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{{Short description|None}}
{{ScientologySeries}}
] in 1950, around when he developed ]]]
In ] doctrine, ] was the term used by Scientology founder ] to describe ] and alien interventions in "]". Descriptions of "space opera" incidents play an important part in the ] and has led to Scientology being characterized by some critics and commentators as a "]" (Partridge, ''UFO Religions''). Hubbard claimed that the modern-day ] genre of ] is merely an ] ] of real events from millions of years ago.
] founder ] routinely referred to "]" in his teachings, drawing from science-fiction and weaving it into his origins of human history. In his writings, wherein ]s (roughly comparable to the concept of a ]) were reincarnated periodically over ] of years, retaining memories of prior lives, to which Hubbard attributed complex narratives about life throughout the universe. The most controversial of these myths is the story of ], to whom Hubbard attributed responsibility for many of the world's problems. <!-- need to rephrase Scientology teaches that individuals can free themselves of the traumas that have occurred to their thetans, and that by doing so, the thetan can gain the ability to transform reality. -->


Some space opera doctrines of Scientology are only provided by the church to experienced members, who church leaders maintain are the only ones able to correctly understand them. Several former members of the church have exposed these secret documents, leading to lengthy court battles with the church, which failed to keep the secret. Critics of the church have noted that some of the narratives are scientifically impossible, and have thus assailed the church as untrustworthy for teaching them. The space opera teachings have also been satirized in popular culture. Scholars of religion have described the space opera narratives as a ] designed to encourage reverence of Hubbard as a supreme messenger. Several academics have drawn attention to the similarity of the space opera myths to themes of the 1950s ] culture in which they were constructed.
Scientology's doctrines famously include the story of ], the ruler of the ] who brought billions of frozen people to Earth 75 million years ago, stacked them around ]es and blew them up with ]s. Xenu is only one element of Scientology beliefs in alien civilizations. Such doctrines have existed in Scientology virtually since its beginning, with Hubbard writing and lecturing about civilizations such as ], the ] and ] in the 1950s and Xenu's Galactic Confederacy in the 1960s. He described repeated instances of them using brainwashing ] on hapless beings. He also spoke of alien invasions of ], such as that carried out around 6235 BC by the ], who were "very strange insect-like creature with unthinkably horrible hands."


== Origins ==
==Scientology and science fiction==
], a device for displaying and/or recording the ] (EDA) of a human being. The device is used frequently for auditing in Scientology.<ref>America's Alternative Religions, by Timothy Miller, 1995, {{ISBN|0-7914-2398-0}};page 386</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=About Us|url=http://www.observationmountainacademy.com/Newsletter.html|website=Observation Mountain Academy|access-date=2 April 2015}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.ronsorg.ch/english/emeterenglish.htm |title=e-meter |date=2015 |access-date=2 April 2015 |website=Ron's Org Grenchen |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150403205233/http://www.ronsorg.ch/english/emeterenglish.htm |archive-date=3 April 2015 }}</ref> ]]
(Although this article regularly refers to Xenu, Hubbard in some of his lectures and writings actually uses the name Xemu and even spells it out).{{sfn|Urban|2011|p=103}}<ref>{{multiref2 |1={{cite web |url=https://www.cs.cmu.edu/~dst/OTIII/ |title=OT III Scholarship Page |website=] |access-date=April 1, 2023}} |2={{citation |title=Assists 6810C03, lecture #10 of Class VIII course <!--around 46:00 minutes--> |first=L. Ron |last=Hubbard |author-link=L. Ron Hubbard |quote=What it was was the loyal officers were the body, the elective body, and they called them the loyal officers and they were there to protect the populations and so forth. And they had elected a fellow by the name of Xemu — could be spelled X-E-M-U — to the supreme ruler.}} }}</ref>


] created a set of beliefs that he represented as a form of therapy, which he named ]. He promoted it as a scientific, not religious, teaching. The system has no scientific basis and is a type of ]. Until the early 1950s, Hubbard had a negative view of organized religions, but thereafter discussed spiritual topics.{{sfn|Urban|2011|p=57–59}} In these teachings, he claimed to identify subconscious memories of past events, which he called "]", as causes of human dissatisfaction.{{sfn|Bromley|2009|p=90}} By 1950, he had begun to ponder ], believing that they could be recalled;{{sfn|Urban|2011|p=61}} he attempted to use these recollections to develop a comprehensive narrative of the universe.{{sfn|Bromley|2009|pp=90–91}} He founded the ] in 1953, advancing his beliefs as religious doctrines. The church was distinct from Dianetics-based groups but incorporated some of their views.{{sfn|Urban|2011|p=64–65}} Hubbard saw Dianetics as focused on the physical body but viewed Scientology as a way to address spiritual matters.{{sfn|Urban|2011|p=66}}
The ] has objected to Scientology being painted as a ] fantasy . However, Hubbard claimed that the modern-day science fiction genre of ] is a retelling of events, such as Xenu's mass murder, that really happened millions of years ago. ''Space opera'' is defined in the ''Official Scientology and Dianetics Glossary'' as:


In Hubbard's efforts to shift from a psychotherapeutic to a spiritual program, he introduced the concept of ]s:{{sfn|Urban|2011|pp=68–69}} a set of godlike, non-corporeal entities capable of creating and shaping universes, later trapped in the ] and confined, by reincarnation, to physical bodies. Hugh Urban of ] states that these teachings bear similarities to ], although he doubts that Hubbard was well versed in Gnostic thought.{{sfn|Urban|2011|pp=69–71}}
:of or relating to time periods &hellip; millions of years ago which concerned activities in this and other galaxies. Space opera has space travel, spaceships, spacemen, intergalactic travel, wars, conflicts, other beings, civilizations and societies, and other planets and galaxies. It is not fiction and concerns actual incidents and things that occurred on the track. ('''')


In the 1950s, as Hubbard's followers recalled their past lives, he recorded many details of these recollections.{{sfn|Urban|2011|pp=71–72}} With this as his source, he constructed an intricate history of the universe, identified as "]".{{sfn|Urban|2011|p=72}} Although Hubbard believed that he had developed a comprehensive history, Urban cites the isolated and incomplete record of the statements,{{sfn|Urban|2011|p=74}} wherein Hubbard identified a thetan universe, separate from the material universe, created by its inhabitants.{{sfn|Urban|2011|p=75}} The material universe, in Hubbard's view, began when other universes created by thetans collided,{{sfn|Bromley|2009|p=91}} from which they entered the material universe in six invasion groups roughly 60 trillion years ago.{{sfn|Urban|2011|p=75}} Hubbard also described a series of events, called the "]", which divorced the thetans from their self-knowledge,{{sfn|Bromley|2009|p=91}} but maintained that thetans could regain their former divinity,{{sfn|Urban|2011|pp=81–82}} and referred to thetans that freed themselves from the material world as "operating thetans".{{sfn|Grünschloß|2004|p=427}}
Particularly during its early years, Scientology had many links with science fiction. Hubbard was originally a ] science fiction and adventure story writer, his book '']'' was first publicised through ]'s magazine '']'' and many of his early followers were recruited from the science fiction milieu. Indeed, Hubbard returned to science fiction in the 1980s with his books '']'' and the ten-volume '']'' series.


== Narratives and civilizations ==
Many science-fictional references can be found in Hubbard's Scientology-related works. Scientologists could find themselves living in "] bodies" in past lives, being killed by "]", living aboard spaceships or flying "space wagons" capable of travelling ''"a ] ]s per day"''. ("The Helatrobus Implants") Scientology magazines even now are often illustrated with pictures of spaceships and exploding stars, and some Scientology books published during the 1960s and 1970s depicted science fictional scenes on their dustjackets.
] August 1956 depicting a space opera story]]
Hubbard located his first 'incident' four quadrillion years ago, in which a thetan encountered 'loud cracks and brightness' and then observed a ] and chariot before experiencing total darkness. In Scientology, this is known as "Incident 1".{{sfn|Kent|1999}} Another important event in Scientology's chronology of the universe occurred on a space city known as Arslycus, the inhabitants of whom brought about an incident when capturing thetans.{{sfn|Urban|2011|p=76}}


