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20 January 2026
- 21:0521:05, 20 January 2026 Scientology A New Slant on Life 1965 Chapter 25 (hist | edit) [14,789 bytes] Cininabri (talk | contribs) (Created page with "← Back to Scientology: A New Slant on Life == How to Study a Science == The whole subject of a science, as far as the student is concerned, is good or bad in direct ratio to his knowledge of it. It is up to a student to find out how precise the tools are. He should, before he starts to discuss, criticize or attempt to improve on the data presented to him, find out for himself whether or not the mechanics of a science are as sta...") Tag: Visual edit
- 21:0421:04, 20 January 2026 Scientology A New Slant on Life 1965 Chapter 24 (hist | edit) [5,311 bytes] Cininabri (talk | contribs) (Created page with "← Back to Scientology: A New Slant on Life == The Vocabularies of Science == In all scientific systems you have a number of code words which operate as communication carriers, and when a person does not know these words well, he is having difficulty with the science itself. I have seen a senior in science falling down in his comprehension of a later part of the science because he had never gotten the nomenclature of the science...") Tag: Visual edit
- 21:0321:03, 20 January 2026 Scientology A New Slant on Life 1965 Chapter 23 (hist | edit) [3,735 bytes] Cininabri (talk | contribs) (Created page with "← Back to Scientology: A New Slant on Life == Justice == What is justice? “The quality of mercy is not strained—it droppeth as the gentle rain from heaven . . .” may be poetic, but it is not definitive. It does, however, demonstrate that even in Shakespeare’s time men were adrift on the subject of justice, injustice, severity and mercy. People speak of an action as unjust or an action as just. What do they mean? Yet,...") Tag: Visual edit
- 21:0321:03, 20 January 2026 Scientology A New Slant on Life 1965 Chapter 22 (hist | edit) [8,919 bytes] Cininabri (talk | contribs) (Created page with "← Back to Scientology: A New Slant on Life == Freedom vs. Entrapment == In Greece, Rome, England, Colonial America, France and Washington, a great deal of conversation is made on the subject of Freedom. Freedom, apparently, is something that is very desirable. Indeed, Freedom is seen to be the goal of a nation or a people. Similarly, if we are restoring ability to a person, we must restore Freedom. If we do not restore Freedom,...") Tag: Visual edit
- 21:0221:02, 20 January 2026 Scientology A New Slant on Life 1965 Chapter 21 (hist | edit) [3,256 bytes] Cininabri (talk | contribs) (Created page with "← Back to Scientology: A New Slant on Life == Playing the Game == The highest activity is playing a game. When one is high-toned, he knows that it is a game. As he falls away down the tone scale, he becomes less and less aware of the game. The greatest ability of thought is DIFFERENTIATION. So long as one can differentiate, one is sane. Its opposite is IDENTIFICATION. The legal definition of sanity is the “ability to tell r...") Tag: Visual edit
- 21:0121:01, 20 January 2026 Scientology A New Slant on Life 1965 Chapter 20 (hist | edit) [3,828 bytes] Cininabri (talk | contribs) (Created page with "← Back to Scientology: A New Slant on Life == Past, Present and Future == There is a basic rule that a psychotic person is concerned with the past, a neurotic person is barely able to keep up with the present, and a sane person is concerned with the future. This division could be more specifically made by realizing that the neurotic is barely able to confront the present, but that the very, very sane confront the present entir...") Tag: Visual edit
- 21:0121:01, 20 January 2026 Scientology A New Slant on Life 1965 Chapter 19 (hist | edit) [7,265 bytes] Cininabri (talk | contribs) (Created page with "← Back to Scientology: A New Slant on Life == On Human Character == In the past, a knowledge of his own character was an unpalatable fact to Man, since people sought to force him to achieve that knowledge solely through condemnation. He resisted what he was, and he became what he resisted; and ever with a dwindling spiral, he reached lower dregs. If ever once a man were to realize with accuracy what he was, if he were to realiz...") Tag: Visual edit
