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{{short description|American novelist}}
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'''Volney G. Mathison''' was an ] ], writer, and inventor of the ].<ref name="cooper" /><ref name="singh" />


{{Infobox person
==Inventor==
| name = Volney G. Mathison
Mathison invented a device called an ''electroencephaloneuromentimograph'' or ].<ref name="cooper" /> He came up with the design for the device and subsequently built it in the 1940s.<ref name="atack" /><ref name="singh">{{cite book | last =Singh | first =Simon | coauthors =Edzard Ernst | title =Trick or Treatment: The Undeniable Facts about Alternative Medicine | publisher =W. W. Norton & Company | year =2008 | pages =163-165 | isbn = 0393066614}}</ref> It was initially known as the "Mathison Electropsychometer".<ref name="freeman">{{cite book | last =Freeman | first =John | title =Suppressed and Incredible Inventions | publisher =Health Research | year =1987 | page =41 | isbn = 0787310913}}</ref> The E-meter "has a needle that swings back and forth across a scale when a patient when a patient holds on to two electrical contacts".<ref name="singh" /> Mathison was a ] and ].<ref name="clearthinking">{{cite news | last =Pilkington | first =Mark | title =Clear thinking | work =] | publisher =Guardian News and Media Limited | date =February 17, 2005 | url =http://www.guardian.co.uk/science/2005/feb/17/science.research | accessdate = 2010-01-14 }}</ref><ref name="cooper" /><ref name="singh" /><ref name="pilkington">{{cite book | last =Pilkington | first =Mark | title =Far Out: 101 Strange Tales from Science's Outer Edge | publisher =The Disinformation Company | year =2007 | pages =85-87 | isbn = 1932857877}}</ref> He used the device with his patients in order to investigate their inner problems.<ref name="freeman" /> He then employed self-hypnosis tapes, and instructed his patients to use these in order to address their "inner" issues.<ref name="freeman" /> The device became popular and was used among other chiropractors.<ref name="singh" /> John Freeman writes in ''Suppressed and Incredible Inventions'', "Recalling my visits at the height of his career, I remember that, while his results were outstanding, he was typically fought by the Medical Profession."<ref name="freeman" />
| image =
| alt =
| caption =
| birth_date = {{birth date|1897|8|13}}
| birth_place =
| death_date = {{death date and age|1965|1|3|1897|8|13}}
| death_place =
| nationality = American
| other_names = Dex Volney
| known_for = Inventor of the ]
| occupation = Writer, inventor
}}
'''Volney G. Mathison''', also known by the ] '''Dex Volney''' (August 13, 1897 &ndash; January 3, 1965), was an American ], writer, and inventor of the first ] used by the ].<ref name="singh" /><ref>{{cite news| last = Nadali | first =Giorgio | title = Processo a Scientology : Rischia la chiusura definitiva in Francia la psicosetta fondata dallo scrittore Ron Hubbard | work =] |publisher = www.affaritaliani.it | date = June 8, 2009 | url = http://expianetadidio.blogspot.it/2009/06/scientology-rischio-chiusura-definitiva.html| access-date =2013-01-15 }}</ref>


==Family==
Mathison was a follower of ] founded by ].<ref name="atack">{{cite book | last =Atack | first =Jon | title =] | publisher =Carol Publishing Group | year =1990 | location =New York | pages =128-129 | isbn =081840499X }}</ref> Hubbard incorporated Mathison's device into ] practices.<ref name="cooper" /> Hubbard often called the inventor of the E-meter simply "Mathison" in his writings.<ref name="cooper" /> According to author ], Scientologists erroneously referred to the inventor of the E-meter as "Olin Mathison".<ref name="cooper">{{cite book | last =Cooper | first =Paulette | authorlink =Paulette Cooper | title =] | publisher =Tower Publications | year =1971 | location =New York | pages =145-146|id={{oclc|921001}} }}</ref> Simon Singh and Edzard Ernst write in ''Trick or Treatment'' that "The E-meter was also widely used by the Church of Scientology, so much so that many Scientologists believe that it was invented by their founder L. Ron Hubbard."<ref name="singh" />
In 1935, Mathison was married to Jean Darrell, a music librarian for ].<ref name="nye">{{cite news| last = Nye | first = Carroll | title = Night races to go on air | work = ] | page = 6 | date =May 15, 1935 }}</ref> She died in November 1964.<ref>{{cite news| last = Los Angeles Times staff | title =Deaths, Funeral Announcements | work =] | page =B17 | date = November 13, 1964 }}</ref>


