e
EARLIER SIMILAR, 1. whenever an auditor gets a read on an item from rudiments or a prepared list it must be carried to an F/N. If you know bank structure you know it is necessary to find an earlier item if something does not release. What has been found as a read on a prepared list would F/N if it were the basic lock. So if it doesn’t F/N, then there is an earlier (or an earlier or an earlier) lock which is preventing it from F/Ning. Example: auditor asks for an earlier similar ARC Break. (HCOB 14 Mar 71R)
E/B, earlier beginning. (7203C30)
ECHO INVALIDATION, pc names an item and auditor says, "That isn’t it." This is not just bad form but a very vicious practice that leads to a games condition. The invalidation of each item makes the pc very dizzy and very desperate. (HCOB 13 Apr 64, Scn VI Tone Arm Action)
ECHO METERING, the pc says, "You missed a suppress. It’s . . ." and the auditor reconsults the meter asking for a suppress. That leaves the pc’s offering an undischarged charge. Never ask the meter after a pc volunteers a button. Example: You’ve declared suppress clean, pc gives you another suppress. Take it and don’t ask suppress again. That’s echo metering. If a pc puts his own ruds in, don’t at once jump to the meter to put his ruds in. That makes all his offerings missed charge. (HCOB 13 Apr 64, Scn VI Part One Tone Arm Action)
ED-1, -2, etc., Expertise Drill. (BTB 20 Jul 74) See AUDITOR EXPERTISE DRILLS
EDUCATION, 1. the conveyance of ideas, patterns and creations from one person to another for knowing retention and conscious use by the second person. (HCOB 27 Apr 71) 2. basically, fixing data, unfixing data and changing existing data, either by making it more fixed or less fixed. (BTB 14 Sept 69 I) 3. learning, knowing or accomplishing the knowingness of a certain subject, and would be in the direction of accomplishing certain actions professionally. One expects an educated person to be able to accomplish certain things in the subject he is educated in. He should be able to accomplish the actions and results that are taught in the subject. (Abil 190) 4. the activity of relaying an idea or an action from one being to another, in such a way as not to stultify or inhibit the use thereof and that’s about all it is. You could add to it that it permits, then, the other fellow to think on this subject and develop. (SH Spec 33, 6408C04) 5. the process by which the individual is given the accumulated data of a long span of culture. It can, no less validly than personal experience, solve many of his problems. (SOS, Bk. 2, p. 9)
EDUCATIONAL DIANETICS, contains the body of organized knowledge necessary to train minds to their optimum efficiency and to an optimum of skill and knowledge in the various branches of the works of man. (DMSMH, p. 152)
EFFECT, 1. receipt point and what is received at the receipt point. (PAB 30) 2. a potential receipt of flow. (COHA, p. 258)
EFFECT GOALS, ambition to be an effect rather than a cause. (COHA, p. 200)
EFFECT SCALE, a scale which tells you how much cause the individual dare be by measuring how much effect he’s willing to suffer. At the top of the scale the individual can give or receive any effect, and at the bottom of the scale he can receive no effects but he still feels he must give a total effect. (5904C08)
EFFORT, 1. the physical force manifestation of motion. A sharp effort against an individual produces pain. A strenuous effort produces discomfort. Effort can be recalled and re-experienced by the preclear. No preclear below 2.5 should be called upon to use effort as such as he is incapable of handling it and will stick in it. The essential part of a painful facsimile is its effort, not its perceptions. (HFP Gloss) 2. directed force. (Scn 0-8, p. 75) 3. making two things coincide at one point or stop coinciding at a point or change coincidence at a point. (2ACC-31B, 5312CM22) 4. condensed feeling. (2ACC-21A, 5312CM11)
EFFORT-POINT, that area from which a person exerted effort, and that area into which that person received effort. (PXL, pp. 257-258)
EFFORT PROCESSING, 1. the bank can be considered to have three layers. Effort-Emotion-Thought. Effort buries emotion. Emotion buries thought. A physical aberration or physical disability is held in place by a counter-effort. Effort processing removes the effort which uncovers the pc’s own emotion and removes the emotion which uncovers and blows the pc’s thoughts and postulates about the disability as these are the aberrative source of it. (BTB 1 Dec 71R IV) 2. processing which lifts up for emphasis the fact that only one’s self-determinism is important, and that the efforts and the counter-efforts against it are the aberrative factor. Rediscovering times for the preclear when he gave up his self-determinism, and erasing the efforts involved in these postulates and incidents is giving back that individual’s happiness and assisting him to move again in a survival direction. (DAB, Vol. II, p. 105)
8-C, 1. control (Routine 8-Control). (HCOB 20 Aug 71 II) 2. essentially and intimately the operation of making the physical body contact the environment. (5410CM08) 3. name of a process. Also used to mean good control. (HCOB 23 Aug 65)
8D, Standard Operating Procedure 8D, 1954. Primarily for heavy cases the goal of this procedure was "to bring the preclear to tolerate any viewpoint." (PXL, p. 205)
8-80, see TECHNIQUE 8-80.
