then the obvious derivation undermines his credibility and the claim that the stories are real history. If that wasn't their name and Hubbard is just using the term to identify them as a group of common folk, then there should at least some mention of the connotation for the less literate among us. 66.122.73.102 03:11, 26 June 2006 (UTC)[reply]

The "Assists" lecture

Terryeo removed the reference to the "Assists" lecture. This lecture is widely available and the Church of Scientology even drug Erlich into court and admitted that the lecture exists. I have a copy of the lecture, as do many other people. There are even many places on the Internet where you can download portions (including the entirety) of these lectures. One such location that provides the portions of the Assists lecture where L. Ron Hubbard says, "The man on the Cross. There was no Christ. But the man on the cross is shown as Everyman." and "The entirety of Roman Catholicism - the devil, all of this sort of thing - that is all part of R6." is at [[8]] Just because the Church of Scientology was unable to keep the information confidential, doesn't mean it can't be reported on here. Vivaldi 08:49, 25 February 2006 (UTC)[reply]

It is not "widely available", not only can you not purchase it, but no one has ever purchased it. It has never been published to the pubic. "Widely Available" is a misinformed statement on your part.Terryeo 17:53, 27 February 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Actually Terryeo, the excerpts are published. I provided a link to just one of hundreds of such similar sites that currently are publishing excerpts from the Assists lecture. Did you bother reading them, or listening to Hubbard's own voice speaking the words? e.g. "The man on the Cross. There was no Christ" -- L. Ron Hubbard Just because the Church of Scientology intended for these lectures to remain confidential, does not imply that Wikipedia or any other person or organization is required to help the Co$ keep the lectures confidential. There exists lots of proof the lecture exists and it will continue to be cited in this article. Vivaldi 00:47, 3 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Here is another link currently being published on the web page of a current member of the Church of Scientology that includes verification of the Assists lecture's existence and authenticity of some of the quotes: [[9]] Vivaldi 00:57, 3 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I added it back as well. It has been reported on in many independent, verifiable sources. It is widely available. It is notable and pertanant here. It should not be censored because it may embarrass some adherants. Jonathunder 13:50, 27 February 2006 (UTC)[reply]
"embarrass some adherants" has nothing to do with the issue by which I am removing it. WP:V is the pertinent policy. It has not been reported in many independent, verifiable sources. It was stolen and duplicated and is legally contested. Terryeo 17:55, 27 February 2006 (UTC)[reply]
It is legally contested? Contested by whom and on what grounds? Are you asserting that the copies of the lecture that do exist are in fact copies of the copyrighted Assist lecture that Hubbard gave? Vivaldi 00:47, 3 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I removed that and I removed that again. This exact reference has been discussed and hammered out before. This is not a censor on my part, nor a refusal to recognize the situation, nor a refusal to recognize the content which is cited, the Class VIII lecture. None of those elements are the issue, though the issue could be raised of their legality. The issue is simply, "Is that a published verification?" The answer is, no, it is not a published verification. It is very far from "unimpeachable source" (WP:V). It is actually stolen information and the copy of it available on the internet might be accurate or might be 10% dubbed, parts removed and so on. Or might be 90# edited, dubbed, etc. There is no way to know because it has never been (and probably won't be) published to the public. Someone stole it. Someone says they present it to you on the internet, obviously in violation of copyrights. Whether it is legal or not, it has not been published to the public. This particular cite has been discussed a lot at [10] where ChrisO attempted to "sneak" it through by modifying WP:CITE, staving off discussion but I got included and revealed what sort of document it was. It shouldn't be cited. Its not censored, it is just good sense and follows WP:VTerryeo 17:51, 27 February 2006 (UTC)[reply]
You are, of course, wrong. First, the fact that the document has not been published by the CoS doesn't mean that it hasn't been published at all. Its publication is merely unauthorised, which is a different thing. Second, publishing extracts of unpublished material is permitted under the fair use doctrine, as litigation involving the CoS has already found (see http://www.publaw.com/fairuse.html under "Church of Scientology"). Third, you're not a lawyer and you're not acting on behalf of the CoS, so stop acting as if you were. You have absolutely no legal standing. Fourth, you've plainly violated the 3 revert rule, so I've requested that you be blocked. -- ChrisO 18:45, 27 February 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Heh, I appreciate that you take the responsibility of stating that you requested another administrator to block me because of 3RR. And I appriciate that the administrator who did block me because of my 3RR violiation took responsibility and told me so. Moving on to your accusation that I am not a lawyer and your evaluation that I am acting like one, I would say both issues are not pertinent to the issue. Moving on to your statement that I have no legal standing, of course I know that to be true in the context you state it in. :) Getting back to the main point, which is the citing of the assists lecture, it seems obvious to me but apparently not obvious to a couple of other editors. In the USA, the document is copyrighted and not published. How can a reader know it is accurate? It is obviously, as you say, unauthorized and therefore a lesser quality of verification than appropriate to Wikipedia. I point you again to WP:V and to earlier discussions we have had which might satisfy WP:CITE but would not satisfy the parent policy, WP:V. The internet gives us the opportunity to link to sites in other countries. Such is the case with the Xenu site. In that country, the copyright laws are not the same as where Wikipedia's servers are, which is in Florida. Wikipedia's servers in Florida fall within USA law and copyrights. That document is contentested. If you use it as a central document for an article, you might have some arguement. But used in Space Opera, it is a minor point in a major article. History of Man, one of the books you cite, has been published since the 1950s. To argue about such a citation as Assits which makes a tiny contribution to an article, places the citation as worthy of being removed. It is not central to the article. It is contested. Terryeo 20:32, 2 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Your legal opinions are not needed or wanted by Wikipedia. If the Church of Scientology wants to sue Wikipedia, then they need to go ahead and file a lawsuit and quit having shills post legal threats here. Vivaldi 00:47, 3 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Though I appriciate that your time is often used in dealing with "shills," the term is, non-the-less, degrading and more of a personal put-off than an invitation toward fruitful communication. What legal threat did you see, I posted no legal threat. Terryeo 20:03, 14 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Another point: you seem to be trying to police the copyright of external websites. We have absolutely no standing to do this for any website other than Wikipedia. There's simply no way that we can determine whether an external website is violating copyright or not, unless it's something very obvious like a warez site. It's your personal contention that xenu.net is breaking copyright law. Frankly, your personal view is completely irrelevant - that's an issue for the CoS' lawyers and xenu.net's owner, not Wikipedia or you. -- ChrisO 00:58, 2 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I appreciate that you take the effort and attempt to evaluate my edits. Perhaps you can hold a class somewhere about that point of view :) As I have stated before, you are wrong to make minor points with contested, unpublished documents. You justify your actions by modifying WP:CITE. You justify your actions by saying such publications are "unauthorized publications". But those statements do not modify WP:V which spells out that a contested verification such as the "Assists" lecture should not be cited. Besides, you don't know and no one except someone with an origianl from the CoS and the duplicate can know if the Xenu site is publishing the real thing or not.Terryeo 20:32, 2 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Actually we do know that its the real thing because Helena Kobrin, church of Scientology attorney, verified the authenticity of the sound clips when she wrote letters to many different people and ISPs stating that the sound clips from the Assists lecture were copyrighted excerpts. See [[11]] for just one example of such a letter. Vivaldi 05:13, 6 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Your ideas are intriguing to me, and I would like to subscribe to your newsletter. Vivaldi 00:47, 3 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]