==Career==
After establishing usage of the E-meter in Dianetics, Hubbard sought for Mathison to turn over patent rights of the device to him.<ref name="pilkington" /><ref name="clearthinking" /> Mathison refused to give up the patent rights over the device, wishing that it remain the "Mathison E-meter".<ref name="pilkington" /><ref name="corydon" /><ref name="clearthinking" /> Usage of the E-meter in Dianetics practices was subsequently stopped by Hubbard in 1954.<ref name="pilkington" /><ref name="corydon">{{cite book | last =Corydon | first =Bent | title =] | publisher =Barricade Books | year =1992 | pages =332-333 | isbn = 0942637577}}</ref> In writing that use of the E-meter should be discontinued, Hubbard said, "Yesterday, we used an instrument called an E-Meter to register whether or not the process was still getting results so that the auditor would know how long to continue it. While the E-Meter is an interesting investigation instrument and has played its part in research, it is not today used by the auditor.... As we long ago suspected, the intervention of a mechnical gadget between the auditor and the preclear had a tendency to depersonalize the session...."<ref name="corydon" /> Scientology engineers manufactured a similar type of E-meter device, and this began usage in the movement in 1958.<ref name="pilkington" /><ref name="clearthinking" /> The version of the E-meter developed by Joe Wallis and Don Breeding was powered by a battery and was smaller than Mathison's device.<ref name="corydon" /> This device was called the "Hubbard electrometer", and was seen as a necessary part of the Scientology practice of "]".<ref name="corydon" /> In 1966, Hubbard received a patent in the United States for a "Device for Measuring and Indicating Changes in Resistance of a Living Body".<ref name="pilkington" /><ref name="clearthinking" />

===Writer===
]
In 1921, Mathison wrote the fictional short story "A Phony Phone", which was published in '']'' edited by ].<ref>{{cite book| last =Ashley | first =Michael |author2=Robert A. W. Lowndes | title = The Gernsback Days | publisher = Wildside Press | year = 2004 | page =418 | isbn = 0-8095-1055-3}}</ref> In 1924, he wrote the fictional book ''The Radiobuster: Being Some of the Adventures of Samuel Jones, Deep Sea Wireless Operator''.<ref name="smith">{{cite book| last = Smith | first = Geoffrey Dayton | title =American Fiction, 1901-1925: A Bibliography | url = https://archive.org/details/americanfiction10000smit | url-access = registration | publisher = ] | year = 1997| page = | isbn =0-521-43469-6 }}</ref> The book is listed in ''American Fiction, 1901-1925: A Bibliography''.<ref name="smith" /> Mathison's story "The Death Bottle" was published in ''Weird Tales'' in March 1925.<ref name="bleiler">{{cite book | first=Everett F.| last=Bleiler| title=Science-Fiction: The Gernsback Years: A complete coverage of the genre magazines ''Amazing'', ''Astounding'', ''Wonder'', and others from 1926 through 1936| publisher=The Kent State University Press| location=Kent, Ohio| year=1998 | isbn= 0-87338-604-3|page=281}}</ref> He also wrote stories most of which were published under the ] of "Dex Volney".<ref name="bleiler" /> His pieces as "Dex Volney" were of the ], and set in ].<ref name="bleiler" /> According to ''Science-Fiction: The Gernsback Years'', Mathison was "a prolific author" under this pseudonym.<ref name="bleiler" /> As Dex Volney, he wrote popular stories published by ].<ref>{{cite book | last = Tuska | first = Jon | title = Stories of the far North | publisher = University of Nebraska Press | year = 1999 | page = xv | isbn = 0-8032-9434-4 | url = https://archive.org/details/storiesoffarnort0000unse }}</ref>