8-8008, see SCIENTOLOGY 8-8008.
EIGHT, the symbol of infinity oo stood upright makes the numeral "8." (PAB 83)
EIGHTH DYNAMIC, see DYNAMICS.
8 LEVELS OF CASES, see STATE OF CASE SCALE.
8RB, word clearing series 8RB, the standard C/S for word clearing Method 1 in session. (HCOB 30 Jun 71R II)
EJECTOR, species of command. These are colloquially called "bouncers." They include such things as "Get out!" "Don’t ever come back," "I’ve got to stay away," etc. etc., including any combination of words which literally mean ejection. (DMSMH, p. 213)
ELAN VITAL, theta, life force, life energy, divine energy, the energy peculiar to life. (SOS, Bk. 2, p. 21)
ELECTRICAL, is the bridge between sensation and pain and is difficult to classify as either pain or sensation when it exists alone. (HCOB 8 Nov 62) [This definition of electrical is a specialized definition of the word in terms of how it applies in the field of perceptics. Only the technical usage of the word as it is used in Dn and Scn is defined here.]
ELECTRICITY, a flow manifestation of force. (5312CM17)
ELECTRONICS, lower and cruder manifestations of the same order of actuality as thought. (Scn 8-8008 Gloss)
ELECTROPSYCHOMETER, it’s an electrical means of measuring the spirit. It’s exactly what its name says, electropsychometer. It’s called for short, E-meter. (Class VIII, No. 7) See also E-METER .
EMERGENCY AUDITOR, this person is the person called upon by the group auditor to assist a preclear in the group who has hit a sudden "grief charge" or who is consistently "boiling-off." (GAH, p. iii)
EM, E-meter. Where EM is followed directly by a number (e.g. EM 16) it refers to the E-meter drill of that number. (BTB 12 Apr 72R)
E-METER, l. the E-meter is a religious artifact used as a spiritual guide in the church confessional. It is an aid to the auditor (minister, student, pastoral counselor) in two-way communication locating areas of spiritual travail and indicating spiritual well-being in an area. (HCO PL 24 Sept 73 VII) 2. Hubbard Electrometer. An electronic instrument for measuring mental state and change of state in individuals, as an aid to precision and speed in auditing. The E-meter is not intended or effective for the diagnosis, treatment or prevention of any disease. (Scn AD) 3. used to verify the preclear’s gain and register when each separate auditing action is ended. (HCOB 5 Apr 69R) 4. Electropsychometer. (HCOB 23 Aug 65) 5. the meter tells you what the preclear’s mind is doing when the preclear is made to think of something. The meter registers before the preclear becomes conscious of the datum. It is therefore a pre-conscious meter. It passes a tiny current through the preclear’s body. This current is influenced by the mental masses, pictures, circuits and machinery. When the unclear pc thinks of something, these mental items shift and this registers on the meter. (EME, p. 8)
E-METER CALIBRATION, see CALIBRATION.
E-METER CHECK, see METER CHECK.