- 21:0021:00, 20 January 2026 Scientology A New Slant on Life 1965 Chapter 18 (hist | edit) [676 bytes] Cininabri (talk | contribs) (Created page with "← Back to Scientology: A New Slant on Life == On Bringing Order == When you start to introduce order into anything, disorder shows up and blows off. Therefore, efforts to bring order in the society or any part of it will be productive of disorder for a while every time. The trick is to keep on bringing order; and soon the disorder is gone, and you have orderly activity remaining. But if you ''hate'' disorder and fight disorder...") Tag: Visual edit
- 21:0021:00, 20 January 2026 Scientology A New Slant on Life 1965 Chapter 17 (hist | edit) [6,466 bytes] Cininabri (talk | contribs) (Created page with "← Back to Scientology: A New Slant on Life == Confronting == That which a person can confront, he can handle. The first step of handling anything is gaining an ability to face it. It could be said that war continues as a threat to man because man cannot confront war. The idea of making war so terrible that no one will be able to fight it is the exact reverse of fact—if one wishes to end war. The invention of the long bow, g...") Tag: Visual edit
- 20:5920:59, 20 January 2026 Scientology A New Slant on Life 1965 Chapter 16 (hist | edit) [1,355 bytes] Cininabri (talk | contribs) (Created page with "← Back to Scientology: A New Slant on Life == Acceptance Level == One thing that a person will discover is that he has been carefully taught that certain things are bad and, therefore, not enjoyable and that he has set up resistance’s to these things and that they, at length— these resistance’s—have become a sponge for the things they were set up to counteract and the resistance, caving in, has created a hunger for that...") Tag: Visual edit
- 20:5920:59, 20 January 2026 Scientology A New Slant on Life 1965 Chapter 15 (hist | edit) [3,928 bytes] Cininabri (talk | contribs) (Created page with "← Back to Scientology: A New Slant on Life == Honest People Have Rights, Too == After you have achieved a high level of ability, you will be the first to insist upon your rights to live with honest people. When you know the technology of the mind, you know that it is a mistake to use “individual rights” and “freedom” as arguments to protect those who would only destroy. Individual rights were not originated to protect...") Tag: Visual edit
- 20:5820:58, 20 January 2026 Scientology A New Slant on Life 1965 Chapter 14 (hist | edit) [4,409 bytes] Cininabri (talk | contribs) (Created page with "← Back to Scientology: A New Slant on Life == Accent on Ability == When we say “Life”, all of us know, more or less, what we are talking about; but when we use this word “Life” practically, we must examine the purposes and behavior, and in particular, the formulas evolved by Life in order to have the game called “Life”. When we say “Life”, we mean Understanding; and when we say “Understanding”, we mean Affi...") Tag: Visual edit
- 20:5820:58, 20 January 2026 Scientology A New Slant on Life 1965 Chapter 13 (hist | edit) [6,883 bytes] Cininabri (talk | contribs) (Created page with "← Back to Scientology: A New Slant on Life == On the Death of Consciousness == Where does one cease to Survive and begin to Succumb? The point of demarcation is not death as we know it. It is marked by what one might call ''the death of the consciousness of the individual.'' Man’s greatest weapon is his reason. Lacking the teeth, the armor-plated hide, the claws of so many other life forms, Man has relied upon his ability t...") Tag: Visual edit
- 20:5720:57, 20 January 2026 Scientology A New Slant on Life 1965 Chapter 12 (hist | edit) [4,991 bytes] Cininabri (talk | contribs) (Created page with "← Back to Scientology: A New Slant on Life == The Man Who Succeeds == The conditions of success are few and easily stated. Jobs are not held consistently and in actuality by flukes of fate or fortune. Those who depend upon luck generally experience bad luck. The ability to hold a job depends in the main upon ability. One must be able to control his work and must be able to be controlled in doing his work. One must be able, as...") Tag: Visual edit