In the June 1929 issue of '']'', Mathison's story "The Mongolian's Ray" appeared and was promoted on the cover.<ref name="ackerman">{{cite book| last = Ackerman | first = Forrest J. |author2=Brad Linaweaver | title = Worlds of Tomorrow: The Amazing Universe of Science Fiction Art | publisher = Collectors Press| year = 2004 | page =56 | isbn = 978-1-888054-93-4}}</ref> ] and Brad Linaweaver write in the book ''Worlds of Tomorrow'', "In this story, he created the fictional device that shortly after the introduction of Dianetics, morphed into reality as the E-meter employed today to supposedly reveal the personalities of individuals interested in becoming 'clears' in the Dianetic regimen."<ref name="ackerman" /> Mathison's story "Thor Olsen's Ace" was selected for inclusion in ''The World's Best Short Stories of 1930''.<ref>{{cite book| title = The World's Best Short Stories of 1930 | publisher = Minton, Balch | year = 1930 | location = New York | page =308 | oclc = 3373283 }}</ref>

===Inventor===
In 1935, Mathison was employed building ]s.<ref name="nye" /> He was also a ] and ].<ref name="singh" /><ref name="cooper" /><ref name="clearthinking">{{cite news | last =Pilkington | first =Mark | title =Clear thinking | work =] | publisher =Guardian News and Media Limited | date =February 17, 2005 | url =https://www.theguardian.com/science/2005/feb/17/science.research | access-date = 2010-01-14 }}</ref><ref name="pilkington">{{cite book | last =Pilkington | first =Mark | title =Far Out: 101 Strange Tales from Science's Outer Edge | publisher =The Disinformation Company| year =2007 | pages =85–87 | isbn = 978-1-932857-87-0}}</ref> According to some critics of ], Mathison designed and built the first E-meter in the 1940s,<ref name="singh">{{cite book |last1 = Singh|first1 = Simon|author-link = Simon Singh|last2 = Ernst|author2-link = Edzard Ernst|title = ]|publisher = W. W. Norton & Company|year = 2008|pages = 163–165|isbn = 978-0-393-06661-6|first2 = Edzard}}</ref><ref name="atack" /> which he called a ''Mathison Electropsychometer'',<ref name="freeman">{{cite book | last =Freeman | first =John | title =Suppressed and Incredible Inventions | publisher =Health Research | year =1987 | page =41 | isbn = 0-7873-1091-3}}</ref> or ], to read ].<ref name="cooper" /> However, Mathison wrote in his own book, ''Electropsychometry'', that he first began considering the subject of E-meters when he attended a series of lectures in 1950<ref name="Electropsychometry 101">{{cite book|last1=Mathison|first1=Volney|title=Electropsychometry|date=1952|publisher=Mathison Electropsychometers|location=Los Angeles, CA|page=101|edition=1|url=https://www.cs.cmu.edu/~dst/E-Meter/Electropsychometry.pdf|access-date=11 May 2015}}</ref> and other writers identify the lecturer as ].<ref>{{cite book |last1=Garrison |first1=Omar V. |title=The Hidden Story of Scientology |date=August 1974 |edition=1st |publisher=Citadel Press (Lyle Stuart, Inc.) |location=Secaucus, NJ |page= |isbn=0-8065-0440-4 |url=https://archive.org/details/hiddenstoryofsci00garr/page/64 }}</ref>

The E-meter "has a needle that swings back and forth across a scale when a patient holds on to two electrical contacts".<ref name="singh" /> He used the device to investigate the psychoanalytic problems of his patients.<ref name="freeman" /> He then employed ] tapes, and instructed his patients to use them to address those issues.<ref name="freeman" /> The device became popular and was used among other chiropractors.<ref name="singh" /> John Freeman writes in ''Suppressed and Incredible Inventions'', "Recalling my visits at the height of his career, I remember that, while his results were outstanding, he was typically fought by the Medical Profession."<ref name="freeman" /> The Mathison meter was based on the ] invented in 1833. Earlier ] meters were used by ] in 1889 and popularized by ] in a series of papers published in 1904.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Binswanger|first1=L.|editor1-last=Jung|editor1-first=Carl|title=Studies in Word-Association|date=1919|publisher=Moffat, Yard & company|location=New York, NY|pages=446 et seq|chapter-url=https://archive.org/stream/studiesinwordass00jung#page/446/mode/2up/search/psychogalvanic|access-date=30 March 2015|chapter=XII}}</ref>