"Unimpeachable!!!"
"Uhm, I do not think that word means what you think it means..."
With apologies to the Princess Bride. Ronabop 10:58, 2 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I have often attempted to state how Space Opera, as exciting as it is to many people, forms a really small element of Scientology Doctrine. I understand perfectly that no one is going to take my word for it, but insist that due to researches of their own, will insist it be otherwise presented. Here is a link to a more professional presentation of what part Space Opera plays in Scientology Doctrine. [12] Terryeo 20:03, 14 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]
And what makes this "more professional"? -- Antaeus Feldspar 00:38, 16 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Space opera a small element?
«This Grade, OT III, is a long and very valuable Grade. It determines whether or not the Solo auditor will eventually be a real OT.» L. Ron Hubbard, HCO BULLETIN OF 26 AUGUST AD 19R REVISED 16 AUGUST 1983, "OT III CASE SUPERVISION"
«OT III is a vital Grade. One fronts up to it and does it. When he is really done, the rewards of OT III exceed his wildest dreams.» L. Ron Hubbard, HCO BULLETIN OF 26 AUGUST AD 19R REVISED 16 AUGUST 1983, "OT III CASE SUPERVISION"
Scientology advertisement of OT3: [13] [14]. OT3 is all available for reading there, from court files. Raymond Hill 02:05, 19 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Yep, a small element. Space Opera is a small element of Scientology. Before you even approached Space Opera as being real, you would have to have at least some possible thought, you would have to consider it at least possible that you had existed beyond the current body. How important to you, may I ask, is that ? Is that a "small element?" Or is that a BIG DEAL? heh ! Space Opera plays a small element in Scientology. Terryeo 09:17, 24 April 2006 (UTC)[reply]
If space opera plays such a minor role, I'd have to ask you two questions . . .
1) Why do you believe eMeters are helpful therapudic devices (I do realize that you are a low level Scientologist, without access to OT teachings, so the question is an honest one). This space opera excitement that you haven't paid to learn about yet explains that you're removing those nasty thetans when you use eMeters, so without space opera, you wouldn't even have eMeters!
2) If space opera plays such a minor role, why does it cost so very, very much to get to the point where you'll finally learn about it? Of course, the unstated assumption (now stated) is that the more you pay Scientology coffers to advance through their teachings, the more important the materials are to the core beliefs of the church.
Two adverts and one summary... where is it "all available", again, because I'm not seeing it in the links you provided? Ronabop 09:29, 20 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]
There might be too much focus on Xenu and the assists lecture. (Not that I think it should be removed.) After all, there plenty of other published sources predating OT-III that show that space opera is an important part of Scientology doctrine. [15] [16] [17] (Check these against older versions since some Golden Age of Knowledge ones have apparently been edited.) (Sorry, forgot to sign, AndroidCat 19:59, March 20, 2006 UTC)
Whomever posted this opinion should have signed it. Terryeo 09:17, 24 April 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Scientology's history of the universe