EMOTION, 1. a response by a wave-length affecting an individual or another which produces a sensation and a state of mind. (SH Spec 83, 6612C06) 2. emotion is three things—engramic response to situations, endocrine metering of the body to meet situations on an analytical level and the inhibition or the furtherance of life force. (Scn 0-8, p. 66) 3. a manifestation, a condition of beingness which is the connector between thought and effort. The tone scale is a direct index of emotion. (5203CM05B) 4. the intention to exert effort bridges into the body by emotion. In other words, the physical-mental bridge is emotion. Emotion is motion. (5203CM04B) 5. emotion could be called the energy manifestation of affinity. As used in Dn, emotion could be called the index of the state of being. In the English language, "emotional" is often considered synonymous with "irrational." This would seem to assume that if one is emotional one cannot be reasonable. No more unreasonable assumption could possibly be made. (SOS, p. 48) 6. this word is redefined in Dn and is given an opposite for comparison, "misemotion." Previously the word emotion was never satisfactorily defined. Now it is defined as an organism manifestation of position on the tone scale which is rationality appropriate to the present time environment and which truly represents the present time position on the tone scale. Rational effect. (SOS Gloss)
EMOTIONAL CHARGE, emotional charge may be contained in any engram: the emotion communicates, in the same tone level, from the personnel around the "unconscious" person into his reactive mind. Anger goes into an engram as anger, apathy as apathy, shame as shame. Whatever people have felt emotionally around"an unconscious" person should be found in the engram which resulted from the incident. (DMSMH, p. 251)
EMOTIONAL CURVE, 1. the drop from any position above 2.0 to a position below 2.0 on the realization of failure or inadequacy. It is easily recovered by preclears. (AP&A, p. 24) 2. the drop or rise from one level of emotion to another. (HFP, p. 120)
EMOTIONAL SCALE, refers to the subjective feelings of the individual, in relation to his position on the tone scale. (NOTL, p. 102)
EMOTIONAL TONE SCALE, see TONE SCALE.
EMOTION-POINT, that point from which a person emotes, and at which he emoted. (PXL, p. 257)
EMPIRICAL FACT, one that is established by observation, not established by theory or reason. (SH Spec 61, 6110C03)
END OF CYCLE, a finite stop. (5311CM24)
END OF CYCLE PROCESSING, in end of cycle processing you merely keep mocking up a finished, completed task, a goal, and so on up to a point where you’ve obtained that goal. (5312CM21)
END PHENOMENA, those indicators in the pc and meter which show that a chain or process is ended. It shows in Dn that basic on that chain has been erased and in Scn that the pc has been released on that process being run. Any Dn auditing below power processing has four definite reactions in the pc which show the process is ended. (1) floating needle, (2) cognition, (3) very good indicators, (pc happy), (4) erasure of the final picture audited. The 0 to IV Scn end phenomena are (1) floating needle, (2) cognition, (3) very good indicators, (4) release. (HCOB 20 Feb 70) Abbr. EP.
END RUDIMENTS, rudilnents to make the pc feel ok by session end. They are to clean up additional residual charge left by reason of the session and they are to put the pc in a frame of mind to end the session. (SH Spec 121, 6203C01)
END WORD, 1. the common denominator to the whole of a GPM. (SH Spec 50, 6412C22) 2. the final word of a goal. (HCOB 17 Aug 64)
ENERGY, 1. energy would simply mean a potential of motion or power. It’s potential or actual motion or force. (SH Spec 84, 6612C13) 2. energy derives from imposition of space between terminals and a reduction and expansion of that space. (COHA, p. 256) 3. there are three kinds of energy. There’s a flow, and then there’s a dispersal, and then there’s a ridge. (PDC 18) 4. a mass of particles which is a mass of motion. (5203CM04B) 5. postulated particles in space. (PXL, p. 150) 6. energy is subdivisible into a large motion, such as a flow, a dispersal, or a ridge, and a small motion which is itself commonly called a "particle" in nuclear physics. Agitation within agitation is the basic formation of particles of energy, such as electrons, protons and others. (Scn 8-80, p. 43)
