A DESCRIPTION OF SCIENTOLOGY
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Scientology: Scio (Latin) know, logos
(Greek) the word or outward form by which
the inward thought is expressed and made
known. Thus, Scientology means knowing
about knowing.
The full story of the development and
codification of Scientology can be found
in scores of books, more than 15,000 pages
of technical writing and more than 3,000
taped lectures. All told, these works
represent a lifetime of research by L. Ron
Hubbard to discover a workable means to
set men spiritually free — to replace ignorance with knowledge, doubts with
certainty and misery with happiness.
Today, the fruits of L. Ron Hubbard’s
work are available to anyone who wishes to
reach for them. And no matter how
different Scientologists may be — whether
teachers and businessmen, housewives and
athletes, artists and secretaries — they
hold one vital factor in common: having
significantly bettered their lives, they
know that Scientology works.
Nothing in Scientology, however, need
be taken on faith. Its truths are
self-evident, its principles are easily
demonstrable and its technology can be
seen at work in any church of Scientology.
One need only open the door and step
through.
Scientology is a twentieth-century
religion. It comprises a vast body of
knowledge extending from certain
fundamental truths, and prime among those
truths: Man is a spiritual being endowed
with abilities well beyond those which he
normally envisages. He is not only able to
solve his own problems, accomplish his
goals and gain lasting happiness, but also
to achieve new states of awareness he may
never have dreamed possible.
In one form or another, all great
religions have held the hope of spiritual
freedom — a condition free of material
limitations and misery. The question has
always been, however, how does one reach
such a state, particularly while still
living amidst a frantic and often
overwhelming society?
Although modern life seems to pose an
infinitely complex array of problems,
Scientology maintains that the solutions
to those problems are basically simple and
within every man’s reach. Difficulties
with communication and interpersonal
relationships, nagging insecurities,
self-doubt and despair — each man innately
possesses the potential to be free of
these and many other concerns.
Scientology offers a pathway to greater
freedom.
While the hope for such freedom is
ancient, what Scientology is doing is new.
The way it is organized is new. The
technologies with which it can bring about
a new state of being in man are likewise
new.
Because Scientology addresses man as a
spiritual being, it stands completely
apart from other religions which see man
as a product of his environment or his
genes — fixed in the limitations under
which he was born.
Rather, Scientology is the study and
handling of the spirit in relationship to
itself, universes and other life. Based
upon the tradition of fifty thousand years
of thinking men, it is built upon the
fundamental truths of life. From these
principles, exact methods by which one can
improve conditions were derived; and
unlike other efforts of improvement, which
offered only rules by which men should
live, Scientology offers real tools for
use in everyday life. Thus, it does not
depend upon a system of beliefs or faith.
The emphasis is squarely on an exact
application of its principles toward the
improvement of one’s life and the world in
which we live.
To understand exactly how Scientology
is utilized, something should be known of
the track of research L. Ron Hubbard
traveled and the antecedent of Scientology
— Dianetics.
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