]
Mathison was a follower of ] founded by ].<ref name="atack">{{cite book | last =Atack | first =Jon | title =] | publisher =Carol Publishing Group | year =1990 | location =New York | pages = | isbn =0-8184-0499-X }}</ref> Hubbard incorporated Mathison's device into ] practices.<ref name="cooper" /> Hubbard often called him simply "Mathison" in his writings.<ref name="cooper" /> According to author ], Scientologists erroneously referred to him as "Olin Mathison".<ref name="cooper">{{cite book | last =Cooper | first =Paulette | author-link =Paulette Cooper | title =] | publisher =Tower Publications | year =1971 | location =New York | pages =145–146|oclc=921001 }}</ref> ] and ] write in '']'' that "The E-meter was also widely used by the Church of Scientology, so much so that many Scientologists believe that it was invented by their founder L. Ron Hubbard."<ref name="singh" />

According to the 1986 memoirs of Hubbard's son, ], after establishing usage of the E-meter in Dianetics, Hubbard asked Mathison to give the patent rights to him, but Mathison refused to give up the patent rights, wishing that it remain the "Mathison E-meter".<ref name="clearthinking" /><ref name="pilkington" /><ref name="corydon" /> Mathison was granted {{US Patent|2684670}} for his vacuum tube E-meter in 1954. But DeWolf was inconsistent on this history. In an earlier sworn affidavit to the Federal District Court in about 1980, DeWolf stated that Mathison gave Hubbard his rights to the E-meter in 1952.<ref>{{cite web|last1 = DeWolf|first1 = Ronald|title = Affidavit of Ronald DeWolf|url = http://www.ronthenut.org/dewolf.htm|website = Ron the Nut|publisher = Organized Crime Civilian Response|access-date = 30 April 2015|date = 1980|quote = My father obtained the rights to the E-meter in 1952 from Volney Mathison in the same manner that he does everything - through fraud and coercion.}}</ref>

Another writer tells yet a third version this history. According to ], the first E-meter was "developed by Volney Mathison, following Hubbard's designs."<ref>{{cite book|last1=Melton|first1=J. Gordon|title=Studies in Contemporary Religion: The Church of Scientology|date=2000|publisher=Signature Books, Inc.|location=United States of America|page=|isbn=1-56085-139-2|url=https://archive.org/details/churchofscientol00meltrich/page/10}}</ref>

Use of the E-meter in Dianetics practice was subsequently stopped by Hubbard in 1954.<ref name="pilkington" /><ref name="corydon">{{cite book | last =Corydon | first =Bent | title = ] | publisher =Barricade Books | year =1992 | pages =332–333 | isbn = 0-942637-57-7}}</ref> In 1966, Hubbard was awarded a United States patent for a solid-state E-meter, described as a "Device for Measuring and Indicating Changes in Resistance of a Living Body".<ref name="clearthinking" /><ref name="pilkington" />

According to some writers, Mathison was bitter and disillusioned about Scientology.<ref>{{cite book|title=Dianetik und Scientology in ihrem Anspruch als Wissenschaft|first=Tilo|last=Müller|pages=32|publisher=GRIN Verlag|year=2010|isbn=978-3-640-58010-1|quote=Mathison stated: "I decry the doings of trivial fakers, such as scientologists and the like, who glibly denounce hypnosis and then try covertly to use it in their phony systems"}}</ref>