Someone obviously did a great deal of original research to put this section together. They deserve a lot of credit for their efforts. I hope they will provide the citations so the reader can verify these statements. I am familiar with a couple of the terms, such as Marcab Conferation and Fifth Invader Force, but most of these incidents are a complete mystery to me. Where did they come from? dcottle561 17:59, 19 May 2006 (UTC)

There is no original research here: the sources are already given appropriately in the article. For example, if you look carefully and slowly at the article again, you will see that the Marcab info is from Hubbard's Auditing Comm Cycles, E-Meter Actions, Errors in Auditing, Create and Confront, A History of Man, and Russell Miller's Bare-Faced Messiah. Further references are made available at the bottom of the page, in a section cleverly titled "References". wikipediatrix 19:47, 19 May 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Of course, Bare-Faced Messiah, by Russell Miller ! Was there some secret which Hubbard whispered to him about some Marcab Federation back in the 50's sometime or another? Some little tidbit which Hubbard did not publish except through word-of-mouth to Miller? Terryeo 10:45, 16 August 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Terryeo, simply making snide and unsupported insinuations about Miller's work (insinuations which you would realize were false if you actually read the book, or if you even did a halfway careful reading of the article) is not helpful to the process of editing the article. In fact, it's pretty disruptive, just like your constant nonsensical insistence that Scientology is not a belief system and your sneering attacks on other editors. -- Antaeus Feldspar 13:48, 16 August 2006 (UTC)[reply]

You can't be serious.

Is this for real? It's a bunch of crock to me.