ENFORCED AFFINITY, the demand on the individual that he experience or admit affinity when he has not felt it. People lower toned than the preclear commonly command his affinity; and when affinity is given but not felt locks are formed which are quite enturbulative should engrams underlie such an enforcement. (SOS, Bk. 2, p. 72)
ENFORCED COMMUNICATION, the demand on the individual that he experience or admit communication when he has not felt it. Enforced communication is productive of all manner of aberration and physiological changes in the individual. When the individual is forced to listen to something he would not ordinarily listen to if left to his own self-determinism, his hearing to that degree is impaired. When he has been forced to touch something which he would not ordinarily touch, his tactile is thus impaired. When he has been forced to talk when his self-determinism says he should remain silent, his speech communication is impaired. (SOS, Bk. 2, pp. 72-73)
ENFORCED HAVE, making someone accept what they didn’t want. (HCOB 3 Jun 72R)
ENFORCED OVERT HAVE, forcing upon another a substance, action or thing not wanted or refused by the other. (HCO PL 12 May 72)
ENFORCED REALITY, the demand on the individual that he experience or admit reality when he has not felt it. Any time a person is made to agree by force or threat or deprivation, to another’s reality and yet does not feel that reality himself, an aberrative condition exists. (SOS, Bk. 2, pp. 72-73)
ENGRAM, 1. a mental image picture which is a recording of a time of physical pain and unconsciousness. It must by definition have impact or injury as part of its content. (HCOB 23 Apr 69) 2. a specialized kind of facsimile. This differs from other mental pictures because it contains, as part of its content, unconsciousness and physical pain. (Dn 55.1, p. 12) 3. a complete recording, down to the last accurate detail, of every perception present in a moment of partial or full unconsciousness. (Scn 0-8, p. 11) 4. a theta facsimile of atoms and molecules in misalignment. (Scn 0-8, p. 81) 5. a unit of force which is held in because one has chosen force itself for his randomity. (5312CM13) 6. the word engram is an old one borrowed from biology. It means simply, "a lasting memory trace on a cell." It may be engraved on more than the cell, but up against Dn processing, it is not very lasting. (SOS, p. 10) 7. physical pain, enmest and entheta held at a specific point on the time track. (SOS, Bk. 2, p. 25) 8. a severe physical pain causes considerable analytical attenuation, shutting off the analyzer thoroughly for a period of time. This, technically, is an engram, although any incident, painful or not, contained in the reactive mind, and occluded by anaten can be considered an engram. (SOS, p. 80) 9. a recording which has the sole purpose of steering the individual through supposed but usually nonexistent dangers. (SOS, p. 10) 10. a severe area of plus or minus randomity of sufficient volume to cause unconsciousness. (Scn 0-8, p. 81) 11. a moment when the analytical mind is shut down by physical pain, drugs or other means, and the reactive bank is open to the receipt of a recording. (DMSMH, p. 153) 12. simply moments of physical pain strong enough to throw part or all the analytical machinery out of circuit; they are antagonism to the survival of the organism or pretended sympathy to the organism’s survival. That is the entire definition. Great or little unconsciousness, physical pain, perceptic content, and contra-survival or pro-survival data. (DMSMH, p. 68) 13. not a sentient recording containing meanings. It is merely a series of impressions such as a needle might make on wax. These impressions are meaningless to the body until the engram keys-in, at which time aberrations and psychosomatics occur. (DMSMH, p. 131) 14. a bundle of data which includes not only perceptics and speech present but also metering for emotion and state of physical being. (DMSMH, p. 245)15. an apparent surcharge in the mental circuit with certain definite finite content. That charge is not reached or examined by the analytical mind but that charge is capable of acting as an independent command. (DTOT, p. 43)
ENGRAM BANK, a colloquial name for the reactive mind. It is that portion of a person’s mind which works on a stimulus response basis. (PXL Gloss)
ENGRAM CHAIN, a basic engram and a series of similar incidents. (DTOT, p. 112) See CHAIN.