The most controversial portion of Scientology's space opera is the myth of ],{{sfn|Urban|2011|p=74}} known as "Incident 2",{{sfn|Kent|1999}} in which Hubbard described a group of 76 planets, orbiting stars visible from Earth, organized in a Galactic Confederacy c. 75 million years ago,{{sfn|Urban|2011|pp=75–76}}{{sfn|Reitman|2011|p=99}} ruled by the ] Xenu.{{sfn|Urban|2011|pp=103–104}}{{sfn|Rothstein|2009|p=380}} The confederacy having become overpopulated,{{sfn|Kent|1999}} Xenu sent several billion of his citizens onto ] planes to the planet Teegeeack (Earth),{{sfn|Urban|2011|pp=103–104}} ostensibly for tax audition.{{sfn|Rothstein|2009|p=381}} There, ]s were detonated inside ]es, killing the exiles,{{sfn|Urban|2011|pp=103–104}} whose thetans were brainwashed on ] and the ],{{sfn|Urban|2011|pp=103–104}}{{efn|name=psych}} introducing various myths, such as the myth of ], to conceal the thetans' origins.{{sfn|Kent|1999}} Eventually, officers of the Galactic Confederacy launched a rebellion against Xenu, which continued for six years before capturing him{{sfn|Kent|1999}} and placing him in an electrified prison in the center of a mountain.{{sfn|Urban|2011|pp=103–104}} Hubbard taught that the thetans brainwashed by Xenu's forces remained on Earth, where the "body thetans", attached to human psyches, contribute to human problems; and that individuals could be freed from these brainwashed thetans and thus attain a type of ].{{sfn|Reitman|2011|p=100}}
Hubbard later dramatised the story of Xenu as a ] script, ''Revolt in the Stars'', in the late 1970s, but failed to find a studio willing to buy the work. His novels ''Battlefield Earth'' and ''Mission Earth'' are not directly related to Scientology, but critics have noted a similarity between some themes of ''Mission Earth'' and Scientology doctrine, particularly ''"the very strong opposition against 20th century psychology and psychiatry, which is seen as a major source of evil."'' (Frenschkowski){{fact}}


Hubbard also taught that, upon the deaths of humans, thetans continued to "implant stations", including locations on planets near Earth, where their memories were erased and new memories emplaced.{{sfn|Reitman|2011|p=49}} On grounds that some "implant stations" were better than others, Hubbard advised his followers to avoid the one on ].{{sfn|Sappell|Welkos|1990}} After passing an implant station, he taught, the thetan returned to Earth, where it was incarnated.{{sfn|Sappell|Welkos|1990}} Hubbard taught the Christian concept of heaven was based on a physical location on another planet, which he claimed to have visited. He compared its appearance to ] in Pasadena, California, (actual location ]), and noted it contained effigies of characters from the ]. Over time, he recalled, the location fell into disrepair. A town nearby contained an implant station, to which thetans were convinced to return.{{sfn|Kent|1999}}
Rather than Scientology being based on science fiction, however, Hubbard argued that science fiction was actually an unconscious recollection of real past lives that could be uncovered in detail through Scientology ]:


Another significant encounter in Hubbard's narrative occurred when a large group of planets formed the ],{{sfn|Urban|2011|p=76}} described as in search of slaves,{{sfn|Grünschloß|2009|p=230}} and called a "decadent" society.{{sfn|Kent|1999}} The author related that this civilization caused a significant implant upon their encounter with thetans.{{sfn|Kent|1999}}
:ou say, well, this is science fiction. No. No, no. No. The only part of science fiction they are, is the mistakes the science fiction writers have made while writing about their own past. ("The Helatrobus Implants")
<!-- DON'T FIDDLE WITH THE IMAGE, IT'S WORKING FINE - THE CACHE IS PLAYING UP. If you can't see the image, go to the web address you originally went to and add "&action=purge" or "?action=purge" and it should load properly.
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] said that ]'s victims were transported in interstellar space planes which looked exactly like ]s.]]


Hubbard discussed the history of human civilizations on Earth, and the lives of ancient sea monsters and fish people, as well.{{sfn|Urban|2011|p=76}} He also said humans could recover memories of previous lives, such as the experiences of clams and ].{{sfn|Reitman|2011|p=49}} In his mythos, ] was a completely electronic civilization, whose inhabitants possessed disintegration technology; in contrast, Earth was invaded by multiple groups around 1200 BCE, including the "fifth invader force from Martian Command" against the "fourth invasion force from Space Command" in battle.{{sfn|Urban|2011|p=76}}
==Scientology's view of the universe==


On premise that thetans are forced to believe various faulty ideas, the church teaches that their courses allow "theta beings" to be freed from these beliefs and regain their former abilities.{{sfn|Reitman|2011|p=40}} Committed Scientologists pursue courses and procedures offered by the church in the hope of gaining freedom and enlightenment,{{sfn|Rothstein|2009|p=366}} allegedly permitting travel around the Solar System.{{sfn|Urban|2011|pp=78–79}} The author referred to the process of a thetan leaving its human body as "exteriorization",{{sfn|Urban|2012|p=106}} which he said allowed for space travel. Urban notes that this is similar to ]'s teachings of ], although he adds that Hubbard did not use that term.{{sfn|Urban|2012|p=107}}
Scientology doctrine holds that the human spirit is manifested as what it terms ], a spiritual being roughly corresponding to religious and philosophical conceptions of the ], which is immortal and theoretically immensely powerful, but is currently imprisoned in mortal human bodies and unable to reach its full potential. Thetans are credited with having created the universe trillions of years ago and with having the potential for ''"knowing and willing cause over life, thought, matter, energy, space and time"'': the ability to operate free of the encumbrances of the material universe.


== Space opera and Scientologists ==
However, over the ''"trillennia"''<!-- this is the word Hubbard used-->, thetans have been repeatedly subjected to the depredations of beings in the material or "MEST" universe. In the ongoing conflict between "theta" (good) and "entheta" (bad), material beings have captured, tortured and brainwashed thetans to make them more tractable. Xenu's galactic genocide was the most famous example of such methods but was not by any means the only such incident related in Scientology doctrine.


], a former spokesman of the Church of Scientology, stated that extraterrestrial auditing is merely "a small percent" of Scientology's teachings.]]
According to Hubbard, there have been many other such incidents and alien involvement in Earth's affairs is still ongoing. The result is that thetans today are severely "aberrated" by billions of years of mistreatment in past lives, causing mental and physical problems such as illness, insanity and war. The only way to resolve this is said to be through Scientology's "auditing" or counselling methods. During Scientology auditing sessions, the Scientologist confronts and handles a series of past lives and key incidents which they may have experienced.


A glossary on the Scientology website defined the term "space opera" as a description of actual events:{{sfn|Wolf|2005}}
Hubbard described many key incidents on the "whole track" (''"the moment to moment record of a person’s existence in this universe in picture and impression form"'' ) in his writings and lectures. He also gave details of various alien civilizations, their roles and their histories &mdash; most of which seem to have involved the mass brainwashing of thetans with "]" (false memories).
<blockquote>
"Space opera has space travel, spaceships, spacemen, intergalactic travel, wars, conflicts, other beings, civilizations and societies, and other planets and galaxies. It is not fiction and concerns actual incidents."
</blockquote>
The 1958 Scientology publication '']'' contains some space opera,{{sfn|Grünschloß|2004|p=428}} describing past lives—including some on warlike planets—which were recalled through auditing.{{sfn|Rothstein|2003|p=263}} In the 1960s, Hubbard introduced a series of questions, known as "security checks", to verify members' loyalty.{{sfn|Urban|2011|pp=107–108}} ], associate professor of religious history at the University of Copenhagen, sees the Xenu myth as building on, and the culmination of, these accounts.{{sfn|Rothstein|2009|p=376}} The Xenu myth was released to Scientologists in the late 1960s, after teachings about thetans and their relationship to the physical body had been disseminated; its release provided the cause and origin of many of the group's teachings.{{sfn|Rothstein|2009|p=378}} Rothstein describes "space opera" as "Hubbard's introduction of a new reality, and new foundation for everything".{{sfn|Rothstein|2009|p=377}}


In a 1968 lecture, Hubbard acknowledged similarities between his teachings and the space opera. Said Hubbard: "This planet is part of an earlier federation and passed out of its control due to losses in war and other such things. Now, this larger confederacy, this isn’t its right name, but we have often called it and referred to it in the past as the Marcab Confederacy. And it has been wrongly or rightly pointed to as one of the tail stars of the Big Dipper, which is the capital planet of which this planet is. Now, all this sounds very Space Opera-ish and that sort of thing, and I’m sorry for it, but I am not one to quibble about the truth. "<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://tonyortega.org/source-code-actual-things-l-ron-hubbard-said-on-this-date-in-history/|title = SOURCE CODE: Actual things L. Ron Hubbard said on this date in history &#124; the Underground Bunker}}</ref>
==Scientologists and space opera==