- 20:5620:56, 20 January 2026 Scientology A New Slant on Life 1965 Chapter 11 (hist | edit) [3,752 bytes] Cininabri (talk | contribs) (Created page with "← Back to Scientology: A New Slant on Life == On Marriage == Communication is the root of marital success from which a strong union can grow, and non-communication is the rock on which the ship will bash out her keel. In the first place, men and women aren’t too careful “on whom they up and marry”. In the absence of any basic training about neurosis, psychosis, or how to judge a good cook or a good wage-earner, that tric...") Tag: Visual edit
- 20:5620:56, 20 January 2026 Scientology A New Slant on Life 1965 Chapter 10 (hist | edit) [7,482 bytes] Cininabri (talk | contribs) (Created page with "← Back to Scientology: A New Slant on Life == How to Live with Children == An adult has certain rights around children which the children and modern adults rather tend to ignore. A good, stable adult with love and tolerance in his heart is about the best therapy a child can have. The main consideration in raising children is the problem of training them without breaking them. You want to raise your child in such a way that you...") Tag: Visual edit
- 20:5520:55, 20 January 2026 Scientology A New Slant on Life 1965 Chapter 9 (hist | edit) [4,721 bytes] Cininabri (talk | contribs) (Created page with "← Back to Scientology: A New Slant on Life == Myths of the Mind == The curse of the past has been a pretense of knowledge. We’ve had a worship of the fable. We have had prayers being sent up to a myth. And man hasn’t been looking at all. We in this modern age of science have not developed out of the field of humanities anything comparable to a scientific observation of the mind. The humanities—psychology, sociology, crim...") Tag: Visual edit
- 20:5420:54, 20 January 2026 Scientology A New Slant on Life 1965 Chapter 8 (hist | edit) [2,133 bytes] Cininabri (talk | contribs) (Created page with "← Back to Scientology: A New Slant on Life == The Conditions of Existence == There are three conditions of existence. These three conditions comprise life. They are BE, DO and HAVE. The condition of BEING is defined as the assumption of a category of identity. It could be said to be the role in a game, and an example of beingness could be one’s own name. Another example would be one’s profession. Another example would be...") Tag: Visual edit
- 20:5420:54, 20 January 2026 Scientology A New Slant on Life 1965 Chapter 7 (hist | edit) [6,423 bytes] Cininabri (talk | contribs) (Created page with "← Back to Scientology: A New Slant on Life == What Is Knowledge? == Knowledge is certainty; knowledge is ''not'' data. Knowingness itself is certainty. Sanity is certainty, providing only that that certainty does not fall beyond the conviction of another when he views it. To obtain a certainty one must be able to observe. But what is the level of certainty required? And what is the level of observation required for a certainty...") Tag: Visual edit
- 20:5320:53, 20 January 2026 Scientology A New Slant on Life 1965 Chapter 6 (hist | edit) [8,032 bytes] Cininabri (talk | contribs) (Created page with "← Back to Scientology: A New Slant on Life == The Reason Why == Life can best be understood by likening it to a game. Since we are exterior to a great number of games, we can regard them with a detached eye. If we were exterior to Life instead of being involved and immersed in the living of it, it would look to us much like games look to us from our present vantage point. Despite the amount of suffering, pain, misery, sorrow a...") Tag: Visual edit
- 20:5320:53, 20 January 2026 Scientology A New Slant on Life 1965 Chapter 5 (hist | edit) [3,387 bytes] Cininabri (talk | contribs) (Created page with "← Back to Scientology: A New Slant on Life == Man's Search for His Soul == For countless ages past, Man has been engaged upon a search. All thinkers in all ages have contributed their opinion and considerations to it. No scientist, no philosopher, no leader has failed to comment upon it. Billions of men have died for one opinion or another on the subject of this search and no civilization, mighty or poor, in ancient or in mode...") Tag: Visual edit