Many of Mathison's professional activities and publications &mdash; chiropractic,<ref name="Keating_primer">{{cite web |title=Chiropractic history: a primer |last1=Keating |first1=JC Jr |last2=Cleveland |first2=CS III |last3=Menke |first3=M |url=http://data.memberclicks.com/site/ahc/ChiroHistoryPrimer.pdf |year=2005 |access-date=16 June 2008 |publisher=Association for the History of Chiropractic }}{{dead link|date=November 2019|bot=medic}}{{cbignore|bot=medic}}</ref><ref name="Keating1997">{{Cite journal|last= Keating |first=JC Jr |journal= ] |volume=21 |issue=4 |pages=37–43 |title= Chiropractic: science and antiscience and pseudoscience side by side |year=1997}}</ref><ref name="Johnson1999">{{cite journal | title = Angry scientists fight university's attempt to affiliate with chiropractic college | journal = Canadian Medical Association Journal |date=December 1999 | first = T. | last = Johnson | volume = 160 | issue = 1 | pages = 99–100 | pmc = 1229962 }}</ref><ref>{{cite news | title = First public chiropractic school causes stir | date = 17 January 2005 | url = https://www.nbcnews.com/id/wbna6835571 | publisher = NBC News | access-date =7 November 2010}}</ref> psychoanalysis,<ref>{{cite book|last=Cioffi |first=Frank |contribution=Psychoanalysis, Pseudo-Science and Testability|editor1-last=Currie|editor1-first= Gregory| editor2-last=Musgrave|editor2-first= Alan |year=1985|title= Popper and the Human Sciences |series= Nijhoff International Philosophy Series|publisher= SpringerVerlag|pages=13–44|isbn=978-90-247-2998-2 }}</ref><ref>{{cite book|last=Popper|first=K. R.|contribution=Science: Conjectures and Refutations| editor-last=Grim |editor-first=P |year=1990|title= Philosophy of Science and the Occult|url=https://archive.org/details/philosophyofscie00grim|url-access=registration|location= Albany| pages=|isbn=9780791402047}}</ref> ],<ref name="Hypnosis_Lynn">{{Cite book| first1=Steven Jay | last1=Lynn| first2=Timothy|last2=Lock|first3=Elizabeth|last3=Loftus|first4= Elisa |last4=Krackow|first5=Scott O.|last5=Lilienfeld| chapter=The remembrance of things past: problematic memory recovery techniques in psychotherapy| title=Science and Pseudoscience in Psychotherapy| editor1-first=Scott O.| editor1-last=Lilienfeld|editor2-last= Lynn|editor2-first=Steven Jay|editor3-last=Lohr|editor3-first=Jeffrey M.|chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=rZr0DtX2siQC&pg=PA219|publisher=Guilford Press| location=New York| pages=219–220| year=2003| isbn = 1-57230-828-1| access-date=25 February 2008}} "hypnotically induced past life experiences are rule-governed, goal-directed fantasies that are context generated and sensitive to the demands of the hypnotic regression situation."</ref> and hypnotherapy<ref name="Westen 2006">Westen et al. 2006 "Psychology: Australian and New Zealand edition" John Wiley.</ref><ref name="Cathcart">{{Cite news|url=https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/hypnotism-does-not-exist-say-the-experts-1389968.html|title=Hypnotism does not exist, say experts | work=The Independent | location=London | first1=Brian | last1=Cathcart | first2=Tom | last2=Wilkie | date=18 December 1994 | access-date=31 March 2010}}</ref> &mdash; have been classed as ] by various critics.


==Bibliography== ==Bibliography==


===Fiction===
Mathison authored a Science Fiction novel called ''Radiobuster'', and also published many non-fiction books over the years on various topics, some less scientific than others:
*{{cite book| last = Mathison | first = Volney G. | title = The Radiobuster: Being Some of the Adventures of Samuel Jones, Deep Sea Wireless Operator | publisher = Frederick A. Stokes Company|location=] | year = 1924 | oclc = 6869013 }}
* "The Death Bottle," '']'', March 1925
* Dex Volney, "Renegade of Eagle Cove," ''North•West Romances'', Summer 1943 (last known published fiction)