ENGRAM COMMAND, any phrase contained in an engram. (DMSMH Gloss)
ENGRAMIC THOUGHT, 1. thought that demands immediate action without examination by the analytical mind. (Scn Jour 28-G) 2. irrational identity thought by which the mind is made to conceive identities where only vague similarities may exist. Engramic thinking can be stated by A equals A equals A equals A equals A. (DTOT, p. 64)
ENMEST, 1. another word meaning enturbulated mest. (SOS, p. 5) 2. below 2.0 on the tone scale mest is considered to be confused and enturbulated and is referred to as enmest. Mest, in a life form, is an orderly array above 2.0 on the tone scale. (SOS, p. 41) 3. enmest could be considered mest with a somehow reversed polarity. It is fighting to get free from theta. The entrapped enmest seeks to fight away from anything which even closely resembles entheta and so attacks all theta. (DAB, Vol. II, p. 136) 4. mest which has been enturbulated by entheta or crushed too hard into theta and rendered less usable. (SOS Gloss)
ENTHETA, 1. means enturbulated theta (thought or life); especially refers to communications, which, based on lies and confusions, are slanderous, choppy or destructive in an attempt to overwhelm or suppress a person or group. (Scn AD) 2. theta which has been confused and chaotically mixed with the material universe and which will lie in this confusion until death or some other process disenturbulates it. Theta, below 2.0 on the tone scale, we call entheta. (SOS, p. 41) 3. anger, sarcasm, despair, slyly destructive suggestions. (HTLTAE, p. 88)
ENTITIES, ridges on which facsimiles are planted. Each one of those things can be a thinking entity. It thinks it’s alive. It can think it’s a being, as long as energy is fed to it. (PDC 36)
ENTRAPMENT, the opposite of freedom. A person who is not free is entrapped. He may be trapped by an idea; he may be trapped by matter; he may be trapped by energy or space or time; or he may be trapped by all of them. The more thoroughly a person is trapped, the less free he is. He cannot move, he cannot change, he cannot communicate, he cannot feel affinity and reality. Death itself could be said to be man’s ultimate in entrapment; for when a man is totally entrapped, he is dead. (Abil 254)
ENTURBULATE, cause to be turbulent or agitated and disturbed. (Scn AD) [The mechanics of enturbulation can be found in SOS Chapter One.]
ENVIRONMENT, 1. the physical universe, security, it’s right there, it’s solid. This is the space of the room, the floor, the ceiling, the walls, the objects there, and if we happen to be looking through these things, then it’s the walls in the next room, and up through the roof, the air about the house and down through, it’s the earth underneath the house. (PXL, pp. 218-219) 2. the surroundings of the preclear from moment to moment in particular or in general, including people, pets, mechanical objects, weather, culture, clothing or the Supreme Being. Anything he perceives or believes he perceives. The objective environment is the environment everyone agrees is there. The subjective environment is the environment the individual himself believes is there. They may not agree. (HFP Gloss)
ENVIRONMENTAL ABERRATION, the result of aberrated persons and situations in the individual’s present-time environment. This is normally temporary, but cumulative environmental entheta has a chronic effect in the case. (SOS, Bk. 2, p. 103)
EO, Ethics Officer. (HCO PL 7 Mar 72R)
EP, end phenomena. (HCOB 20 Feb 70)
EPICENTER, the epicenters would be such parts of the body as the "funny bones" or any "judo-sensitive" spots: the sides of the neck, the inside of the wrist, the places the doctors tap to find out if there is a reflex. Those things are sub-brains picked up on the evolutionary line probably. They have a monitoring effect on the body and the individual. (PAB 2)
EPICENTER THEORY, the theory of epicenters merely states that there is an evolution of command posts and that those command posts remain structurally visible in the organism. They can be found in the organism and they still behave as lower echelon command posts, control centers in other words. (5110CMllB) See also EPICENTER.