Although I thought that to start with, it appears that it's for real - it cites relevant sources, and it appears that it actually is part of Scientology doctrine. It may look like sci-fi, but to be fair, L. Ron Hubbard also believed that some sci-fi comes from subconscious racial memories, so it makes more sense than it appears. Also, be wary of condemning a religion just because some of its beliefs are implausible when taken literally; not all Christians, for instance, believe in the literal truth of Adam and Eve. I'm not a Scientologist and don't know any more; you might want to consult Terryeo for more information. Walton monarchist89 10:42, 11 July 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Terryeo is perhaps not the best source to turn to for information about Scientology beliefs, because he has claimed repeatedly that Scientology does not have beliefs, among other reasons. -- Antaeus Feldspar 15:49, 11 July 2006 (UTC)[reply]
You have, by implication, mis-stated what I have said many times. Scientology (the philosophy) does not present beliefs. The Church of Scientology does present beliefs. Terryeo 10:37, 16 August 2006 (UTC)[reply]
From what I'd read Dianetics is the philosophy with Scientology being the religion. In least I seem to recall John W. Campbell and A. E. Van Vogt were interested in Dianetics, but were not interested in Scientology later on as "it was a religion."--T. Anthony 15:07, 26 August 2006 (UTC)[reply]
And "Scientology is not a belief system",[18] yada yada yada, right. Why do you persist in the same canards, Terryeo? You could possibly make an argument that Scientology is only a "philosophy" and not a belief system if it actually did not consist in any part of beliefs and only consisted of value judgements. But since that has absolutely no connection with the truth, why do you persist in trying to discuss it? Scientology is bursting at the seams with beliefs -- the belief that the "thetan" has lived many past lives, that enough auditing clears the "engrams" from the "reactive mind" and the right course of study after that allows the thetan to "exteriorize with full perceptics" -- I mean, honestly. It's not just bizarre that you would ask us to believe that Scientology is not a belief system, it's insulting. -- Antaeus Feldspar 13:41, 16 August 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I state the actual situation because it is the actual situation. You state certain things are beliefs. I state that you are misinformed. You state that your case is strong. I state that if you read Hubbard's statements instead of Xenu.net and newsgroups, you might understand what I am saying is real. You state that you are insulted. I state that I am presenting the actual situation. I do understand it is just unbelievable to you, and I would expect anyone to feel as you do. That is, anyone who studies Xenu.net / Clambake.org, and takes the word of people who have declared themselves to be the enemy of the source of the information you refuse. Anyone who does as you do is pretty much not going to understand the actual situation because the situation which Xenu.net and self-declared enemies make is not the actual situation they say it is. I am stating the actual situation. The philosophy, Scientology, does not present beliefs. To the contrary, Hubbard suggested reading his words with a skeptical eye, with one's own judgement intact. It is not my responsibility to convince you. I can, however, reply to your statements. Terryeo 04:39, 17 August 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Clap-trap. It has nothing to do with Operation Clambake or "alt.net.scientology" or the words of any critics. It has to do with the fact that Scientology asserts the human mind to be "made up of mental image pictures which have mass and energy". [19] That is a belief. Scientology asserts that "man is an immortal spiritual being whose experience extends well beyond a single lifetime and whose capabilities are unlimited".[20] That is a belief. Your bizarre claim that "The philosophy, Scientology, does not present beliefs" is so trivially disproven that one can think of no reason why a person would persist in such a claim except for the purpose of time-wasting disruption. -- Antaeus Feldspar 17:07, 17 August 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Well, I'm a relative newcomer to this field, and was only trying to be helpful to whoever asked the question at the top of this section (who, by the way, should have signed it). I admit that I don't know much about Scientology, and can't really claim to know how accurate or otherwise this article is. I was only explaining, to whoever asked the question, that it seems to be for real, as it cites all relevant sources. I do know that Hubbard did claim that some space opera/sci-fi comes from our subconscious racial memories, and that he did some experiments into trying to discover these subconscios memories. Alternatively, a cynic might claim that it came from Hubbard's overactive imagination (he was a sci-fi writer himself, after all; see Battlefield Earth). (I'm not saying this to offend any Scientologists, just stating that it's what many people would argue). Walton monarchist89 08:25, 12 July 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I have gone around with Feldspar, ChrisO and others on this subject many times. Space opera plays an insignificant role in Scientology. The article is based on how important that role is. While I tell you my opinion and the next Scientologist tells you his opinion, there are learned scholars who have stated their professional opinions here. Yet none of those opinions are worthy of the notice of the editors who create and maintain this article. Instead (because it makes good reading?) those editors (including Feldspar) refuse to recognize and assimilate the actual role which space opera has in Scientology. It is a minor role. Terryeo 04:45, 17 August 2006 (UTC)[reply]
If space opera plays such a minor role, I'd have to ask you two questions . . .
1) why do you believe eMeters are helpful therapudic devices. This space opera excitement explains that you're removing those nasty thetans, so without space opera, you wouldn't even have eMeters. heh.
2) If space opera plays such a minor role, why does it cost so very, very much to get to the point where you'll finally learn about it? Of course, the unstated assumption (now stated) is that the more you pay Scientology coffers to advance through their teachings, the more important the materials are to the core beliefs of the church.
Um, most of those "opinions" on that Scientology-run page are obvious shills for Scientology. For example, Harri Heino's "book" is published by Scientology's Freedom Publications. Wow, what an amazing coincidence. For every "learned scholar" who defends Scientology, I can find you a hundred who don't. wikipediatrix 13:34, 16 August 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Fasinating. Why don't you email those learned scholars, find out if they are real or not, their degree of education, wether they hold the positions their titles imply, whether they are asked to testify before courts and the U.N. on religion or not, etc ? That is the basis on which I refer to those people as "scholars". Their opinions were asked for by the Church and they gave their opinions. In some cases their opinions additionally appear on their personal websites. Why do you make little of well published and make large of poorly published? Terryeo 04:45, 17 August 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Translation: "The official Party line of Scientology is that space opera is not an important part of their beliefs, and obviously the official Party line outweighs any evidence to the contrary no matter how overwhelming." -- Antaeus Feldspar 13:41, 16 August 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Translation. Hubbard wrote something like 40 million words (anyway, a lot). The total amount of that work that has something to do with "space opera" is small, in fact, almost all of it is cited in this article. Terryeo 04:45, 17 August 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I have edited this article a number of times. I changed one or two words. The article mis-presents the importance of space opera