Although Hubbard spoke openly about space opera in the 1950s,{{sfn|Urban|2011|p=74}} Scientology eventually became an esoteric faith: some teachings are withheld until followers reach a certain point in their spiritual development, and the mythological foundation of the courses are unknown to many members.{{sfn|Rothstein|2009|p=366}} Over a decade of auditing and study—and donations of tens of thousands of dollars—are required for a member to reach the highest echelons of hidden knowledge.{{sfn|Urban|2011|pp=135–136}} Followers below a certain level (]) of growth are denied access to the church's cosmological teachings, and they are given different explanations for the church's teachings.{{sfn|Urban|2011|p=198}} German scholar Gerald Willms notes that in addition to the esoteric foundations, Scientology cites practical justifications for its rituals, so they can be pursued without knowledge of advanced teachings.{{sfn|Willms|2009|p=249}} The Church of Scientology has attempted to prevent the public release of their esoteric teachings, but, through the internet, their confidential aspects have been widely released.{{sfn|Urban|2011|p=198}} The church considers public discussion of their space opera teachings offensive and has asked academics not to publish their details. Scientologists maintain that the true meaning of these texts is only accessible to those who have progressed through their courses, and that those who read them prematurely risk damage to their spiritual and physical conditions.{{sfn|Rothstein|2009|pp=367–369}} Church leaders have sometimes outright refused to discuss the subject with journalists.{{sfn|''Mail & Guardian'', November 22, 2009}} Rothstein observes that the church also has a strong financial motivation to keep members from accessing higher-level courses, as devotees are required to make large payments to obtain them.{{sfn|Rothstein|2009|pp=367–369}} ], however, are sometimes more open about space opera. Some Free Zone Scientologists believe that the Church of Scientology has been hijacked by undercover agents of the ].{{sfn|Grünschloß|2009|p=231}}
Some aspects of Scientology space opera are revealed only in higher-level Scientology courses. For instance, the story of Xenu is part of the ] level III course, which requires an extensive (and expensive) preparatory series of courses. Only high-level Scientologists are given access to such "Advanced Technology" materials. This has not always been the case, as the Church of Scientology was initially quite open about its beliefs in space opera. Some "advanced" material was withdrawn from public circulation from the late 1960s onwards (although old copies can still be found in some public library collections, due to the Church's energetic policy of book donations).


During auditing, Scientology members sometimes recall details of life in space. Rothstein states that this is part of a "mythological paradigm" that members initially partake of through Scientology's scriptures.{{sfn|Rothstein|2003|p=264}} He notes, however, that some Scientologists do not believe that there are space opera myths in the group's teachings, and that others have left the group after learning about the higher-level doctrines.{{sfn|Rothstein|2009|p=370}} Reitman relates that some members accept the space opera teachings by seeing them as similar to seemingly implausible stories of popular religions or simply remain quiet about their doubts.{{sfn|Reitman|2011|p=100}}
Much Scientology space opera is nonetheless still accessible to "ordinary" Scientologists and in materials which are readily available to the general public. The ''Dianetics and Scientology Technical Dictionary'' (ISBN 0884040372) contains many definitions for extraterrestrial civilizations and brainwashing incidents, and many of L. Ron Hubbard's publicly available works contain extensive references to space opera. Within Scientology, internal magazines often publicize aspects of space opera to entry-level "]" Scientologists. For instance, ''International Scientology News'' issue 3 contains an advertisement for volume 10 of Hubbard's ''Research and Discovery Series'' (ISBN 0884042189), which says in part:


Rothstein states that space opera is a "part of the total fabric of Scientological thinking and narrative, but not of prime importance."{{sfn|Rothstein|2003|p=263}} He argues that these teachings are a "second order belief", in that they exist to support the group's core teachings about thetans.{{sfn|Rothstein|2003|p=265}} ], a former spokesman of the Church of Scientology, stated that extraterrestrial auditing is merely "a small percent" of their canon.{{sfn|Reitman|2006}}
:Your mind is completely '''UNPREPARED''' for what is about to '''HAPPEN''' to your '''REALITY ...'''


== Criticism and leaking ==
:''Volume 10: The Infinite Potential of Theta'' is unsurpassed: Nowhere will you find more knowledge about the mysterious ENTITIES, also known as theta bodies, those inhabitants of every human being that talk to him, and lead him astray. Nowhere are you likely to find more concentrated data about the ''BETWEEN LIVES AREAS'' and LRH's eye-popping discovery of '']''.


], a Dutch journalist who helped publicize confidential Scientology doctrines]]
:Do YOU have a body in pawn?


Scientology's space opera teachings were publicized in accounts given by former church members, most notably during court cases. One such case was filed by a former Scientologist, ], against the church in 1980. Five years later, Wollersheim offered confidential Scientology materials, including space opera teachings, to the court as evidence, a move that was vigorously protested by the church's attorneys. They were unable to prevent disclosure, however, and the documents were published by the '']'' in November 1985. This was the first time that some aspects of Scientology's space opera teachings were offered as public evidence about the church. In the mid-1990s, Wollersheim published some of the materials on a website, prompting the church to sue his organization, ]. The Church attested that the space opera narratives were ]; this claim was rejected by the court.{{sfn|Urban|2011|pp=183–184}}
:Read ''Volume 10'', for once you know ALL about it, you won't have to worry about nightmares, inexplicable ]s, disturbing <!--DO NOT CORRECT:-->visio<!-- NOTE: this is not a typo for video, please don't correct it --> images of cylindrical tanks, bodies floating in green fluid ...
:(''International Scientology News'' issue 3, 1997; formatting as per original)


In 1990, after being sued for libel by the Church of Scientology, ], a former member turned critic, offered a large amount of the group's highly confidential teachings in court. The documents, contained in what is known as the ], included detailed accounts of the church's space opera narratives. This material was subsequently posted on ] and a website of Dutch journalist ]. The church filed suits against those who posted the documents, claiming copyright violations. Lengthy court battles ensued, but the church was unable to prevent the materials' dissemination over the internet.{{sfn|Urban|2011|pp=186–188}}
It is not clear to what degree the typical Scientologist personally shares the official belief in "space opera", though the above advertisement features in an "entry-level" publication. The views of a number of individual Scientologists were recorded in the 1960 book '']'' (ISBN 0884049582). It describes "past life" episodes as recounted by 43 Scientologists undergoing Scientology auditing during a conference in ] in 1958 . The participants in the conference reported having lived past lives including the following:


Former Scientologists and members of the ] often discuss Scientology's space opera teachings. They generally take a rationalistic approach to the narratives and see them as absurd,{{sfn|Rothstein|2009|p=371}} or even as drug-fueled delusions,{{sfn|Rothstein|2009|p=383}} using them as a source of humor.{{sfn|Rothstein|2009|p=371}} The doctrines have been satirized in popular culture, most notably in the '']'' episode "]".{{sfn|Feltmate|2011|p=347}} The anti-Scientology website ] prominently uses space opera doctrines in their criticisms of the church, casting the implausibility of the stories as a clear reason to reject the group.{{sfn|Rothstein|2009|p=383}} Anti-cult critics of Scientology argue that the content of these teachings demonstrates that Scientology misleads its followers;{{sfn|Rothstein|2009|p=371}} many aspects of the narratives, such as the age of the volcanoes that Xenu is said to have used, contradict scientific consensus.{{sfn|Rothstein|2009|p=381}} The space opera teachings are, in fact, incompatible with scientific consensus on the ]: around 14 billion years. Rothstein notes that scholars of religion usually do not pursue this line of analysis because all myths contain unscientific content;{{sfn|Rothstein|2009|p=371}} he notes that cultural conditioning determines whether religious narratives appear reasonable.{{sfn|Rothstein|2009|p=383}}
* A past life as a robot working in a factory in space, which had gold animals hanging around it which ''"appeared solid but periodically imploded or exploded"''. It ground up discs to make small animals, which were then ''"inflated after blowing up through a totem and a cat devil" '' before being sent to other planets. A planet blew up, and the robot was blamed. He was drugged and forced to work the grinder.
* A past life ''"55,] years ago"'' in which the being had to do outside repairs on a space ship. He suffered radiation burns and fell off, plunging into an ocean on the planet below. A ] killed him and he in turn inhabited the manta ray.
* A past life as a trouble-making free being on ] ''"469,476,600 years ago"''. He tried to inhabit a "doll body", but he was captured and beaten up. The being was zapped with a ray gun by a Martian bishop in front of a congregation chanting ''"God is Love"'', before being run over by a large car and a steamroller. He was then frozen in an ice cube and dropped on Planet ZX 432, where he took another robot body and zapped and killed another robot. He took off in a ], and died when it exploded.
* A past life in which a being went to a planet where the forces of good were fighting evil black magic forces. After 74,000 years of battle, implants and hallucinations, he lost the fight, and joined the black magic side. He went to another planet on a space ship, where he was ''"deceived into a love affair with a robot decked out as a beautiful red-haired girl."''
* Being transformed into an intergalactic ] which perished after falling out of a flying saucer.
* Being ''"a very happy being who strayed to the planet Nostra 23,064,000,000 years ago"''.


== Analysis ==
== Non-Scientologists and space opera ==
]
]
Non-Scientologists have, on the whole, not reacted with much sympathy to Scientology space opera. However, Hubbard claimed that the power of past life implants was such that non-Scientologists would involuntarily react to depictions of space opera incidents. In the wake of Hubbard's revelation of Xenu's act of mass murder, images from the Xenu story and the related implants were exploited to improve Scientology's recruitment prospects.