- 20:5220:52, 20 January 2026 Scientology A New Slant on Life 1965 Chapter 4 (hist | edit) [3,990 bytes] Cininabri (talk | contribs) (Created page with "← Back to Scientology: A New Slant on Life == What Is the Basic Mystery? == In the general study of the world and its affairs, we find out that the only way you can make a slave—as if anybody would want one—would be to develop a tremendous amount of mystery about what it’s all about and then develop an overwhelming charge on the mystery line. Not only develop a mystery, but then sell it real good; sell some bogus answer t...") Tag: Visual edit
- 20:5120:51, 20 January 2026 Scientology A New Slant on Life 1965 Chapter 3 (hist | edit) [6,144 bytes] Cininabri (talk | contribs) (Created page with "← Back to Scientology: A New Slant on Life == Two Rules for Happy Living == ''1. Be able to experience anything.'' ''2. Cause only those things which others can experience easily.'' Man has had many golden rules. The Buddhist rule of “Do unto others as you would have these others do unto you” has been repeated often in other religions. But such golden rules, while they served to advance man above the animal, resulted in...") Tag: Visual edit
- 20:5020:50, 20 January 2026 Scientology A New Slant on Life 1965 Chapter 2 (hist | edit) [6,322 bytes] Cininabri (talk | contribs) (Created page with "← Back to Scientology: A New Slant on Life == The True Story of Scientology == The true story of Scientology is simple, concise and direct. It is quickly told: # A philosopher develops a philosophy about life and death; # People find it interesting; # People find it works; # People pass it along to others; # It grows. When we examine this extremely accurate and very brief account, we see that there must be in our civilization...") Tag: Visual edit
- 20:4920:49, 20 January 2026 Scientology A New Slant on Life 1965 Chapter 1 (hist | edit) [9,626 bytes] Cininabri (talk | contribs) (Created page with "← Back to Scientology: A New Slant on Life == Is It Possible to Be Happy? == ''Is it possible to be happy?'' A great many people wonder whether half of us even ''exist'' in this modern, rushing world. Very often an individual can have a million dollars, he can have everything his heart apparently desires, and is still unhappy. We take the case of somebody who has worked all his life; he has worked hard and he has raised a big...") Tag: Visual edit
- 20:4820:48, 20 January 2026 Scientology A New Slant on Life 1965 (hist | edit) [2,321 bytes] Cininabri (talk | contribs) (Created page with "← Back to Books Index == Scientology: A New Slant on Life (1965) == * Is It Possible to Be Happy? * The True Story of Scientology * Two Rules for Happy Living * What Is the Basic Mystery? * Scientology_A_New_Slant_on_Life_1965_Chapter_5|Man's Search...")
19 January 2026
- 20:5720:57, 19 January 2026 The Problems of Work 1956 Chapter 9 (hist | edit) [1,741 bytes] Xekay (talk | contribs) (Created page with "← Back to The Problems of Work == Chapter Nine: First Aid == If somebody is injured, you can assist in many ways. Recovery from a burn or bruise or even sprains or breaks is much swifter with SCIENTOLOGY assists. The most elementary assist is easily done. For ages Man has known that “laying on of hands” or Mother’s kiss was effective therapy. Even gripping, in pain, an injured member, seems to help. But Man neglected the most impor...") Tag: Visual edit
- 20:5620:56, 19 January 2026 The Problems of Work 1956 Chapter 8 (hist | edit) [5,476 bytes] Xekay (talk | contribs) (Created page with "← Back to The Problems of Work == Chapter Eight: The Man Who Succeeds == The conditions of success are few and easily stated. Jobs are not held consistently and in actuality by flukes of fate or fortune. Those who depend upon luck generally experience bad luck. The ability to hold a job depends in the main upon ability. One must be able to control his work and must be able to be controlled in doing his work. One must be able, as well, to...") Tag: Visual edit
- 20:5520:55, 19 January 2026 The Problems of Work 1956 Chapter 7 (hist | edit) [25,763 bytes] Xekay (talk | contribs) (Created page with "← Back to The Problems of Work == Chapter Seven: Exhaustion == To work or not to work, that is the question. The answer to that question in most men’s minds is exhaustion. One begins to feel, after he has been long on a job and has been considerably abused on that job, that to work any more would be quite beyond his endurance. He is tired. The thought of doing certain things makes him tired. He thinks of raising his energy or of being...") Tag: Visual edit