in Scientology in a very big way. Yet, the more I work at presenting the actual situation, the more inflammed editors become. Its not that wouldn't like Wikipedia to present good information, I would strongly prefer Wikipedia to present good information. The problem is that enough editors insist on presenting bad information that my discussions and edits don't make enough difference. So I fall back to insisting that newsgroups and blogs and personal opinion not be used as secondary sources in these articles. It isn't much toward good information, but it is something. While I suspect the articles probably have some vested, but hidden interest prompting some editors to push a POV or a website, Wikipedia's editing policy allows it. Its the best I can do. Terryeo 11:02, 16 August 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I don't agree with you much on Scientology. I think Hubbard was just a hack author and if you just go by what is officially said the Church of Scientology is paranoid or delusional or both. However I'm not trying to start a fight with you. The truth is I think you're kind of right on this. This article really should do more to mention that many Scientologists dispute that "space opera incidents play an important part in beliefs of Scientology" and that the link for the statement it does is essentially an anti-Scientology site. It would be like using Avro Manhattan to say that secret conspiracies are a critical part of Catholicism and not allowing any rebuttal. Granted I think the indisputable facts of Scientology are negative enough, but in many respects this article is so one-sided and loopy it being a featured article should be vaguely embarrassing. As I'm not a Scientologist in anyway, shape, or form perhaps I can make the appropriate edit here.--T. Anthony 14:53, 26 August 2006 (UTC)[reply]
How is it one-sided? The article is one of best-sourced of the Scientology articles, its references come directly from official Scientology publications, not haters and critics. Any alleged Scientologist who denies the importance of "Space Opera" simply doesn't know what they are talking about, just as there are many Christians today who would fail a Bible quiz if given one. Don't take my word for it, look it up: "Space Opera" is included in the official glossary of Scientology terminology: "Space opera: of or relating to time periods on the whole track millions of years ago which concerned activities in this and other galaxies. Space opera has space travel, spaceships, spacemen, intergalactic travel, wars, conflicts, other beings, civilizations and societies, and other planets and galaxies. It is not fiction and concerns actual incidents and things that occurred on the track." [21] We already know (from released court documents that the CoS tried to cover up) that Xenu, which is part of Hubbard's Space Opera mythos, is a key part of Scientology after reaching the OTIII level, and we also know that Scientologists are forbidden from acknowledging its existence to outsiders. wikipediatrix 18:54, 26 August 2006 (UTC)[reply]
The nature of Scientology as an esoteric religion means what you're saying might be true. However the statements I added simply say that in public Scientologists dispute how important Space Opera is to their religion. And not just bumpkin uneducated Scientologists, the higher ups too. I think that deserves to be mentioned. If you want to add that they have to deny it in public that's fine by me. Trust me I don't care for this religion at all, but I think it's weird enough without bashing over the head on it. As for it being well-sourced I know most of the sources as I've read this article a few times for humor. (It's one of the most hilarious things on the web, funnier than almost anything in BJAODN) The sources are mostly educated and rational people who studied this, but this means they're bound to be biased. Almost any educated and rational person would tend to be aghast by the stuff they admit. It seems like a bit more response from the adherents of this group deserved mention. At least a brief mention early on that Scientology is a mystery/esoteric religion so this may not be known or accepted by most members. (Trust me being fair to Scientology is not something I relish, but I'd hate to invite reciprocal religious wars)--T. Anthony 04:53, 27 August 2006 (UTC)[reply]
You could try Category:Scientologist Wikipedians. Unfortunately it's just got two people and User talk:Buttered Bread indicates he might be dead. The other is User:Coil who states s/he is also a Mormon. There's little evidence that person is active. In David Miscavige's Nightline interview he stated that space-opera is not important to their religion. However he also stated some pretty oddball things in his own right so judge his statement as you will.--T. Anthony 14:02, 18 July 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Is this really the pinnacle of scientological thought? I find it hard to believe. Scientology is clearly esoteric in that it does not teach the whole truth to intiates but slowly tells them how things 'really are'. Is there no chance that there is not in fact a higher level of scientological truth where they say, all this space opera was bull, we are now going to tell you the real origin of the enslavement of the theta? Alternatively, is there a metaphorical analysis traditon, which has members understand the DC10 shaped space ships as the arrival of a system, such as the millitary-industrial complex, and its influence upon the mind or whatever. --Timtak 11:27, 7 September 2006 (UTC)[reply]
What you're suggesting is speculation and is, therefore, of no use in editing a Wikipedia article. wikipediatrix 13:18, 7 September 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Hi, Timtak. To answer your first question as you asked it -- sure, there is a chance that there is a level of Scientology teachings beyond those that have been publicly revealed which contradict the known teachings of Hubbard that this was all quite literal truth about the past of the universe. It seems rather unlikely, however; there have been many very high-level departures from the Church of Scientology -- Pat Broeker, John McMaster, David Mayo, Jesse Prince, Robert Vaughn Young, to name just the first handful that come to mind -- and no matter how much they revealed of the doctrines of the CoS, none of them mentioned a level such as the one you postulate.
As for a "metaphorical analysis tradition" -- there have been, I believe, attempts to imply that the space opera doctrines are to Scientology what the Old Testament is to Judaism and Christianity. There is definitely a tradition of analyzing the Old Testament as a metaphor rather than as literal truth, so what's to stand in the way of a similar metaphorical analysis tradition for Scientology? Answer: Anyone who did would be "squirreling". Hubbard didn't say it was metaphorical; he said it was literal truth. It might exist in the Free Zone but not in mainstream Scientology.
Of course, as Wikipediatrix points out, this is our own speculation here, and can't really be article material without sourced material for such a sub-topic. -- Antaeus Feldspar 20:00, 7 September 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Thank you very much for your thorough answer. I guess this can all be deleted now? *Perhaps* it might be worth a mention that there is no tradition of space opera exegesis nor any evidence for the existance of a higher esoteric level.
Why would we delete this discussion? (I'm guessing that's what your "this" refers to, but I'm not sure...) -- Antaeus Feldspar 13:30, 8 September 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Don't delete the discussion. It is a part of the page record, and clears up a major query that users may have about this article, i.e. its accuracy. If you delete this discussion, more people are bound to add queries along the lines of "is this a joke"? We have established that it is not (i.e that some Scientologists do actually believe this), and I for one am not fond of answering the same question numerous times. Yes, there's a lot of bickering here between certain users, but that doesn't stop the discussion from being both valid and valuable. Walton monarchist89 10:01, 18 September 2006 (UTC)[reply]