According to Susan Raine, Hubbard's concept of "space opera" significantly diverges from traditional definitions by asserting that it is not a fictional genre but rather a factual account of human history. Although an official Scientology dictionary defines space opera as a sub-genre of science fiction, Hubbard's writings and lectures from the early 1950s present it as a genuine reflection of human events spanning millions of years across galaxies. He characterizes space opera as encompassing elements like space travel, intergalactic conflicts, and various civilizations, claiming these are actual occurrences rather than mere fiction. This redefinition illustrates how Hubbard intertwined his passion for science fiction with his views on human behavior, presenting a unique perspective on human history as shaped by these grand narratives. The concept of "the whole track" in Scientology serves as a framework for understanding this expansive history. The fluid nature of the term "space opera" reflects its evolving interpretations within both literary and religious contexts.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Raine |first=Susan |title=Astounding History: L. Ron Hubbard’s Scientology Space Opera |journal=Religion |volume=45 |issue=1 |year=2015 |pages=66–88 |doi=10.1080/0048721X.2014.957746}}</ref>
Hubbard is reported to have ordered that Scientology books be reissued with covers based on images from OT III . The 1968 and subsequent reprints of '']'' have had covers depicting an exploding volcano, apparently alluding to the volcanoes in the Xenu story &mdash; ''"Man responds to an exploding volcano"'' (Hubbard, "Assists"). Other cover images may reference Xenu as well: the cover of the 1972 edition of '']'' shows pictures of uniformed men in white helmets carrying boxes in and out of a spaceship, which may refer to the transportation of Xenu's victims. These images were supposed to have a lasting impact on non-Scientologists:<blockquote>A special 'Book Mission' was sent out to promote these books, now empowered and made irresistible by the addition of these overwhelming symbols or images. Organization staff were assured that if they simply held up one of the books, revealing its cover, that any bookstore owner would immediately order crateloads of them. A customs officer, seeing any of the book covers in one's luggage, would immediately pass one on through.<br />(Corydon)</blockquote>


Rothstein argues that in the construction of the space opera narratives, Hubbard drew from tropes common to his audience. The concept of a Galactic Confederation, Rothstein observes, was present in other UFO religions of the 1950s;
Since the 1980s, the volcano has also been depicted in television commercials advertising ''Dianetics''.
* In contrast to the overpopulation and atomic bombs were often discussed therein.{{sfn|Rothstein|2009|pp=379–380}} Urban cites UFO encounters and alien invasions as popular themes during the ];{{sfn|Urban|2011|p=73}}
* Rothstein draws parallels between Hubbard's teachings and the beliefs of UFO religions, citing similarities between thetans trapped in human bodies and the ] hypothesis of the ].{{sfn|Rothstein|2009|p=375}} ] notes Scientology's space opera teachings place them in the tradition of the ] hypothesis; he states the group's teachings about thetans bears similarities to "star seeds" found in UFO religions.{{sfn|Grünschloß|2004|p=427}}


Grünschloß speculates the UFO-contact narratives may have played a role in the group's development of space opera,{{sfn|Rothstein|2003|p=264}} specifically citing the resemblance of Hubbard's description of life in Xenu's time to statements by ], a UFO contactee of the 1950s.{{sfn|Rothstein|2009|p=375}} Rothstein notes the group's teachings about extraterrestrials varies greatly from most of the UFO movement,{{sfn|Rothstein|2003|p=264}} particularly in Hubbard's descriptions of demonic characters.{{sfn|Rothstein|2009|p=375}}
==Scientology's history of the universe==


Hubbard was a science fiction writer before starting Scientology, and some aspects of the church's space opera bear similarities to his previous writings.{{sfn|Urban|2011|p=76}} Noting similarities between Hubbard's fiction writing and creation of religious myths, Rothstein argues; "perhaps no division between such categories should be made".{{sfn|Rothstein|2009|p=374}} Kent posits some of his cosmology, such as the priests and psychiatrists loyal to Xenu, were modeled after events in Hubbard's life, such as his distaste for Christianity and clashes with the psychiatric establishment.{{sfn|Kent|1999}} Hubbard theorized science fiction writers sometimes recalled portions of events from past lives and incorporated it into their works,{{sfn|Urban|2011|p=76}} and Urban writes Hubbard's science fiction writings "contain more than a few seeds of Hubbard's religious movement, the Church of Scientology".{{sfn|Urban|2011|pp=35–36}}
* 70 ] years ago (7&times;10<sup>85</sup> years): '''The Story of Creation Implants'''
* 40.7 trillion trillion trillion trillion years ago to 5.9 trillion trillion trillion trillion trillion years ago (4.07&times;10<sup>49</sup>&ndash;5.9&times;10<sup>60</sup> years): The '''Glade Implants''' are implanted
* 83 trillion trillion trillion years ago to about 40.7 trillion trillion trillion trillion years ago (8.3&times;10<sup>36</sup>&ndash;4.07&times;10<sup>49</sup> years): The ''']''' are implanted
* 110,000 trillion trillion years ago or earlier to 390 trillion trillion years ago (1.1&times;10<sup>29</sup>&ndash;3.9&times;10<sup>26</sup> years): The ''']''' implants are implanted by an unknown alien race
* 390 trillion trillion years ago to 370 trillion trillion years ago (3.9&times;10<sup>26</sup>&ndash;3.7&times;10<sup>26</sup> years): The ''']''' are implanted
* 4 ] years ago (4&times;10<sup>15</sup> years): Thetans enter the present universe and experience ''']'''
* 382 trillion years ago to 52 trillion years ago (3.82&times;10<sup>14</sup>&ndash;5.2&times;10<sup>13</sup> years): The ''']''' are implanted
* 319 trillion years ago to 83 trillion trillion trillion years ago (3.19&times;10<sup>14</sup>&ndash;8.3&times;10<sup>36</sup> years): The ''']''' Implants
* 315 trillion years ago to 216 trillion years ago (3.15&times;10<sup>14</sup>&ndash;2.16&times;10<sup>14</sup> years): The ''']''' are implanted
* 80 trillion years ago (8&times;10<sup>13</sup> years): The ''']''' is established
* 52 trillion years ago (5.2&times;10<sup>13</sup> years): The ''']''' government is established
* 44 trillion years ago (4.4&times;10<sup>13</sup> years, ''"43,891,832,611,177 years, 344 days, 10 hours, 20 minutes and 40 seconds from 10:02&frac12; PM Daylight Greenwich Time May 9, 1963"''): The ''']''' are given, presumably by Helatrobus
* 38 trillion years ago (3.8&times;10<sup>13</sup> years): '''Helatrobus''' falls or is destroyed
*:<small>It should be noted that all dates given above are far beyond the current scientific consensus for the ] (approximately 13.7 billion years)</small>
* 75 million years ago (7.5&times;10<sup>7</sup> years): ''']''' commits his famous genocide and brainwashes his victims with the ''']'''
* 50 million years ago (5&times;10<sup>7</sup> years): The ''']'''
* 200,000 years ago (2&times;10<sup>5</sup> years): The ''']''' is established
* ''"Hundreds of years ago to hundreds of thousands of years ago"'':- The Marcab Invasion Force implants thetans with the ''']'''
* Circa 6235 BC: The ''']''' invades the ] but is defeated by the ''']'''
* AD 1150: The ''']''' abandons the Solar System


Rothstein argues Scientology's space opera identify Xenu as the root of evil and Hubbard as the hero,{{sfn|Rothstein|2009|p=379}} for having uncovered the mysteries of the universe. Rothstein states the group's teachings about "salvation" may be a means to encourage reverence of Hubbard.{{sfn|Rothstein|2009|pp=376–379}} In addition, Rothstein notes the space opera teachings also provide fundamental justifications for some practical aspects of Scientology, including the rejection of psychiatry and the formation of the ].{{sfn|Rothstein|2009|pp=381–382}} He sees space opera as similar to most types of mythology, involving superhuman beings in the far distant past.{{sfn|Rothstein|2009|p=381}} Willms states the mythology of Scientology differs from many other religions because it focuses on material beings; but argues the Xenu myth is a religious narrative, although the Church of Scientology has never used this claim in their efforts to be recognized as a religion.{{sfn|Willms|2009|p=248}}
==Alien civilizations==


==See also==
Hubbard said that the following "alien civilizations" exist(ed):
* ]
* ]


===Arslycus=== == Notes ==
{{notes
| colwidth =
| notes =


{{efn
'''Arslycus''' was an ancient civilization located in space, rather than on a planet, as this was at a time when ''"nobody had invented planets yet."'' Hubbard described it as being notorious for its mind-numbingly tedious jobs, putting thetans to work for ''"ten thousand lives in Arslycus, on the average"'', spent doing nothing better than polishing bricks.
| name = psych
| Former scientologist ] discussed an account of the origin of psychiatrists that he says was passed from Hubbard to ]. The account casts psychiatrists as originating on the planet Farsec and being sent to Earth to control its population. There they took the form of priests and shamans before becoming psychiatrists. {{harv|Rathbun|2013|p=238}}
}}


