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- Scientology was developed by an author of science fiction (Sci-Fi) books, L. Ron Hubbard.
- Including short stories, novels, and non-fiction, he published 1084 works in his lifetime (died in 1986) and holds the Guinness World Record for most published works.
- After serving in WWII, he practised as a hypnotist and published a book called Dianetics (soon became a bestseller), which, he said, covered a new approach to handle mental health.
- The success of Dianetics provoked Hubbard to establish a foundation that was based on 3 principles: A) Souls are eternal and each soul has had multiple bodies over many lifetimes; B) In each of these lifetimes, the soul has gathered traumas; C) We, the current carriers of this soul, could get rid of these traumas through a process called ‘Auditing’.
- In auditing, either through a conversation or through a machine called E-meterScientologists say an e-meter measures the body’s electric flow as an auditor asks a series of questions they say reveals sources of trauma. It is said to work like a polygraph lie-detector and the auditor observes the phrases and words that generate negative feelings., professionals help the patient recall their past traumas.
- Members believe that reliving those traumas helps victims overcome them because the analytic mind (instead of our reactive mind) takes over and the victim reaches a state called ‘clear’.
- The process, however, has not received any endorsement by medical science so far.
- Those who look down upon Scientology base their argument on the fact that it was developed by someone whose life revolved around science fiction.
- Another argument against the legitimacy of Scientology as a religion is that auditing costs money (US$800 for a 1-hour session; high-level full-scale auditing can cost up to $100,000), which is not something people associate with religion.
- Also, the religion restricts people from leaving; people who have shared their inner secrets during auditing feel scared leaving (potential blackmailing).
- A few (including Hollywood celebrities) who have left the religion have made various complaints but because of lack of evidence, these complaints have been ignored.
- In the 1960s, when Scientology began making huge sums of money, the US tax department tried to claim taxes but after 25 years of a legal battle, it was ruled that Scientology was indeed a church and thus exempt from taxes.
- After Hubbard died in 1986, David Miscavige took over the church; he has been accused of violence and abuse towards church members but nothing has been proved yet.
- The biggest controversy around David Miscavige is the mysterious circumstances under which his wife, Shelly Miscavige, went missing in 2007.
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