- 20:5320:53, 19 January 2026 The Problems of Work 1956 Chapter 6 (hist | edit) [24,184 bytes] Xekay (talk | contribs) (Created page with "← Back to The Problems of Work == Chapter Six: Affinity, Reality and Communication == There are three factors in Scientology which are of the utmost importance in handling life. These three factors answer the questions, How should I talk to people?-How can I sell people things?-How can I give new ideas to people?-How can I find what people are thinking about?-How can I handle my work better? We call these three factors in Scientology the...") Tag: Visual edit
- 20:5120:51, 19 January 2026 The Problems of Work 1956 Chapter 5 (hist | edit) [19,657 bytes] Xekay (talk | contribs) (Created page with "← Back to The Problems of Work == Chapter Five: Life as a Game == It is quite obvious that if anyone controlled everything he would have no game. There would be no unpredictable factors, no surprises in life. This might be said to be a Hell of considerable magnitude. If one could control everything absolutely he would of course be able to predict everything absolutely. If he could predict the course and action of every motion in the enti...") Tag: Visual edit
- 20:5020:50, 19 January 2026 The Problems of Work 1956 Chapter 4 (hist | edit) [32,186 bytes] Xekay (talk | contribs) (Created page with "← Back to The Problems of Work == Chapter Four: The Secret of Efficiency == What is control? Whether one handles a machine of the size of a car or as small as a typewriter or even an accounting pen, one is faced with the problems of control. An object is of no use to anyone if it cannot be controlled. Just as a dancer must be able to control his body, so must a worker in an office or a factory be able to control his body, the machines of...") Tag: Visual edit
- 20:4820:48, 19 January 2026 The Problems of Work 1956 Chapter 3 (hist | edit) [13,475 bytes] Xekay (talk | contribs) (Created page with "← Back to The Problems of Work == Chapter Three: Is Work Necessary? == An understanding of life is necessary to the living of it. Otherwise life becomes a trap. To so many of us in the work-a-day world this trap takes the form of WORK. If only we didn’t have to work, how many delightful things could we do! If only we had some other way of getting money... Travel, vacations, new clothes... what a host of things would be ours if only we d...") Tag: Visual edit
- 20:4720:47, 19 January 2026 The Problems of Work 1956 Chapter 2 (hist | edit) [16,900 bytes] Xekay (talk | contribs) (Created page with "← Back to The Problems of Work == Chapter Two: Handling the Confusions of the Work-a-Day World == We have seen how one might be led to believe there was something confusing about navigating one’s career in the world of work. And confusion there is to one who is not equipped with guides and maps. Basically, it all seemed very simple, this thing called work, getting a job. One was educated into some skill and one read an ad, or was sent...") Tag: Visual edit
- 20:4320:43, 19 January 2026 The Problems of Work 1956 Chapter 1 (hist | edit) [14,266 bytes] Xekay (talk | contribs) (Created page with "← Back to The Problems of Work == Chapter One: On What Does Holding a Job Depend? == On what does holding a job depend? Familial connections? Who you know? Personal charm? Luck? Education? Industry? Interest? Intelligence? Personal ability? To one grown old and even somewhat cynical in the world of work, the first several seem to have dominance. Only the young appear to be left with the illusion or delusion that Personal Ability, Intell...") Tag: Visual edit
- 20:3920:39, 19 January 2026 The Problems of Work 1956 (hist | edit) [929 bytes] Xekay (talk | contribs) (Created page with "← Back to Books Index == The Problems of Work (1956) == * Chapter One: On What Does Holding a Job Depend? * Chapter Two: Handling the Confusions of the Work-a-Day World * Chapter Three: Is Work Necessary? * Chapter Four: The Secret of Efficiency * The_Problems_of_Work_1956_Chapter_5|Chapter F...")