}}
The civilization was ultimately destroyed when ''"one of these slaves suddenly got the big idea of mass"'' and Arslycus ''"broke to pieces and scattered around in that particular part of the sky as being of too great a mass to sustain itself"''. This was, apparently, ''"about the point where you got the law of gravity coming in strongly. And after that the law of gravity began to affect itself on the universe more and more and more and more and you started to get all kinds of suns and planets and the most fantastic array of things."'' (PDC, ] ])


== References ==
The name was possibly tongue-in-cheek, given that it was pronounced as "]" and would have originated when Hubbard was in ] in the early 1950s.
{{Reflist}}


== Bibliography ==
===Espinol Confederacy===
* {{cite news
| title = Celebrities Lead Charge Against Scientology
| url = http://www.mg.co.za/article/2009-11-22-celebrities-lead-charge-against-scientology
| access-date = September 13, 2012
| newspaper = ]
| date = November 22, 2009
| ref = {{sfnRef|''Mail & Guardian'', November 22, 2009}}
}}
* {{cite book |title=Scientology |title-link=Scientology (Lewis book) |year=2009 |editor-first=James R. |editor-last=Lewis |editor-link=James R. Lewis (scholar) |isbn=9780199852321 |ol=16943235M |publisher=] |chapter=Making Sense of Scientology: Prophetic, Contractual Religion |pages=83–102 |first=David G. |last=Bromley |author-link=David G. Bromley |doi=10.1093/acprof:oso/9780195331493.003.0005}}
* {{cite journal
| last = Feltmate
| first = David
| title = New Religious Movements in Animated Adult Sitcoms—A Spectrum of Portrayals
| journal = Religion Compass
| year = 2011
| volume = 5
| issue = 7
| pages = 343–354
| publisher = John Wiley & Sons
| doi = 10.1111/j.1749-8171.2011.00287.x
}}
* {{cite book
| last = Grünschloß
| first = Andreas
| author-link = Andreas Grünschloß
| editor = James R. Lewis
| title = The Oxford Handbook of New Religious Movements
| year = 2004
| publisher = Oxford University Press
| isbn = 978-0-19-514986-9
| chapter = Waiting for the "Big Beam": UFO Religions and "Ufological" Themes in New Religious Movements
}}
* {{cite book
| last = Grünschloß
| first = Andreas
| editor = James R. Lewis
| title = ]
| year = 2009
| publisher = ]
| isbn = 978-0-19-533149-3
| chapter = Scientology, a New Age Religion?
}}
* {{cite journal
| last = Kent
| first = Stephen
| title = The Creation of "Religious" Scientology
| journal = Religious Studies and Theology
| year = 1999
| volume = 18
| issue = 2
| pages = 97–126
| author-link = Stephen A. Kent
| publisher = ]
| doi = 10.1558/rsth.v18i2.97
}}
* {{cite book
| last = Rathbun
| first = Mark
| title = Memoirs of a Scientology Warrior
| year = 2013
| publisher = ]
| isbn = 978-1-484-80566-4
}}
* {{cite news
| last = Reitman
| first = Janet
| title = Inside Scientology
| url = https://www.rollingstone.com/culture/news/inside-scientology-20110208
| access-date = July 10, 2012
| newspaper = Rolling Stone
| year = 2006
}}
* {{cite book
| last = Reitman
| first = Janet
| title = Inside Scientology: The Story of America's Most Secretive Religion
| url = https://archive.org/details/insidescientolog0000reit
| url-access = registration
| year = 2011
| publisher = ]
| isbn = 978-0-618-88302-8
}}
* {{cite book
| last = Rothstein
| first = Mikael
| author-link = Mikael Rothstein
| year = 2003
| editor = Christopher Partridge
| title = UFO Religions
| publisher = Psychology Press
| isbn = 978-0-415-26324-5
| chapter = UFO Beliefs as Syncristic Components
}}
* {{cite book
| last = Rothstein
| first = Mikael
| editor = James R. Lewis
| title = ]
| year = 2009
| publisher = ]
| isbn = 978-0-19-533149-3
| chapter = "His Name was Xenu. He Used Renegades...": Aspects of Scientology's Founding Myth
}}
* {{cite news
| last1 = Sappell
| first1 = Joel
| title = Defining the Theology
| first2 = Robert
| last2 = Welkos
| url = https://www.latimes.com/local/la-scientologysidea062490-story.html
| archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20080209133838/http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-scientologysidea062490,0,7631220,full.story
| url-status = live
| archive-date = February 9, 2008
| access-date = September 12, 2012
| newspaper = Los Angeles Times
| date = June 24, 1990
}}
* {{cite book
| last = Willms
| first = Gerald
| editor = James R. Lewis
| title = ]
| year = 2009
| publisher = ]
| isbn = 978-0-19-533149-3
| chapter = Scientology: "Modern Religion" or "Religion of Modernity"?
}}
* {{cite book
| last = Urban
| first = Hugh |author-link=Hugh Urban
| title = ]
| year = 2011
| publisher = ]
| isbn = 978-0-691-14608-9
}}
* {{cite journal
| last = Urban
| first = Hugh |author-link=Hugh Urban
| title = The Occult Roots of Scientology?: L. Ron Hubbard, Aleister Crowley, and the Origins of a Controversial New Religion
| journal = Nova Religio: The Journal of Alternative and Emergent Religions
|date=February 2012
| volume = 15
| issue = 3
| pages = 91–116
| publisher = ]
| doi = 10.1525/nr.2012.15.3.91
}}
* {{cite book |last=Urban |first=Hugh |author-link=Hugh Urban |year=2021 |chapter=Scientology |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=tkswEAAAQBAJ&pg=PA329 |editor-last=Zeller |editor-first=Ben |title=Handbook of UFO Religions |location=] and ] |publisher=] |series=Brill Handbooks on Contemporary Religion |volume=20 |doi=10.1163/9789004435537_016 |isbn=978-90-04-43437-0 |issn=1874-6691 |pages=329–342}}
* {{cite news
| last = Wolf
| first = Brock
| title = Cruise Sees No Scientology in 'War of the Worlds'
| url = https://abcnews.go.com/Entertainment/story?id=876503
| agency = ]
| access-date = August 28, 2013
| date = June 24, 2005
}}


{{Scientology}}
The '''Espinol Confederacy''' is a lesser but apparently still extant alien civilization, said by Hubbard to have lasted ''"something on the order of a few hundred thousand years."'' ("The ITSA Line") It used to control Earth's Solar System, which was "Sun 12" of the "Espinol United Stars" (formal name: ''"Espinol United Stars, or the Espinol United Moons, Planets, and Asteroids: This Quarter of the Universe is Ours"''). The Espinols abandoned the Solar System in AD 1150, ''"when a group on Mars was finally abolished and vanished"'', and since then have used the system as a dumping ground for convicts. ("The Free Being")
{{Good article}}

===Galactic Confederacy===

The '''Galactic Confederacy''' was the political unit formerly ruled by the tyrant ]. It ruled a broad swath of the galaxy, and lasted for ''"eighty trillion years"''. ("The ITSA Line") 75 million years ago, at the time of Xenu's mass murder, the Galactic Confederacy comprised 26 stars and 76 planets, including Earth (then called Teegeeack). Its inhabitants ''"were walking around in clothes which looked very remarkably like the clothes they wear this very minute. And the cars they drove looked exactly the same and the trains they ran looked the same and the boats they had looked the same. Circa 1950, 1960."'' ("Assists") Modern civilization closely resembles that of the Galactic Confederacy 75 million years ago because of an unconscious re-enactment of Xenu's "]".

] laurel wreath logo.]]
The Church of Scientology consciously models itself on aspects of the Galactic Confederacy. The ], an elite grouping within the Church of Scientology, has a laurel wreath logo said by Hubbard to be based on the symbol of the "Loyal Officers", an anti-Xenu faction within the Galactic Confederacy. Each of the leaves on the laurel wreath is said to represent one of the Galactic Confederacy's stars. According to the ''Dianetics and Scientology Technical Dictionary'', ''"the Sea Org symbol, adopted and used as the symbol of a Galactic Confederacy far back in the history of this sector, derives much of its power and authority from that association."''

The Church of Scientology's own organizational structure is said to be based on that of the Galactic Confederacy: the Church's "org board" is ''"a refined board of an old galactic civilization. We applied Scientology to it and found why it eventually failed. It lacked a couple of departments and that was enough to mess it all up. They lasted 80 trillion ."'' ("Org Board and Livingness")

===Helatrobus===

'''Helatrobus''' was a now-extinct ''"interplanetary nation"'' which was only a ''"little pipsqueak government, didn't amount to very much."'' It was distinguished by ''"gold crosses on their planes, like the ] or something of the sort."'' ("State of OT") Despite their outwardly friendly aspect, the Helatrobans were responsible for a particularly vicious set of implants, the "]", which were given some 43 trillion years ago. They were also responsible for implanting the ].