The DC-8 thing

The image caption notes that "Hubbard said that Xenu's victims were transported in interstellar space planes which looked exactly like Douglas DC-8s." But this fact isn't mentioned at all in the body of the article. I'd like to see a citation for the DC-8 thing. Patiwat 09:27, 17 September 2006 (UTC)[reply]

It's in Xenu. I'll see if I can make this clearer. -- ChrisO 10:56, 17 September 2006 (UTC)[reply]

This article is confused.

Most of the titillating quotes about alien civilizations come from transcripts of Hubbard's lectures. These lectures were not always necessarily Scientology-related, and were often simply about whatever fanciful stuff popped into his head. Is it wacky and kooky? Of course. And if you listen to the recordings, the audience is laughing good-naturedly about it and so is Hubbard. Was it ever intended, then or now, to be absolute Scientology doctrine he was spouting? Absolutely not, and there's no proof otherwise. Attacking Scientology today by way of holding it literally accountable for goofy jokes, stories and allegories told in 1950's/1960's Hubbard lectures is not only wrong, it's a very desperate kind of wrongness. This article's entire premise is based on the false assumption that "if Hubbard joked about it in a lecture in 1956, then it's serious core Scientology doctrine". Highfructosecornsyrup 16:19, 4 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]

I will simply copy over my comments from Wikipedia:Featured article review/Space opera in Scientology doctrine

Comment - The article is NOT neutral. It gives inordinate emphasis to casual remarks by Hubbard as being part of Scientology doctrine. Arslycus is a good example; that was a casual remark in the PDC lecture made to illustrate a point (I actually listened to that very lecture not long ago while on a long drive). It is not a part of Scientology. Hubbard was always careful, IMO, to distinquish between his opinion or his self-admitted tendency to act the raconteur and what he considered to be the technology of Scientology. Additionally; he specifically excluded space opera (as a general topic) from Scientology; lumping it in, along with lots of other "unprovables", to what he termed "para-Scientology"; meaning that most Scientologists have VERY little intersection with space opera and it is by no means a core belief (the core belief being that you are an immortal spiritual being inhabiting a body and using a mind and that you can improve your state of being, by-and-large, using very concrete techniques that have nothing to do with space opera). The only actual alleged example of space opera that I know of that has any relevance to Scientology is the claim by ex-Scientologists that OT 3 includes the Xenu incident. But if that were the entirety of the article, I guess it would not be as "interesting" (although it might be a lot more accurate). Interestingly, I just looked again at the article and see that critics like to pooh-pooh Scientologist's protestations that LRH's far-out stories, anecdotes, and jokes are not a part of mainstream Scientology. So I guess we are "damned if we do and damned if we don't". Anyway, the article needs a lot of work to bring it to a neutral state. --Justanother 16:50, 27 November 2006 (UTC)

--Justanother 17:01, 4 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]

This article is confused, pt.2

The article states: "The following descriptions of space opera incidents are seen as nonfiction in the beliefs of Scientology", and then justifies this with a link to http://www.scientology.org/gloss.htm#SPACEOPERA, which does say that there is such a thing as space opera and that it "It is not fiction", but what it doesn't say is specifically that it applies to the jokes and stories told in Hubbard's lectures, which are gleefully recounted in the article and presented as "Scientology doctrine". It's not the same thing. The Scientology glossary link used as a reference is non-specific, so it cannot be used to back up this article's highly specific and outrageously misleading claims. Highfructosecornsyrup 16:58, 4 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]

I didn't know that Hubbard told "jokes". What I know is a policy "Joking and degrading" which advises against making fun of things. So, can you tell a few Hubbard jokes? --Tilman 18:15, 4 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Only Hubbard is allowed to "J&D". --Justanother 18:26, 4 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]
The idea that Scientology and/or Hubbard are against humor is ridiculous. "Making fun of things", i.e. ridicule/satire, is a whole 'nother thing and not relevant here. Hubbard frequently used humor and levity to make a point in his lectures. Highfructosecornsyrup 19:00, 4 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Scientologists are ill-advised to joke about Scientology, esp. staff members are not to joke about their posts or fellow staff members. Jokes about other subjects are, of course, common. The reference is HCOB 5 February 1977 "C/S Series 100 Jokers and Degraders"

A recent investigation, however, into the backgrounds and case condition of small handful of people who were joking about their posts and those around them showed a somewhat more sinister scene.

In some cultural areas, wit and humor are looked upon as a healthy release. However, in the case of orgs, this was not found to be the case. Intentional destruction of the org or fellow staff members was the direct purpose.

My point is that this policy did not apply to Hubbard especially as it was written in 1977, after most of his taped lectures that might contain the subject material. The point Tilman makes is one that deserves an answer so there it is. While the policy might seem harsh, I can also see the benefit of not making sarcastic remarks about your job or fellow workers and such restraint is now the norm in the workplace. --Justanother 19:15, 4 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]
It's all just a diversion anyway. Isaac Hayes worked on the most mean-spirited satirical "make fun of everything" TV show on Earth for almost a decade, and Nancy Cartwright still works for the second most "make fun of everything" show, so obviously Tilman's argument is a non-argument. And don't forget John Travolta's current role in another major "make fun of everything" production, John Waters' Hairspray on Broadway. Highfructosecornsyrup 19:24, 4 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I don't know any "Hubbard jokes" anyway though I do know a few Scientologist jokes, e.g. "How many Scientologists does it take to screw in a lightbulb". --Justanother 19:30, 4 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]

title change

Given that there is no evidence, either in the article or anywhere else, that most of the specific incidents and subjects in this article are "Scientology doctrine" in any sense of the word, this article is based on an extremely faulty and POV-driven premise. Therefore, it seems clear that we must either:

  1. Change the name of this article to Space opera and L. Ron Hubbard.
  2. Remove almost all of this article's information or move it elsewhere, reducing this article to basically the Xenu information. This, however, would render it redundant with the Xenu article unless it could be expanded, so I think option #1 makes the most sense.

