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3. The Hubbard ElectrometerThere is one other feature of Scientology processing which merits our close attention because of the important role it has played in the official persecution of Scientologists, especially in America. That is use of the device known as the Hubbard Electrometer or E-meter. Technically, the instrument is a highly refined type of Wheatstone Bridge - an electronic device used to measure the resistance (in units called "ohms") to a flow of electrical current passing through it. The Hubbard version of the E-meter (Mark V) has been specially designed to measure both large and minute changes, regardless of how quickly they occur, in the resistance of the human body to a very low-voltage current of electricity. The instrument contains transistorized, printed circuitry, connected to a galvanometer which indicates the amount of resistance offered by a body connected between two electrodes attached to either side of the device. 60 / The Hidden Story of ScientologyThe display panel is equipped with an on-off switch, a "tone-arm", and three knobs for adjusting the instrument's sensitivity, for changing the calibration and for varying the range. Re-chargeable batteries provide power for the meter's operation. During processing, the preclear grips two tin cans, one in each hand, attached to the electrode lead wires. The dial and the control panel of the instrument face the auditor, usually out of view of the person being audited. As the pc responds to questions or reacts to mental stimulus, the auditor observes the action of the needle on the ohmmeter dial. According to Scientology theory, based on extensive tests made with the instrument, the individual's emotional state instantly causes an increase or a decrease in his body's resistance to the small trickle of electricity being passed through him. In the book, E-Meter Essentials, Hubbard says: "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." There are ten principal kinds of needle activity that are considered indicative in auditing. These are: the stuck needle (no movement); fall (movement to the right); rise (movement to the left); theta bop (steady dance of the needle); rock slam (when needle back and forth in unequal jerky motion); stage four (needle goes up an inch or two, sticks, falls and repeats this action;) floating (when the needle floats free over a wide area, unaffected by questions or commands); nul (when needle is active on its own, but uninfluenced by auditing questions); change of characteristic and body reactions. Scientologists regard the E-meter as an indispensable auditing tool when employed by an auditor thoroughly trained in its operation. They say it answers a long-felt need for scientific accuracy in measuring "the impingement of the individual himself upon the body by the direct action of thought". The Hubbard Electrometer / 61To prove that the E-meter does, in fact, measure the intensity of facsimiles or mental-image pictures of past incidents, Scientologists often invite the preclear to participate in a simple test. Hubbard gives the following instructions for the demonstration: "Place the electrodes in the hands of a person. Then pinch that person. You will see the needle of the E-meter duck. Now tell the person to go back to the moment you pinched him and 'feel the pinch again'. He will do so and you will see that the needle ducks just as it did when you first pinched him. In other words, you made a facsimile containing pain when you pinched him. Now you command the facsimile to come back. You see it read again on the meter just as it did when you pinched him. If you make him go through the pinch several times, you will find the needle action grows less and less. This, in essence, is a primary principle in Dianetics: that facsimiles exist. It is a prime factor in Dianetic processing that facsimiles can be reduced in intensity." The auditor does not read the E-meter to detect untruthful answers or lies that the preclear might tell, but only as a measurement of stress. "And stress is what the auditor is trying to find. For stress is the thing which makes the pc ill and aberrated." According to Hubbard, an experienced auditor can size up the type of person he is dealing with even before the preclear takes the electrodes into his hands. Various attitudes and comments beforehand will give him away. For example: "If the pc invalidates the instrument, says, 'Oh, one of them things. I hear as how they ain't regular', the auditor knows he is dealing with a case he will have to use a dredge on to find bottom. For this character sees in the E-meter something which is going to 'find him out', something he cannot cheat and lie around, something which will locate and bring sunlight into the dark caverns of his loathsome and horrendous guilt. In this E-meter he sees a tattle-tale 62 / The Hidden Story of Scientologywhich will expose his extra-curricular activities on the second dynamic, his masturbation at the age of one and the real reason dogs hate him, why he shoots ducks and committed grand larceny in college and makes improper proposals in the little boy's room. He doesn't spell it E-meter, he spells it Enemy. And when put on the instrument, he will usually register almost 'off the bottom'; that is to say, the range expander will be over at minus, the tone handle so low the light flickers, and the sensitivity knob so shut down that when asked about the time he murdered his mother, the auditor has to have a magnifying glass to see if the needle moved." Bob Thomas, senior executive of the Church of Scientology in the United States, described the E-meter as "a confessional aid in Scientology processing".
The Hubbard Electrometer / 63
Hubbard relates that in the early days of Dianetic auditing, by keeping his fingers on the pulse of the preclear during auditing, he was "crudely and unsatisfactorily" able to detect a reaction when his questions were leading to a heavily charged incident. Then, during a series of lectures which he gave in California in 1950, an inventor and electronics expert named Volney G. Mathison heard Hubbard mention the problem and set to work constructing an instrument which would be capable, as Hubbard put it, "of measuring the rapid shifts in density of a body under the influence of thought and measuring them well enough to give an auditor a deep and marvelous insight into the mind of his preclear". The Hubbard Electrometer / 65This first device was known as the Mathison Electropsycho-meter. During the ensuing years, the instrument was refined and modified through several generations and in accordance with data provided by continuing research. The literature states that the present E-meter is fabricated and assembled according to Hubbard's exact specifications. To ensure that manufacturing standards are maintained, from time to time he random checks the devices being marketed, against the prototype which he keeps in a safe. Critics of Scientology have sought to discredit the E-meter by asserting that the varied readings are not measurements of emotional states as claimed, but are due to such factors as quantity and salinity of sweat on the palms, area of contact, force of the preclear's grip on the terminals, and variations in the electrical resistance of his skin. That such is not the case may easily be demonstrated by a number of simple tests, including that cited above, in which the preclear recalls the experience of being pinched. In connection with our present inquiry, there is another observation to be made regarding the E-meter. It is that the device is harmless, even in the hands of a person ignorant of its proper purpose and operation. 5-HSOS * * |
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