EPISTEMOLOGY, a philosophical term meaning "the study of knowledge." (Abil Ma 270)
E. PURP, (Ev Purp) evil purpose. (HCOB 28 Mar 74)
ERASE, to recount an engram until it has vanished entirely. There is a distinct difference between a reduction and an erasure. If the engram is early, if it has no material earlier which will suspend it, that engram will erase. (DMSMH, p. 287)
ERASED, the words "vanished" or "erased," when applied to an engram which has been treated mean that the engram has disappeared from the engram bank. It cannot be found afterwards except by search of the standard memory. (DMSMH, p. 207)
ERASING AUDITING, treating the session as an incident and erasing it as a lock. (SH Spec 70, 6607C21)
ERASURE, 1. the act of erasing, rubbing out, locks, secondaries or engrams. (HCOB 23 Apr 69) 2. apparent removal of the engram from the files of the engram bank and refiling in the standard bank as memory. (DMSMH, p. 286) 3. erasure, in essence, is a knowingness process rather than an energy rub-out process. It teaches somebody that he can duplicate the experience and is still alive. (5312CM16)
E/S, earlier similar. (HCOB 14 Mar 71R)
ESPINOL, this society belongs nominally to the Espinol United Stars. This is sun twelve and it is one little tiny pinpoint. Their whole title is "Espinol United Stars, moons, planets and asteroids this part of the Universe is ours—this quarter of the Universe is ours"—it translates better. (SH Spec 281, 6307C09) [Note on SH Spec 297, 6308C21 LRH refers to this as the Espinol Confederacy a civilization, duration of which was probably on the order of a few hundred thousand years and which engaged in implanting.]
ESTO, Establishment Officer. An ESTO is a third dynamic auditor who deaberrates a group by cleanly organizing it so it can produce. (FSO 529)
ETH?, "This preclear may be an ethics case, roller coaster or no case gain." (HCOB 23 Aug 65)
ETHICAL CODE, an ethical code is not enforceable, is not to be enforced, but is a luxury of conduct. A person conducts himself according to an ethical code because he wants to or because he feels he is proud enough or decent enough, or civilized enough to so conduct himself. An ethical code, of course, is a code of certain restrictions indulged in to better the manner of conduct of life. (PAB 40)
ETHICAL CONDUCT, conduct out of one’s own sense of justice and honesty. When you enforce a moral code upon people you depart considerably from anything like ethics. People obey a moral code because they are afraid. People are ethical only when they are strong. (Dn 55!, p. 25)
ETHICS, 1. the term is used to denote ethics as a subject, or the use of ethics, or that section of a Scientology Church which handles ethics matters. (BTB 12 Apr 72R) 2. ethics actually consist, as we can define them now in Dn, of rationality toward the highest level of survival for the individual, the future race, the group, and mankind, and the other dynamics taken collectively. Ethics are reason. The highest ethic level would be long-term survival concepts with minimal destruction, along any of the dynamics. (SOS, p. 128) 3. ethicB has to do with a code of agreement amongst people that they will conduct themselves in a fashion which will obtain to the optimum solution of their problems. (5008C30) 4. the rules or standards governing the conduct of the members of a profession. (HCO PL 3 May 72) 5. ethics is a personal thing. By definition, the word means "the study of the general nature of morals and the specific moral choices to be made by the individual in his relationship with others." (AND) When one is ethical or "has his ethics in" it is by his own determination and is done by himself. (HCOB 15 Nov 72 II) 6. that which is enforced by oneself, his belief in his own honor, and good reason, and optimum solution along the eight dynamics. (PDC 37)
ETHICS BAIT, a person in continual heavy ethics or who is out ethics. (HCO PL 4 Apr 72)
ETHICS CASES, SPs and PTSes. (HCOB 3 Apr 66)
EUPHORIA, gleeful happiness about something. (SH Spec 59, 6504C27)
EVALUATION, 1. telling the pc what to think about his case. (HCOB 4 Aug 60) 2. evaluation for a person could be defined as the action of shaking his stable data without giving him further stable data with which he can agree or in which he can believe. (PAB 93) 3. the reactive mind’s conception of viewpoint. (COHA, p. 208) 4. the shifting of viewpoints or the effort to do so. (PAB 8)
EVALUATION OF DATA, a datum is as understood as it can be related to other data. (SOS Gloss)
EVIL, 1. that which inhibits or brings plus or minus randomity into the organism, which is contrary to the survival motives of the organism. (Scn 0-8, p. 92) 2. may be classified as those things which tend to limit the dynamic thrust of the individual, his family, his group, his race, or life in general in the dynamic drive, also limited by the observation, the observer and his ability to observe. (DTOT, pp. 20-21) 3. evil is the opposite of good, and is anything which is destructive more than it is constructive along any of the various dynamics. A thing which does more destruction than construction is evil from the viewpoint of the individual, the future, group, species, life, or mest that it destroys. (SOS, Bk. 2, p. 34)
EVIL PURPOSE, destructive intentions. (7203C30SO) Abbr. Ev purp.