===Invader Forces===
], said by Hubbard to be the site of the defeat of the Third Battalion of the Fifth Invader Force, circa 6235 BC.]]
According to Hubbard, the Solar System has been occupied repeatedly &mdash; and sometimes concurrently &mdash; by multiple '''Invader Forces'''. They were discussed in detail in a 1952 lecture, "The Role of Earth", in which Hubbard described the conflict between the Fourth Invader Force (already occupying the Solar System) and the Fifth Invader Force (which invaded without knowing that the Fourth Invader Force was already in residence).

The Fifth Invader Force renamed the Solar System as ''"Space Station 33"'' but ''"without suspecting that the Fourth Invader Force had been there for God knows how many skillion years, had been sitting down, and they have their installations up on Mars, and they have a tremendous, screened operation"''. The result was a major clash between the two Invader Forces some 8,200 years ago in the ]s, when the Third Battalion of the Fifth Invader Force landed about 72 miles (116 km) northwest of the ] and attempted to set up an implant station. The battalion was captured, taken to the Fourth Invaders' complex on ], brainwashed and stuck into human bodies. As for the remainder,
<blockquote>the Fifth Invader Force, out of its own protection, took over ] &ndash; oh, relatively in modern times &ndash; took over Venus and tried to stabilize the Venusian. If you called a Fifth Invader, though, a Venusian, he would probably shoot you out of hand, because it would be a horrible insult. They merely monitor the government of Venus, and they leave Mars strictly alone.<br />("The Role of Earth")</blockquote>

Many present-day thetans are said to have been former members of the Fifth Invader Force and can be distinguished by the fact that they believe themselves to be ''"a very strange insectlike creature with unthinkably horrible hands."'' (''Scientology 8-8008'')

The Invader Forces are still said to be controlling ''"installations in ] &hellip; installations in the Pyrenees here on Earth, and there are installations down in the ] in Africa which pick up, very often, people on death." (])'' <!-- NOTE: this is verbatim, DON'T CORRECT! -->

===Marcab Confederacy===

The '''Marcab Confederacy''' is said to be one of the most powerful galactic civilizations still active. He describes it as:
<blockquote>various planets united into a very vast civilization which has come forward up through the last 200,000 years, formed out of the fragments of earlier civilizations. In the last 10,000 years they have gone on with a sort of decadent kicked-in-the-head civilization that contains automobiles, business suits, fedora hats, telephones, spaceships &mdash; a civilization which looks almost an exact duplicate but is worse off than the current US civilization.<br />("Auditing Comm Cycles")</blockquote>

The capital of the Confederacy is said to be ''"one of the tail stars of the ]"'', probably ], a star 108 ]s distant from Earth. The Marcabians used to rule Earth at some point in the past but lost control of it due to ''"losses in war and other things"''.

The Marcabians had an oppressive political system: ''"if was considered to be in contempt of court or anything like that, simply fried since there was a curtain of radioactive material which went clear across the front of the bench anywhere that a witness or anybody would stand, and so on."'' ("History and development of processes: question and answer period") They invented ] as a means of punishment, with the ] imposed for making even the slightest mistake in returns &mdash; ''"one comma wrong and it's 'dead forever'."'' The Marcabians also appear to have been distinctly socialistic, having ''"had plan balanced economies"'' (presumably some form of ]). ("E-Meter Actions, Errors in Auditing")

They were also keen on ] and every once in a while Scientologists undergoing auditing ''"will run into race tracks and race-track drivers"''. Hubbard described this in some detail in a 1960 lecture:
<blockquote>They had turbine-generated cars that went about 275 miles an hour (443 km/h). They ran with a high whine. I notice they've just now invented the motor again. And they had tracks that were booby-trapped with atom bombs, and they had side bypasses. The tracks were mined, and the grandstands were leaded-paned.<br />("Create and Confront")</blockquote>

The tracks were deliberately designed to be as dangerous as possible, with ''"a mountain that you went up to the top of and fell off"'', and death was commonplace. This, however, was not a problem, as Marcabian medicine was so good that nobody ever died permanently. According to author ], Hubbard liked to reminisce to his followers about ''"how he was a race-car driver in the Marcab civilization"''. One of the people who accompanied him aboard his private fleet in the late 1960s described Hubbard's stories of life with the Marcabians:
<blockquote>LRH said he was a race driver called the Green Dragon who set a speed record before he was killed in an accident. He came back in another lifetime as the Red Devil and beat his own record, then came back and did it again as the Blue Streak. Finally he realized all he was doing was breaking his own records and it was no game any more.<br />(Miller, p.280)</blockquote>

Hubbard describes exactly this in his lecture "Create and Confront", telling how he went through multiple lives as a Marcabian racing driver with names like The Green Rocket, The Red Comet, The Silver Streak, The Gold Bomb, and so on.

Hubbard stated that the Marcab Confederacy was now using Earth as a "prison planet". When a person dies or "drops the body", as Scientologists put it, his thetan is pulled into a Marcab-established "implant station" or "report station". The idea that Earth is a ''"prison planet"'', maintained by ''"entheta beings"'' or ''Targs'' who dumped their enemies on Earth, was first put forward in a 1952 lecture, "Electropsychometric Scouting: Battle of the Universes". A steady flow of flying saucers is said to be still dropping off more entheta beings.
<blockquote>The report area for most has been ]. Some women report to stations elsewhere in the ]. There are occasional incidents about Earth report stations. The report stations are protected by screens. The last report station on Earth was established in the ].<br />(''A History of Man'')</blockquote>

The thetans are brainwashed and sent back to Earth, where they find a new body to inhabit. Only Scientologists who have reached the level of "]" are said to be able to avoid this fate.

===Other alien civilizations===

Hubbard mentions a number of other alien civilizations in his writings, though he does not go into any detail about them. These include the ''"Three-and-a-half Invaders, ... the Psi Galaxy, Galaxy 82."'' ("The Story of a Static") According to the official Church of Scientology notes accompanying the lectures in which he alluded to them, these were ''"made up"'' (presumably for humorous effect), contrasting with the supposedly real invader forces and civilizations cited above.

==Key incidents==

In his writings and lectures, Hubbard describes many key incidents said to have occurred to thetans during the past few trillion years. Generally speaking, these followed a consistent pattern. A hostile alien civilization would capture free thetans and brainwash them with implants designed to confuse them or otherwise render them more amenable to control. Instances of implantation are termed ''incidents'', while the subject of the implants are often termed ''goals''.

In a specific incident, a thetan would be implanted with two or more opposing objectives (e.g. "to be", "not to be") which, being opposed, cause the thetan great confusion. The memory of the implanting then becomes obscured or is deliberately deleted. This confusion is said to linger for trillions of years and causes unresolved psychological problems in the present day. According to Hubbard, only Scientology methods can resolve the burdens left by such traumas.

===Aircraft Door Goals===

The '''Aircraft Door Goals''' were implanted between 315 trillion years ago and 216 trillion years ago aboard the fuselage of an aircraft, with the thetan held motionless in front of the aircraft door. Hubbard writes that ''"the goal items were laid in with explosions"''. The specific goals given in this implant were variants of the command "to create." ("Routine 3N: Line Plots", HCOB 14 July 1963)

===Bear Goals===

The '''Bear Goals''' were very similar to the ''']''' (see below) with the same set of goals, except that ''"instead of a mechanical gorilla a mechanical or live bear was used, and the motion was even more violent."'' They were implanted by ''"a group called, I think, "The Brothers of the Bear" and were the ancestors of the Hoipolloi."'' ("Routine 3N: Line Plots", HCOB 14 July 1963)

===Black Thetan Goals===

The '''Black Thetan Goals''', also known as the '''Glade Implants''', were implanted between ''"390 trillion trillion years to 370 trillion trillion years ago"''. According to Hubbard, they were ''"in a glade surrounded by the stone heads of "black thetans" who spat white energy at the trapped thetan''". The goals included such things as ''"To End, To be Dead, To be Asleep"'' and so on.

