Reactive mind

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The reactive mind is a concept in Scientology formulated by L. Ron Hubbard, referring to that portion of the human mind that is unconscious and operates on stimulus-response, [1] to which Hubbard attributed most mental, emotional, and psychosomatic ailments:

Contents

What can it do? It can give a man arthritis, bursitis, asthma, allergies, sinusitis, coronary trouble, high blood pressure and so on, down the whole catalog of psychosomatic ills, adding a few more which were never specifically classified as psychosomatic, such as the common cold.

— L. Ron Hubbard ( Dianetics: The Modern Science of Mental Health , 1999 paperback edition, p. 69)

Despite the lack of scientific basis for his claims, [2] Hubbard's book Dianetics: The Modern Science of Mental Health claimed that the reactive mind is composed of impressions of past events of pain and unconsciousness, which he called engrams.

In Scientology, an auditor uses an E-meter (a galvanic skin response detector) [3] to locate engrams in the parishioner [4] which are then erased, using Dianetics. [5] Scientology promotes such treatments to clear engrams believed to limit the individual's spiritual ability, to halt the decline of their spiritual awareness, and to increase their survival potential. [6]

From the end of the 1950s until the early 1970s, author William S. Burroughs used Hubbard's reactive mind theory as the basis of his cut-up method, which was applied to novels such as The Soft Machine . [7]

Criticism

University of Oxford biology professor Richard Dawkins wrote that Scientology purports to use scientific tools such as its controversial E-meter [8] to augment the "gullibility" of this already "gullible age". [9]

Notes

  1. L. Ron Hubbard Science of Survival, p. 418, Bridge Publications Inc., 2007 (1st ed. 1951). ISBN   978-1-4031-4485-0.
  2. Martin Gardner, Fads and Fallacies in the Name of Science , ch. 22, Dover Publications Inc., I957 ISBN   0-486-20394-8.
  3. The Biofeedback Monitor, Archived 2008-09-15 at the Wayback Machine
  4. deChant, Dell; Jorgensen, Danny (2009). Neusner, Jacob (ed.). World Religions in America, Fourth Edition: An Introduction. Presbyterian Publishing Corporation. pp. 229–230. ISBN   9781611640472.
  5. Corydon, Bent (1987). L. Ron Hubbard, Messiah or Madman?. Lyle Stuart. p. 269. ISBN   0818404442. The idea in Dianetics is to gain access to the postulates or "think" (immature evaluations) buried in moments of pain, unconsciousness, and shock, and "erase" them from the "reactive mind," thus refiling them in the conscious mind where they can be intelligently evaluated, used or discarded, at the individual's discretion.
  6. deChant, Dell; Jorgensen, Danny (2009). Neusner, Jacob (ed.). World Religions in America, Fourth Edition: An Introduction. Presbyterian Publishing Corporation. p. 301. ISBN   9781611640472.
  7. Wills, David S., Scientologist! William S. Burroughs and the 'Weird Cult'
  8. "United States v. ARTICLE OR DEVICE, ETC., 333 F. Supp. 357 (D.D.C. 1971)". Justia . July 30, 1971.
  9. The Gullible Age

See also


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