EVOLUTION, there are four evolutionary tracks, evidently. Organism evolution, through natural selection, accident and (evidence suggests) outright planning. Mest evolution, brought about through the agency of life organisms. Theta evolution, a postulated process of learning in theta as a whole or as entities. And present time ladder-of-support evolution, in which less complicated organisms support more complicated organisms. (SOS Gloss)
EXAGGERATERS, engramic commands which give the aspect of too much pain and too much emotion. (DMSMH, p. 347)
EXAMINER, that person in a Scientology Church assigned to the duties of noting pc’s statements, TA position and indicators after session, or when pc wishes to volunteer information. (HCO PL 4 Dec 71 V)
EXAM REPORT, a report made out by the Qual Examiner when the pc goes to Exams after session or goes on his own volition. It contains the meter details, pc’s indicators and the pc’s statement. (BTB 3 Nov 72R)
EXCALIBUR, 1. "Excalibur" was an unpublished book written in the very late 1930’s. Only fragments of it remain. (HCOB 17 Mar 69) 2. an unpublished work most of which has been released in HCOBs, PLs and books. (HCO PL 26 Apr 70)
EXCHANGE BY DYNAMICS, a person who doesn’t produce becomes mentally or physically ill. For his exchange factor is out. The remedy is rather simple. First one has to know all about exchange as covered in the product clearing policy letters. Then he has to specially clear this up with people who do not produce. Clear up the definitions of dynamics then have the person draw up a big chart and say what he gives the first dynamic and what it gives him. And so on up the dynamics. Now, have him consider "his own second dynamic." What does his second dynamic give his first dynarnic. What does his second dynamic give the second dynamic and what does it give him. And so on until you have a network of these exchange arrows, each both ways. Somewhere along the way he will have quite a cognition. That, if it’s a big one is the end phenomena of it. And don’t be surprised if you see a person now and then change his physical face shape. (HCO PL 4 Apr 72) [The above is a brief summary of the action. Full data can be found in the referenced HCO PL. l
EXCHANGED VALENCE, 1. one has directly superimposed the identity of another on his own. Example, daughter becomes own mother to some degree. (FOT, p. 95) 2. a direct assumption of another valence. (HCOB 14 Jul 56)
EX DN, Expanded Dianetics. (BTB 20 Aug 71R II)
EXHIBITIONISTIC, displaying himself too thoroughly, being too much there at all times. (FOT, p. 29)
EXISTENCE, 1. an existing state or fact of being; life; living; continuance of being; and occurrence; specific manifestation. (HCOB 11 May 65) 2. apparency, reality, livingness. (FOT, p. 26) 3. a test or perception of existence. (PDC 5)
EXOGENETIC, there are two kinds of illness: the first could be called autogenetic, which means that it originated within the organism and was self-generated, and exogenetic, which means that the origin of the illness was exterior. The Pasteur germ theory would be the theory of exogenetic—exteriorly generated —illness. (DMSMH, p. 92)
EXPANDED DIANETICS, that branch of Dn which uses Dn in special ways for specific purposes. It is not HSDC Dn. Its position on the grade chart would be just above Class IV. Its proper number is Class IVA. It uses Dn to change an Oxford Capacity Analysis (or an American Personality Analysis) and is run directly against these analysis graphs and the Science of Survival "Hubbard Chart of Human Evaluation." Expanded Dianetics is not the same as Standard Dn as it requires special training and advanced skills. The main difference between these two branches is that Standard Dn is very general in application. Expanded Dn is very specifically adjusted to the pc. Some pcs, particularly heavy drug cases, or who have been given injurious psychiatric treatment or who are physically disabled or who are chronically ill or who have had trouble running engrams (to name a few) require a specially adapted technology. (HCOB 15 Apr 72) Abbr. Ex Dn, XDn.