===Body Builder Incident===

The '''Body Builder Incident''' took place around 50 million years ago. The thetan was forced to ''"fight again with his attention units"'' and was ''"generally tailored into a body.''" (''A History of Man'')

===Bodies in pawn===

'''Bodies in pawn''' result from an ancient "very gruesome experience" in which

<blockquote>a fellow is grabbed, hypnotized, shoved into an electronic field, and then told he is somewhere else. And so he departs &ndash; most of him &ndash; and goes to the new location while still being under control of the implanters. He picks up a MEST body in the new location and starts living a life there, ''while still having a living body somewhere else''. The implanters can keep his original body alive indefinitely, and control the thetan through it. If the thetan tries to flee, the hypnotizers simply cause pain to the original body, still alive in a vat of fluid, and he is immediately recalled. That's a BODY IN PAWN. It's a second body you may have, living somewhere else, right in present time. But the second body is not under YOUR direct control.
<br />(''Adventure'' magazine, Church of Scientology, 1998; see also Hubbard, ''Research and Discovery Series'' vol. 10)</blockquote>

They can apparently cause major problems for people undergoing medical operations, as ''"pain, an anaesthetic or a serious accident cause him to change to the other area with a shocking impact on the other body. The other body quite commonly dies or is deranged by the sudden impact."'' This gives the patient a repressed feeling of having died and leaves him "very, very badly disturbed." (''A History of Man'')

===Bubble Gum Incident===

The '''Bubble Gum Incident''' was an important early incident ''"where you are hit with a motion and finally develop an obsession about motion"''. It was the first incident on the "time track" which included words.("Technique 88 and the Whole Track Part I")

===Gorilla Goals===
] was said by ] to have been used by the Hoipolloi to implant the ].]]<!-- frame because it's a 202px-wide original image - don't try to thumbnail -->
The '''Gorilla Goals''' were a series of implants created by invaders from Helatrobus ''"between about 319 trillion years ago to about 256 trillion trillion years ago"'' (or 89 trillion trillion years ago in another Hubbard lecture). They were
<blockquote>given in an amusement park with a single tunnel, a roller coaster and a Ferris wheel ... The symbol of a Gorilla was always present in the place the goal was given. Sometimes a large gorilla, black, was seen elsewhere than the park. A mechanical or a live gorilla was always seen in the park.
<p>This activity was conducted by the Hoipolloi, a group of operators in meat body societies. They were typical carnival people. They let out concessions for these implant "Amusement Parks." A pink-striped white shirt with sleeve garters was the uniform of the Hoipolloi. Such a figure often rode on the roller coaster cars. Monkeys were also used on the cars. Elephants sometimes formed part of the equipment.
<br />("Routine 3N: Line Plots", HCOB ] ])</blockquote>

The Hoipolloi used ''"fantastic motion"'' as well as ''"blasts of raw electricity and explosions"'' to brainwash the hapless thetans into accepting the Gorilla Goals. The goals themselves were a series of simple tasks intended to trick the thetans into limiting their inherent abilities, with the goals including "To End", "To be Dead", "To be Asleep", "To be Solid", "To be Sexual" and so on.

===Heaven Implants===

The '''Heaven Implants''' were given ''"43,891,832,611,177 years, 344 days, 10 hours, 20 minutes and 40 seconds from 10:02&frac12; PM Daylight Greenwich Time May 9, 1963."'' They comprised two series of views of Heaven, the first of which was quite positive: Hubbard compares Heaven to ''"] in ]"''. In the second series, Heaven had become a lot shabbier:

<blockquote>The place is shabby. The vegetation is gone. The pillars are scruffy. The saints have vanished. So have the Angels. A sign on one (the left as you "enter") says "This is Heaven". The right has a sign "Hell" with an arrow and inside the grounds one can see the excavations like archaeological diggings with raw terraces, that lead to "Hell".</blockquote>

Hubbard reported that he had encountered no ''"devils or satans"''. Heaven was, however, not quite as conventionally depicted, and took the form of a town which ''"consisted of a trolley bus, some building fronts, sidewalks, train tracks, a boarding house, a bistro in a basement where there is a "bulletin board" well lighted, and a BANK BUILDING."'' Hubbard described how the second series of Heaven implants depicts:

<blockquote>a passenger getting on the trolley bus, a "workman" halfway down the first stairs of To Forget "eating lunch" and in To Be in Heaven a gardener or electrician adjusting an implant box behind a hedge and periodically leaping up and screaming.<br />("Heaven", HCOB ] ])</blockquote>

After being ridiculed in the ] (an Australian public inquiry into Scientology), this bulletin was withdrawn from circulation and apparently no longer forms part of publicly admitted Scientology doctrine, although it might possibly still be in use in high-level Scientology courses.

===Helatrobus Implants===

These were implanted by the inhabitants of the planet Helatrobus, some ''"382 trillion years ago to 52 trillion years ago"''. The Helatrobans were motivated by a fear of free thetans and sought to restrain them by capturing and brainwashing thetans in order to weaken them. In a series of lectures, Hubbard goes into some detail about how this was done:

]]]
<blockquote>Planets were surrounded suddenly by radioactive cloud masses. And very often a long time before the planet came under attack from these implant people, waves of radioactive clouds, Magellanic clouds, black and gray, would sweep over and engulf the planet, and it would be living in an atmosphere of radioactivity, which was highly antipathetic to the living beings, bodies, plants, anything else that was on this planet.
<p>And so planetary systems would become engulfed in radioactive masses, gray and black. And the earmarks of such a planetary action was gray and black &ndash; gray towering masses of clouds. These Magellanic clouds would not otherwise have come anywhere near a planetary system.<br />("State of OT")</blockquote>

(Note that the ] are in fact ] orbiting our own ], and so are not clouds at all, let alone "radioactive clouds".)

When a planet had been engulfed, the Helatrobans would attack it with ''"little orange-colored bombs that would talk"'' and the clouds themselves would talk: ''"And here you'd have a gray cloud going by and it'd be saying, 'Hark! Hark! Hark!' you see? 'Watch out! Look out! Who's there? Who's that?'"''

Hapless people on the planet's surface would be kidnapped using a small capsule ''"placed at will in space. It shot out a large bubble, the being would grab at the bubble or strike at it and be sucked at once into the capsule. Then the capsule would be retracted into an aircraft."'' A victim would then be implanted for up to six months and the Helatrobans would ''"fix him on a post in a big bunch of stuff ... put him on a post and wobbled him around and ran him through this implant of goals on a little monowheel. Little monowheel pole trap. And it had the effigy of a body on it.''" ("State of OT")

===Incident I===

'''Incident I''' is set four ] years ago. The unsuspecting thetan was subjected to a loud snapping noise followed by a flood of luminescence, then saw a ] followed by a trumpeting ]. After a loud set of snaps, the thetan was overwhelmed by darkness. This is described as the implant opening the gateway to this universe, meaning that these traumatic memories are what separates thetans from their ''static'' (natural, godlike) state. The incident is described in ] level III (OT III), written in 1967.

===Invisible Picture Goals===
The '''Invisible Picture Goals''' were implanted by an early race of alien implanters some time between ''"110,000 trillion trillion years ago or earlier to 390 trillion trillion years ago"''. They comprised brainwashing of captive thetans by showing them pictures of diametrically opposed goals such as ''"Wake, Never Wake, Sleep, Never Sleep"'', as well as invisible pictures to confuse the thetan. The other pictures would ''"consist usually of a scene of a cave, a railway, an airplane, a view of a sun and planets"''. ("Routine 3N, Line Plots", HCOB ] ])

===R6 Implants===
:''Main article: ]''

The '''R6 Implants''' were the work of the Galactic Confederacy's tyrannical leader, ], 75 million years ago. According to Hubbard, after Xenu blew up his billions of captured subjects, they were forced to watch a ''"three-D, super colossal motion picture"'' for 36 days. This implanted pictures ''"contain God, the Devil, Angels, space opera, theaters, helicopters, a constant spinning, a spinning dancer, trains and various scenes very like modern ]."'' ("Assists")

===Train Goals===

Devised by the Marcab Invasion Force and implemented between ''"hundreds of years ago to hundreds of thousands of years ago"'', the '''Train Goals''' were a series of implants given in a huge train station. The thetan was put into ''"a railway carriage quite like a British railway coach with compartments"'' and subjected to a barrage of ''"white energy"''. During the implant sequence:
<blockquote>a face may come up and say "You still here? Get out. Get off this train. We hate you." And from the speakers "This happened to you yesterday, tomorrow, now. This is your departure point, keep coming back. You'll be meeting all your friends here. When you're killed and dead keep coming back. You haven't a chance to get away. You've got to report in. This happened to you days ago, weeks ago, years ago. You don't know when this happened to you. We hate you. Get out. Don't ever come back."<br />("Routine 3N - The Train GPMs - The Marcab Between Lives Implants", HCOB ] ])</blockquote>

==References==
===Lectures by Hubbard===

*"Electropsychometric Scouting: Battle of the Universes", April 1952
*"Technique 88 and the Whole Track Part I", ] ]
*"The Role of Earth", November 1952
*Philadelphia Doctorate Course (PDC), ] ]
*"History and development of processes: question and answer period", ] ]
*"Create and Confront", ] ]
*"E-Meter Actions, Errors in Auditing", ] ]
*"The Helatrobus Implants", ] ]
*"State of OT", ] ]
*"The Free Being", ] ]
*"Auditing Comm Cycles", ] ]
*"The ITSA Line", ] ]
*"Org Board and Livingness", ] ]