===Non-fiction===
* ''How to Achieve Past Life Recalls''
*{{cite book| editor-last = Hills | editor-first = William Henry | editor2-last = Luce | editor2-first = Robert|last = Volney | first = Dex |title =The Writer|contribution=Beginning the Story | year = 1927 | page = 57| id = Volume 39 }}
* ''The Secret Power of the Crystal Pendulum''
*{{cite book| last1 =Hubbard | first1 = L. Ron |last2 =Mathison | first2 = Volney G. |title = Electropsychometric Auditing / Operator's Manual / Dianetics and Scientology Notes on Technique 100| publisher = The Office of L. Ron Hubbard| year = 1952|location=Phoenix, AZ|url=http://biblio.co.uk/book/electropsychometric-auditing-operators-manual-dianetics-scientology/d/637510514}}
* ''Practical Self-Hypnosis''
*{{cite book| last =Mathison | first = Volney G. |title = Electropsychometry| publisher = V. G. Mathison| year = 1952|oclc=57001177 }}
* ''Space-Age Self-Hypnosis''
*{{cite book| last =Mathison | first = Volney G. |title = Manual Electropsychometry| publisher = Mathison Electropsychometers| year = 1953|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=8dkqcgAACAAJ&q=volney+mathison }}
* ''The Secret of Lourdes Revealed''
*{{cite book| last = Mathison | first = Volney G. | title = Creative Image Therapy | publisher =Mathison Electropsychometer | year = 1954 | oclc = 55984760 }}
* ''Creative Image Therapy''
*{{cite book| last =Mathison | first =Volney G. | title = How to Achieve Past Life Recalls| publisher = Institute of Physical and Mental Development | year = 1956 | location = ] | oclc = 42019616 }}
* ''Electropsychometry''
*{{cite book| last = Mathison | first = Volney G. | title = The Secret of the Lourdes Miracles Revealed | publisher = Mathison Electropsychometers | year = 1956 | location = ] | oclc = 49324997 }}
* ''The Power and Glory of Sex''
*{{cite book| last =Mathison | first = Volney G.| title = Practical Self-Hypnosis: How to Achieve and Effectively to Use Hypnosis Without the Presence of an Operator | publisher = Mathison Electro Psychometers | year =1957 | oclc = 54514206 }}
*{{cite book| last = Mathison | first =Volney G. | title =Space-Age Self Hypnosis | year = 1957 }}
*{{cite book| last =Mathison | first = Volney G.| title = The Secret Power of the Crystal Pendulum | publisher = Institute of Self Hypnosis | year =1958}}

==See also==
*]
*]


==References== ==References==
{{Reflist}} {{Reflist|2}}


==Further reading== ==Further reading==
*

* '']'', expanded paperback edition, Bent Corydon, L.Ron Hubbard Jr., Barricade Books, 1992.
*
* *
* *
* *
* *
* *

==External links==
*{{isfdb name|id=Volney_G._Mathison|name=Volney G. Mathison}}

{{Authority control}}


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Latest revision as of 21:22, 3 August 2024

American novelist
Volney G. Mathison
Born(1897-08-13)August 13, 1897
DiedJanuary 3, 1965(1965-01-03) (aged 67)
NationalityAmerican
Other namesDex Volney
Occupation(s)Writer, inventor
Known forInventor of the E-meter

Volney G. Mathison, also known by the pseudonym Dex Volney (August 13, 1897 – January 3, 1965), was an American chiropractor, writer, and inventor of the first E-meter used by the Church of Scientology.

Family

In 1935, Mathison was married to Jean Darrell, a music librarian for NBC. She died in November 1964.

Career

Writer

Dust jacket of The Radiobuster by Volney G. Mathison

In 1921, Mathison wrote the fictional short story "A Phony Phone", which was published in Radio News edited by Hugo Gernsback. In 1924, he wrote the fictional book The Radiobuster: Being Some of the Adventures of Samuel Jones, Deep Sea Wireless Operator. The book is listed in American Fiction, 1901-1925: A Bibliography. Mathison's story "The Death Bottle" was published in Weird Tales in March 1925. He also wrote stories most of which were published under the pseudonym of "Dex Volney". His pieces as "Dex Volney" were of the Western genre, and set in Alaska. According to Science-Fiction: The Gernsback Years, Mathison was "a prolific author" under this pseudonym. As Dex Volney, he wrote popular stories published by Street & Smith.