Highfructosecornsyrup 19:49, 4 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]

I agree and have no real preference as to which. I think you will have better luck selling the former. --Justanother 19:58, 4 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I can't see any reason to change it. Petty word-games trying to pretend that the Operating Thetan levels somehow do not count as "doctrine" are just that, petty word-games and not valid reasons. Keep it under its current fully accurate title, thanks. -- Antaeus Feldspar 20:47, 4 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]
If it is so petty then perhaps you will have no objection to the change? --Justanother 21:02, 4 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Of course I have objections to it, because it makes no sense and is a change for the worse. -- Antaeus Feldspar 21:48, 4 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]
The problem with the change proposed is that it would be too easy to confuse it with just L. Ron Hubbard as a writer. A less drastic change might be Space opera and Scientology doctrine. That way these things can be discussed in relation to Scientology while avoiding any claim they are part of Scientology. As a mystery religion, of a kind, they aren't in a great position to rebut any bizarre claims. Even if they do it can be stated they are just "hiding the truth" because the faith requires it. The same could also be said of the Druze, but I think we'd treat them with greater respect. Granted I feel the Druze deserve far greater respect, but I think Wikipedia is not really supposed to take sides in that way. I should also say I'm personally quite opposed to Scientology. I'm hesitant to reiterate how harmful I think it is as I don't want them coming at me, but I think in a spirit of fairness we need to acknowledge that they reject the idea this is "in their doctrine." Otherwise we'd be creating a double-standard that could harm articles on valid religions.--T. Anthony 01:49, 5 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Oh, I was giving you the benefit of the doubt and assuming that you meant the change was "Of small importance; trivial". Did you instead mean that our bringing it up was "Marked by narrowness of mind, ideas, or views"? Is there some other definition of petty that I am lacking that would better apply? --Justanother 22:07, 4 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Not everyone agrees that stuff like the "Bubble Gum Incident" is Scientology doctrine. In fact, there's NO verifiable proof that it is. However, surely everyone agrees that this stuff DID originate with Hubbard, so let's call the article Space opera and L. Ron Hubbard. There's no reason to want to shoehorn this stuff into Scientology except to try and make it look stupid. You wouldn't want that, now would you? Highfructosecornsyrup 21:53, 4 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]
None of this "Obscene Dog"-type stuff is "doctrine" according to the dictionary definition of the word, the Doctrine Wikipedia article, or most importantly, any Scientology doctrinal text such as The Scientology Handbook. Not everything that ever came out of Hubbard's mouth is "Scientology doctrine". Highfructosecornsyrup 21:18, 4 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]
What's your source for that statement? (I mean, is there a "HCOPL 23 May, 19xx I WAS JUST KIDDING" that says which is what?) AndroidCat 04:29, 5 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]
What statement are you referring to? Are you really saying that you believe that everything that ever came out of Hubbard's mouth is "Scientology doctrine"? Highfructosecornsyrup 04:38, 5 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]
What is your source which says which statements by Hubbard are doctrine and which aren't? Are there special autographed versions of the lectures with "just joking" anotations? AndroidCat 04:43, 5 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I don't need a source because I am not an article. This article needs a source if you want it to say that the "Obscene Dog Incident" is part of Scientology doctrine. Why would you want to have an article with such a misleading title? You KNOW it's misleading. You KNOW that most Scientologists have never heard of it. The article itself even basically says as much. The authors and defenders of this article seem to want to use the widest possible definition of "doctrine" so that anything Hubbard ever said, no matter how wacky (and yes, he said many wacky things) can be held up as "Scientology doctrine" for the purposes of ridicule, and you KNOW that's the only reason to enumerate this long over-detailed list of stuff like Gorilla Goals and Aircraft Doors and Bubble Gum, none of which can be found in The Scientology Handbook. Highfructosecornsyrup
If the The Scientology Handbook was published in 1994 (but strangely by Hubbard), what's its issue authority? It sounds like you want us to swallow on an awful lot of Original Research about what is and is not doctrine. Let's have cites all around about that, thank you. But it seems you KNOW exactly what I KNOW, so I leave the floor to you. (Open mic night.) AndroidCat 05:06, 5 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]
You keep trying to shift the burden of proof over to me. Doesn't work that way. The article currently fails to make a case for its assertions. This article's sources do not say what the article says. "Doctrine" is not defined in the article, so the reader is deliberately left with the impression that Scientology is all about the Marcabs and the Helatrobans. Highfructosecornsyrup 05:20, 5 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]