- 16:3016:30, 19 January 2026 The Fundamentals of Thought 1956 Chapter 12 (hist | edit) [30,097 bytes] Xekay (talk | contribs) (Created page with "← Back to The Fundamentals of Thought == Chapter 12: Exact Processes == '''Auditing''' '''Game and No Game Conditions''' In Scientology, the most important single elements, to the auditor are ''Game Conditions'' and ''No Game Conditions.'' Reason-all games are aberrative. All processing is directed toward establishing game conditions. Little or no processing is directed toward no-game-conditions. Therefore it is of the utmost i...") Tag: Visual edit
- 16:2216:22, 19 January 2026 The Fundamentals of Thought 1956 Chapter 11 (hist | edit) [6,458 bytes] Xekay (talk | contribs) (Created page with "← Back to The Fundamentals of Thought == Chapter 11: Scientology Processing == Scientology is applied in many ways to many fields. One particular and specialised method of application of Scientology is its use on individuals and groups of people in the eradication of physical illnesses deriving from mental states and the improvement of their abilities and intelligence. By processing is meant the verbal exer- cising of a patient (pr...") Tag: Visual edit
- 16:1816:18, 19 January 2026 The Fundamentals of Thought 1956 Chapter 10 (hist | edit) [431 bytes] Xekay (talk | contribs) (Created page with "← Back to The Fundamentals of Thought == Chapter 10: The Goal of Scientology == The end object of Scientology is not the making into nothing of all of existence or the freeing of the individual of any and all traps everywhere. The goal of Scientology is the making of the individual capable of living a better life in his own estimation and with his fellows and the playing of a better game.") Tag: Visual edit
- 16:1816:18, 19 January 2026 The Fundamentals of Thought 1956 Chapter 9 (hist | edit) [1,731 bytes] Xekay (talk | contribs) (Created page with "← Back to The Fundamentals of Thought == Chapter 9: Know and Not-Know == It is a mechanism of thinkingness, whether one is postulating or receiving information, that one retain one's ability to know. It is equally important that one retains one's ability to not-know. Thought consists entirely of knowing and not-knowing and the shades of grey between. You will discover that most people are trying not to remember. In other words the...") Tag: Visual edit
- 16:1616:16, 19 January 2026 The Fundamentals of Thought 1956 Chapter 8 (hist | edit) [19,746 bytes] Xekay (talk | contribs) (Created page with "← Back to The Fundamentals of Thought == Chapter 8: Causation of Knowledge == Scientology as a science is composed of many axioms (self-evident truths, as in geometry). There are some fifty-six of these axioms in addition to the two hundred more axioms of Dianetics which preceded the Scientology axioms. The first axiom in Scientology is: ''Axiom I. Life is basically a static.'' (Definition : A life static has no mass, no motion,...") Tag: Visual edit
- 16:1316:13, 19 January 2026 The Fundamentals of Thought 1956 Chapter 7 (hist | edit) [26,565 bytes] Xekay (talk | contribs) (Created page with "← Back to The Fundamentals of Thought == Chapter 7: The Parts of Man == The individual man is divisible (separable) into three parts (divisions). The first of these is the spirit called in Scientology, the ''Thetan.'' The second of these parts is the ''Mind.'' The third of these parts is the ''Body.'' Probably the greatest discovery of Scientology and its most forcefull contribution to the knowledge of mankind has been the isola...") Tag: Visual edit
- 16:0916:09, 19 January 2026 The Fundamentals of Thought 1956 Chapter 6 (hist | edit) [14,827 bytes] Xekay (talk | contribs) (Created page with "← Back to The Fundamentals of Thought == Chapter 6: The Reason Why == Life can best be understood by likening it to a game. Since we are exterior to a great number of games we can regard them with a detached eye. If we were exterior to Life instead of being in- volved and immersed in the living of it, it would look to us much like games look to us from our present vantage point. Despite the amount of suffering, pain, misery, sorro...") Tag: Visual edit