In the June 1929 issue of Amazing Stories, Mathison's story "The Mongolian's Ray" appeared and was promoted on the cover. Forrest J. Ackerman and Brad Linaweaver write in the book Worlds of Tomorrow, "In this story, he created the fictional device that shortly after the introduction of Dianetics, morphed into reality as the E-meter employed today to supposedly reveal the personalities of individuals interested in becoming 'clears' in the Dianetic regimen." Mathison's story "Thor Olsen's Ace" was selected for inclusion in The World's Best Short Stories of 1930.

Inventor

In 1935, Mathison was employed building short wave radios. He was also a chiropractor and psychoanalyst. According to some critics of Scientology, Mathison designed and built the first E-meter in the 1940s, which he called a Mathison Electropsychometer, or E-meter, to read electrodermal activity. However, Mathison wrote in his own book, Electropsychometry, that he first began considering the subject of E-meters when he attended a series of lectures in 1950 and other writers identify the lecturer as L. Ron Hubbard.

The E-meter "has a needle that swings back and forth across a scale when a patient holds on to two electrical contacts". He used the device to investigate the psychoanalytic problems of his patients. He then employed self-hypnosis tapes, and instructed his patients to use them to address those issues. The device became popular and was used among other chiropractors. John Freeman writes in Suppressed and Incredible Inventions, "Recalling my visits at the height of his career, I remember that, while his results were outstanding, he was typically fought by the Medical Profession." The Mathison meter was based on the Wheatstone bridge invented in 1833. Earlier electrodermal activity meters were used by Ivane Tarkhnishvili in 1889 and popularized by Carl Gustav Jung in a series of papers published in 1904.

Volney Mathison uses an E-meter to analyze a patient, circa 1951

Mathison was a follower of Dianetics founded by L. Ron Hubbard. Hubbard incorporated Mathison's device into Scientology practices. Hubbard often called him simply "Mathison" in his writings. According to author Paulette Cooper, Scientologists erroneously referred to him as "Olin Mathison". Simon Singh and Edzard Ernst write in Trick or Treatment that "The E-meter was also widely used by the Church of Scientology, so much so that many Scientologists believe that it was invented by their founder L. Ron Hubbard."

According to the 1986 memoirs of Hubbard's son, Ronald DeWolf, after establishing usage of the E-meter in Dianetics, Hubbard asked Mathison to give the patent rights to him, but Mathison refused to give up the patent rights, wishing that it remain the "Mathison E-meter". Mathison was granted U.S. patent 2,684,670 for his vacuum tube E-meter in 1954. But DeWolf was inconsistent on this history. In an earlier sworn affidavit to the Federal District Court in about 1980, DeWolf stated that Mathison gave Hubbard his rights to the E-meter in 1952.

Another writer tells yet a third version this history. According to Gordon Melton, the first E-meter was "developed by Volney Mathison, following Hubbard's designs."

Use of the E-meter in Dianetics practice was subsequently stopped by Hubbard in 1954. In 1966, Hubbard was awarded a United States patent for a solid-state E-meter, described as a "Device for Measuring and Indicating Changes in Resistance of a Living Body".

According to some writers, Mathison was bitter and disillusioned about Scientology.

Many of Mathison's professional activities and publications — chiropractic, psychoanalysis, past life regression, and hypnotherapy — have been classed as pseudosciences by various critics.