When we, as Scientologists, leave the "heavy lifting" to critics or editors with easy access to only critical sources then we do not have a lot of room to complain about how those editors "load" the articles (heavy lifting . . . load?). Some room, just not a lot. We can only, IMO, ask them to be true to their sources, we cannot ask them to "uncriticalize" their critical sources. That is what often happens, though. The Scientologist comes here, sees it all skewed and misrepresented and complains that the editors are all acting in bad faith, The editors go, like, "WTF?" The editors are being true to their sources and cannot easily see the blatent bias in those sources because they often (with exceptions, of course) have no or very little experience dealing with real Scientology or real Scientologists. The evaluation that they are "bad faith" often made by the Scientologists acts as a "wrong indicator" and causes upset (it is very upsetting for someone to tell you what is "wrong" with you and they, themselves, be wrong about that. As I may have myself made that self-same offense above, let me state that it is also likely true that many editors DO see the bias in those source and try to use them as best they can in a neutral fashion; making NPOV stew out of POV meat; not sure how possible that is). The only workable solution is for Scientologists to take the pandetermined (caring for all sides of a debate or upset; not taking sides) position and sort out the offending article first then bring up any questions as to its notability. The solution is not, IMO, to attack the article; that just leads to more games condition (human behavior seen in entrenched partisan stands; digging in, defending, attacking, etc.) By sort out I mean fix it, make it true. The truth is that there is lots of Space Opera in Scientology (in quantity, not percentage, the percentage is tiny); the truth is most of it is not doctrine; some of it is; some of it is older doctrine but key policy (HCOB Tech Degrades) says ALL Scientology tech remains valid so the only statement that could be made about older line charts might be that they are not on the Bridge (though who knows as the Upper Bridge is secret so even that cannot be reliably stated); it is true is that, in context of Scientology; space opera is "no big deal, like, so what"; it is true that much of it is non-notable Hubbard banter. If a Scientologist's mission here is not to present the truth about this subject but instead to suppress the information then that Scientologist is acting as an enemy to the goals of wikipedia and wikipedians will treat the Scientologist as an enemy (and subsequent Scientologists too until proven otherwise). --Justanother 13:25, 5 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Left: Since we are talking Scientology "doctrine" then doctrinal advices as to the nature of this material take precedence, not critics' opinions. It is up to the Scientologists here to find and present those advices. Doctrinal materials like the definition and nature of "para-Scientology" from the Tech. Dict. and sources referenced therein along with LRH's own disclaimers as to the nature of this matter should be presented early on; the same PDC tape that mentions Arslycus makes the distinction and it appears in other tapes. Then we can discuss the notability of including every wacky thing he ever said. So first, HFCS, I would recommend that you find a few references that speak to the misc. stuff that is NOT claimed by anyone with real familiarity with the subject (and I include "apostates" in the same category as Scientologists in this case); NOT claimed to be part of the tech. That obviously does not apply to Xenu as knowledgable apostates claim he is and the CoS has taken action that tend to validate that. So first get some refs; then divide the material in the article into "tech" and "wacky comments"; finally discuss the notability of any or all of it. --Justanother 05:10, 5 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Do it my way and the existing title is just fine as it would then be an actual referenced discussion of Space Opera in Scientology Doctrine. --Justanother 05:12, 5 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Before I go to all that trouble for something that will probably still be ignored anyway, I'd like for it first to be addressed that there are statements in this article the way it is right now that are not borne out by the reference sources. Once the outright lies are removed from the article's very premise, then we can get into dissecting the rest of the material. Highfructosecornsyrup 18:17, 5 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I don't think it works that way, i.e. that you make a case here and get all this agreement first. The better way to go about it is called WP:BOLD in that you make well-thought out corrections that are totally defensible to anyone seeking to support the WP:PILLARS. Then you will find that your edits tend to stick. So start with the most obvious case and see how it goes; correct yourself; continue. --Justanother 18:48, 5 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Well, the problem is, the primary change I want to make is to pin down and define what constitutes "doctrine" in the very first paragraph. But if did that, it would disqualify half the article from existing, and would necessitate its removal. And this, of course, would result in an uproar from many editors whose position seems to be "I don't care if it's not really Scientology doctrine, I think it's hilarious and so we're keeping it just the way it is!" Highfructosecornsyrup 18:53, 6 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]
At the risk of being taken seriously we might want to simply rename this to List of really weird stuff said by Scientologists that they apparently think is true but everyone else thinks is a total hoot. Then all the HYLBTL (Have You Lived . . . ) stuff can stay in. --Justanother 19:57, 6 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]
For me OT testimonials are similar to my Christian friends and their "Angel Sightings" and "Jesus Protecting" them stories. Or the stories told by advanced Aikidoka about paranormal aiki phenomena: Interesting, harmless and believable enough for other Christians/ Aikidoka but they tend unfailingly to get my eyes to rolling (as do most OT anectdotes). They are not doctrine by any stretch of the imagination. ---Slightlyright 20:37, 6 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]
And when was a declaimer about that added to HYLBTL? I don't remember any "Oh yeah, these are just stories" text in the adverts for the book in the 1970s. AndroidCat 02:51, 7 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]
So what? If you bother to read the book, you will learn that the book is a collection of stories of alleged past-life recollections by people during auditing. You have to do some pretty crazy mental gymnastics to try to frame these people's remembrances as "Scientology doctrine". Highfructosecornsyrup 02:57, 7 December 2006 (UTC)[reply]