- 16:0716:07, 19 January 2026 The Fundamentals of Thought 1956 Chapter 5 (hist | edit) [4,598 bytes] Xekay (talk | contribs) (Created page with "← Back to The Fundamentals of Thought == Chapter 5: The A.R.C. Triangle == There is a triangle of considerable importance in Scientology and understanding of it gives a much greater understanding of life, and an ability to use it. The A-R-C triangle is the keystone of living associations. This triangle is the common denominator to all of life's activities. The first corner of the triangle is called Affinity. The basic definition o...") Tag: Visual edit
- 16:0616:06, 19 January 2026 The Fundamentals of Thought 1956 Chapter 4 (hist | edit) [5,687 bytes] Xekay (talk | contribs) (Created page with "← Back to The Fundamentals of Thought == Chapter 4: The Eight Dynamics == As one looks out across the confusion which is life or existence to most people, one can discover eight main divisions to each one of which applies the conditions of existence. Each division contains a cycle of action. There could be said to be eight urges (drives, impulses) in life. These we call DYNAMICS. These are motives or motivations. We call them THE...") Tag: Visual edit
- 16:0516:05, 19 January 2026 The Fundamentals of Thought 1956 Chapter 3 (hist | edit) [12,446 bytes] Xekay (talk | contribs) (Created page with "← Back to The Fundamentals of Thought == Chapter 3: The Conditions of Existence == There are three ''conditions'' (circumstances, ''qualities)'' of ''existence'' (apparency, reality, livingness). These three ''conditions'' comprise (make up, ''constitute)'' life. They are BE, DO and HAVE. THE CONDITION OF BEING is defined as the assumption (choosing) of a category of ''identity.'' It could be said to be the role ''in'' a game a...") Tag: Visual edit
- 16:0416:04, 19 January 2026 The Fundamentals of Thought 1956 Chapter 2 (hist | edit) [10,458 bytes] Xekay (talk | contribs) (Created page with "← Back to The Fundamentals of Thought == Chapter 2: Basic Principles == Like engineering Scientology has certain basic principles. These are necessary to a full understanding of the subject. It is not enough to know how to process (drill) people in Scientology. To be effective (good) one must also know the basic principles. Scien- tology is very exact. The humanities (human studies) of the past were full of opinions. Scientology is...") Tag: Visual edit
- 16:0216:02, 19 January 2026 The Fundamentals of Thought 1956 Chapter 1 (hist | edit) [7,266 bytes] Xekay (talk | contribs) (Created page with "← Back to The Fundamentals of Thought == Chapter 1: The Vital Statistics of Scientology == '''What is Scientology?''' Scientology is that branch of psychology which treats of (embraces) human ability. It is an extension of DIANETICS which is in itself an extension of old-time faculty-psychology of 400 years ago. More acceptable and normal psychology such as that begun by St. Thomas Aquinas and extended by many later authors was,...") Tag: Visual edit
- 16:0116:01, 19 January 2026 The Fundamentals of Thought 1956 Introduction (hist | edit) [5,968 bytes] Xekay (talk | contribs) (Created page with "← Back to The Fundamentals of Thought == Introduction == While "Scientology: The Fundamentals of Thought" was originally published as a resume of Scientology for use in trans- lations into non-English tongues, the book itself is of inestimable value to the beginner or advanced student of the mind and life. Containing much material new to Scientologists, the book forms a compact but broad survey of the subject. Equipped with this...") Tag: Visual edit
- 15:5915:59, 19 January 2026 The Fundamentals of Thought 1956 (hist | edit) [1,266 bytes] Xekay (talk | contribs) (Created page with "← Back to Books Index == The Fundamentals of Thought (1956) == * Introduction * Chapter 1: The Vital Statistics of Scientology * Chapter 2: Basic Principles * Chapter 3: The Conditions of Existence * The_Fundamentals_of_Thought_1956_Chapter_4|Chapter 4: The Eigh...")