Bibliography

Fiction

  • Mathison, Volney G. (1924). The Radiobuster: Being Some of the Adventures of Samuel Jones, Deep Sea Wireless Operator. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: Frederick A. Stokes Company. OCLC 6869013.
  • "The Death Bottle," Weird Tales, March 1925
  • Dex Volney, "Renegade of Eagle Cove," North•West Romances, Summer 1943 (last known published fiction)

Non-fiction

  • Volney, Dex (1927). "Beginning the Story". In Hills, William Henry; Luce, Robert (eds.). The Writer. p. 57. Volume 39.
  • Hubbard, L. Ron; Mathison, Volney G. (1952). Electropsychometric Auditing / Operator's Manual / Dianetics and Scientology [with] Notes on Technique 100. Phoenix, AZ: The Office of L. Ron Hubbard.
  • Mathison, Volney G. (1952). Electropsychometry. V. G. Mathison. OCLC 57001177.
  • Mathison, Volney G. (1953). Manual Electropsychometry. Mathison Electropsychometers.
  • Mathison, Volney G. (1954). Creative Image Therapy. Mathison Electropsychometer. OCLC 55984760.
  • Mathison, Volney G. (1956). How to Achieve Past Life Recalls. Quincy, Massachusetts: Institute of Physical and Mental Development. OCLC 42019616.
  • Mathison, Volney G. (1956). The Secret of the Lourdes Miracles Revealed. Los Angeles, California: Mathison Electropsychometers. OCLC 49324997.
  • Mathison, Volney G. (1957). Practical Self-Hypnosis: How to Achieve and Effectively to Use Hypnosis Without the Presence of an Operator. Mathison Electro Psychometers. OCLC 54514206.
  • Mathison, Volney G. (1957). Space-Age Self Hypnosis.
  • Mathison, Volney G. (1958). The Secret Power of the Crystal Pendulum. Institute of Self Hypnosis.

See also

References

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  16. Mathison, Volney (1952). Electropsychometry (PDF) (1 ed.). Los Angeles, CA: Mathison Electropsychometers. p. 101. Retrieved 11 May 2015.
  17. Garrison, Omar V. (August 1974). The Hidden Story of Scientology (1st ed.). Secaucus, NJ: Citadel Press (Lyle Stuart, Inc.). p. 64. ISBN 0-8065-0440-4.
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  19. ^ Corydon, Bent (1992). L. Ron Hubbard, Messiah or Madman?. Barricade Books. pp. 332–333. ISBN 0-942637-57-7.
  20. DeWolf, Ronald (1980). "Affidavit of Ronald DeWolf". Ron the Nut. Organized Crime Civilian Response. Retrieved 30 April 2015. My father obtained the rights to the E-meter in 1952 from Volney Mathison in the same manner that he does everything - through fraud and coercion.
  21. Melton, J. Gordon (2000). Studies in Contemporary Religion: The Church of Scientology. United States of America: Signature Books, Inc. p. 10. ISBN 1-56085-139-2.
  22. Müller, Tilo (2010). Dianetik und Scientology in ihrem Anspruch als Wissenschaft. GRIN Verlag. p. 32. ISBN 978-3-640-58010-1. Mathison stated: "I decry the doings of trivial fakers, such as scientologists and the like, who glibly denounce hypnosis and then try covertly to use it in their phony systems"
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  25. Johnson, T. (December 1999). "Angry scientists fight university's attempt to affiliate with chiropractic college". Canadian Medical Association Journal. 160 (1): 99–100. PMC 1229962.
  26. "First public chiropractic school causes stir". NBC News. 17 January 2005. Retrieved 7 November 2010.
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  28. Popper, K. R. (1990). "Science: Conjectures and Refutations". In Grim, P (ed.). Philosophy of Science and the Occult. Albany. pp. 104–110. ISBN 9780791402047.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  29. Lynn, Steven Jay; Lock, Timothy; Loftus, Elizabeth; Krackow, Elisa; Lilienfeld, Scott O. (2003). "The remembrance of things past: problematic memory recovery techniques in psychotherapy". In Lilienfeld, Scott O.; Lynn, Steven Jay; Lohr, Jeffrey M. (eds.). Science and Pseudoscience in Psychotherapy. New York: Guilford Press. pp. 219–220. ISBN 1-57230-828-1. Retrieved 25 February 2008. "hypnotically induced past life experiences are rule-governed, goal-directed fantasies that are context generated and sensitive to the demands of the hypnotic regression situation."
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Further reading

External links

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