EXPANDED DIANETIC SPECLALIST, an HGDS (Hubbard Graduate Dianetic Specialist). (HCOB 15 Apr 72R)
EXPANDED GITA, an extension of Give and Take processing. Expanded Gita remedies contra-survival abundance and scarcity. (COHA, p. 227)
EXPANDED LOWER GRADES, pcs won’t like being told they "have to have their lower grades rerun." Actually that’s not a factual statement anyway. The lower grades harmonic into the OT levels. They can be run again with full 1950-1960 to 1970 processes as given on the SH courses all through the 1960’s. These are now regrouped and sorted out and are called Expanded Lower Grades. (HCOB 25 Jun 70 II)
EXPERIENCE, the doingness of a beingness . ( SH Spec 107, 6201C31)
EXPLOSION, an outflow of energy usually violent but not necessarily so, from a more or less common source point. (Scn 8-8008, p. 49)
EXT, 1. extended. (Class VIII No. 11) 2. exterior. (HCOB 5 Apr 71)
EXTENDED HEARING, 1. too high an alertness to sounds. This accompanies, quite ordinarily, a general fear of the environment or the people in it. (SA, p. 85) 2. able to hear much more acutely. (DMSMH, p. 94)
EXTENSION COURSE, consists of a textbook and a series of lessons done on a glued-top table, one sheet per lesson, eight questions or exercises per lesson. The extension course should give the taker a passing knowledge of Dn and Scn terminology, phenomena and parts. (HCOB 16 Dec 58)
EXTERIOR, the fellow would just move out, away from the body and be aware of himself as independent of a body but still able to control and handle the body. (Spec Lect 7006C21)
EXTERIORILY DETERMINED, compelled to do or repressed from doing without his own rational consent. (DMSMH, p. 229)
EXTERIORIZATION, 1. the state of the thetan, the individual himself, being outside his body. When this is done, the person achieves a certainty that he is himself and not his body. (PXL Gloss) 2. the phenomenon of being in a position in space dependent on only one’s consideration, able to view from that space, bodies and the room, as it is. (PAB 125) 3. the act of moving out of the body with or without full perception. (HCOB 22 Oct 71)
EXTERIORIZATION RUNDOWN, a remedy designed to permit the pc to be further audited after he has gone exterior. The Ext Rundown is not meant to be sold or passed off as a method of exteriorizing a pc. (HCOB 2 Dec 70, C/S Series No. 23, Exteriorization Summary) [NOTE: the above HCOB has since been revised to HCOB 17 Dec 71R, C/S Series 23RA, Interiorization Summary. All references to Exteriorization Rundown in the former HCOB have been changed to Interiorization Rundown in the latter HCOB. This is also known as Interiorization Rundown, Int Rundown, Int-Ext Rundown, Ext-Int Rundown.] Abbr. Ext RD or Int RD.
EXTRAORDINARY SOLUTIONS, extraordinary solutions are only required when the basics of auditing are violated, and that is an extraordinary solution, definition of—that activity which somebody thinks he ought to do because all the basics of auditing have been flubbed. (SH Spec 60, 6109C28)
EXTRAPOLATING, getting some more and some more and some more application of the same datum. Theoretical adding up of data. (5211C10)
EXT RD, Exteriorization Rundown. (HCOB 12 Apr 71, C/S Series 35, Exteriorization Errors) [NOTE: The above HCOB has since been revised to HCOB 16 Dec 71RA, Revised 19 Sept 74, C/S Series 35RA Interiorization Errors. All references to Ext RD in the former HCOB have been changed to Int RD in the latter HCOB. ]
EXTROVERSION, 1. extroversion means nothing more than being able to look outward. An extroverted personality is one who is capable of looking around the environment. A person who is capable of looking at the world around him and seeing it quite real and quite bright is, of course, in a state of extroversion. (HCOB 23 Jan 74RA) 2. the preclear ceasing to put his attention on his mind, but putting his attention on the environment. We see this happen often in the Opening Procedure of 8-C where the preclear has the room suddenly become bright to him. He has extroverted his attention. He has come free from one of these communication tangles out of the past and has suddenly looked at the environment. (Dn 55.!, p. 94)
EXTROVERT, n. one whose available energy is being applied to the world and people around him rather than being applied to the past, or even to any great degree, the present. He does a lot of future planning, a lot of action. Every effort is into the future. (51 12CM29B)