===HCO Bulletins===
*, HCOB ] ] (no longer published by the Church of Scientology)
*"Routine 3N: Line Plots", HCOB ] ]
*"Routine 3N - The Train GPMs - The Marcab Between Lives Implants", HCOB ] ]

===Books===
* Jon Atack, '''' (Kensington Publishing Corporation, New York, 1990; ISBN 081840499X)
* Bent Corydon and L. Ron Hubbard Jr., ''L. Ron Hubbard: Messiah Or Madman?'' (Lyle Stuart, New Jersey, 1987; ISBN 0818404442)
* L. Ron Hubbard, '']'', 1954
* L. Ron Hubbard, ''Dianetics and Scientology Technical Dictionary'' (current edition, Bridge Publications, 1995; ISBN 0884040372)
* L. Ron Hubbard, ''Scientology 8-8008'' (current edition, Bridge Publications, 1989; ISBN 0884044297)
* Russell Miller, '']'' (Henry Holt, New York, 1988; ISBN 1550130277)
* Christopher Partridge, ''UFO Religions'' (Routledge, 2003; ISBN 0415263247)

===Other references===
*Church of Scientology, ''International Scientology News'' #3 (1997)
*Church of Scientology, ''''
* (Jamie Doward, ''The Observer'', Sun ] ])
*Marco Frenschkowski: ''L. Ron Hubbard and Scientology'', Marburg Journal of Religion, Volume 4, No. 1 (July 1999)
*Hubbard, "The Story of a Static", Professional Auditor's Bulletin ] ]

]
]


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Latest revision as of 04:42, 12 October 2024

L. Ron Hubbard in 1950, around when he developed Scientology

Scientology founder L. Ron Hubbard routinely referred to "space opera" in his teachings, drawing from science-fiction and weaving it into his origins of human history. In his writings, wherein thetans (roughly comparable to the concept of a human soul) were reincarnated periodically over quadrillions of years, retaining memories of prior lives, to which Hubbard attributed complex narratives about life throughout the universe. The most controversial of these myths is the story of Xenu, to whom Hubbard attributed responsibility for many of the world's problems.

Some space opera doctrines of Scientology are only provided by the church to experienced members, who church leaders maintain are the only ones able to correctly understand them. Several former members of the church have exposed these secret documents, leading to lengthy court battles with the church, which failed to keep the secret. Critics of the church have noted that some of the narratives are scientifically impossible, and have thus assailed the church as untrustworthy for teaching them. The space opera teachings have also been satirized in popular culture. Scholars of religion have described the space opera narratives as a creation myth designed to encourage reverence of Hubbard as a supreme messenger. Several academics have drawn attention to the similarity of the space opera myths to themes of the 1950s Cold War culture in which they were constructed.

Origins

A Scientology e-meter, a device for displaying and/or recording the electrodermal activity (EDA) of a human being. The device is used frequently for auditing in Scientology.

(Although this article regularly refers to Xenu, Hubbard in some of his lectures and writings actually uses the name Xemu and even spells it out).

L. Ron Hubbard created a set of beliefs that he represented as a form of therapy, which he named Dianetics. He promoted it as a scientific, not religious, teaching. The system has no scientific basis and is a type of pseudoscience. Until the early 1950s, Hubbard had a negative view of organized religions, but thereafter discussed spiritual topics. In these teachings, he claimed to identify subconscious memories of past events, which he called "engrams", as causes of human dissatisfaction. By 1950, he had begun to ponder past lives, believing that they could be recalled; he attempted to use these recollections to develop a comprehensive narrative of the universe. He founded the Church of Scientology in 1953, advancing his beliefs as religious doctrines. The church was distinct from Dianetics-based groups but incorporated some of their views. Hubbard saw Dianetics as focused on the physical body but viewed Scientology as a way to address spiritual matters.

In Hubbard's efforts to shift from a psychotherapeutic to a spiritual program, he introduced the concept of thetans: a set of godlike, non-corporeal entities capable of creating and shaping universes, later trapped in the MEST universe and confined, by reincarnation, to physical bodies. Hugh Urban of Ohio State University states that these teachings bear similarities to Gnosticism, although he doubts that Hubbard was well versed in Gnostic thought.

In the 1950s, as Hubbard's followers recalled their past lives, he recorded many details of these recollections. With this as his source, he constructed an intricate history of the universe, identified as "space opera". Although Hubbard believed that he had developed a comprehensive history, Urban cites the isolated and incomplete record of the statements, wherein Hubbard identified a thetan universe, separate from the material universe, created by its inhabitants. The material universe, in Hubbard's view, began when other universes created by thetans collided, from which they entered the material universe in six invasion groups roughly 60 trillion years ago. Hubbard also described a series of events, called the "incidents", which divorced the thetans from their self-knowledge, but maintained that thetans could regain their former divinity, and referred to thetans that freed themselves from the material world as "operating thetans".

Narratives and civilizations

Cover of Imagination August 1956 depicting a space opera story

Hubbard located his first 'incident' four quadrillion years ago, in which a thetan encountered 'loud cracks and brightness' and then observed a cherub and chariot before experiencing total darkness. In Scientology, this is known as "Incident 1". Another important event in Scientology's chronology of the universe occurred on a space city known as Arslycus, the inhabitants of whom brought about an incident when capturing thetans.

The most controversial portion of Scientology's space opera is the myth of Xenu, known as "Incident 2", in which Hubbard described a group of 76 planets, orbiting stars visible from Earth, organized in a Galactic Confederacy c. 75 million years ago, ruled by the dictator Xenu. The confederacy having become overpopulated, Xenu sent several billion of his citizens onto DC 8 planes to the planet Teegeeack (Earth), ostensibly for tax audition. There, hydrogen bombs were detonated inside volcanoes, killing the exiles, whose thetans were brainwashed on Hawaii and the Canary Islands, introducing various myths, such as the myth of Jesus, to conceal the thetans' origins. Eventually, officers of the Galactic Confederacy launched a rebellion against Xenu, which continued for six years before capturing him and placing him in an electrified prison in the center of a mountain. Hubbard taught that the thetans brainwashed by Xenu's forces remained on Earth, where the "body thetans", attached to human psyches, contribute to human problems; and that individuals could be freed from these brainwashed thetans and thus attain a type of salvation.

Hubbard also taught that, upon the deaths of humans, thetans continued to "implant stations", including locations on planets near Earth, where their memories were erased and new memories emplaced. On grounds that some "implant stations" were better than others, Hubbard advised his followers to avoid the one on Venus. After passing an implant station, he taught, the thetan returned to Earth, where it was incarnated. Hubbard taught the Christian concept of heaven was based on a physical location on another planet, which he claimed to have visited. He compared its appearance to Busch Gardens in Pasadena, California, (actual location Van Nuys, California), and noted it contained effigies of characters from the New Testament. Over time, he recalled, the location fell into disrepair. A town nearby contained an implant station, to which thetans were convinced to return.

Another significant encounter in Hubbard's narrative occurred when a large group of planets formed the Marcab Confederacy, described as in search of slaves, and called a "decadent" society. The author related that this civilization caused a significant implant upon their encounter with thetans.

Hubbard discussed the history of human civilizations on Earth, and the lives of ancient sea monsters and fish people, as well. He also said humans could recover memories of previous lives, such as the experiences of clams and Neanderthals. In his mythos, Atlantis was a completely electronic civilization, whose inhabitants possessed disintegration technology; in contrast, Earth was invaded by multiple groups around 1200 BCE, including the "fifth invader force from Martian Command" against the "fourth invasion force from Space Command" in battle.

On premise that thetans are forced to believe various faulty ideas, the church teaches that their courses allow "theta beings" to be freed from these beliefs and regain their former abilities. Committed Scientologists pursue courses and procedures offered by the church in the hope of gaining freedom and enlightenment, allegedly permitting travel around the Solar System. The author referred to the process of a thetan leaving its human body as "exteriorization", which he said allowed for space travel. Urban notes that this is similar to Aleister Crowley's teachings of astral projection, although he adds that Hubbard did not use that term.

Space opera and Scientologists

Mike Rinder, a former spokesman of the Church of Scientology, stated that extraterrestrial auditing is merely "a small percent" of Scientology's teachings.

A glossary on the Scientology website defined the term "space opera" as a description of actual events:

"Space opera has space travel, spaceships, spacemen, intergalactic travel, wars, conflicts, other beings, civilizations and societies, and other planets and galaxies. It is not fiction and concerns actual incidents."

The 1958 Scientology publication Have You Lived Before This Life contains some space opera, describing past lives—including some on warlike planets—which were recalled through auditing. In the 1960s, Hubbard introduced a series of questions, known as "security checks", to verify members' loyalty. Mikael Rothstein, associate professor of religious history at the University of Copenhagen, sees the Xenu myth as building on, and the culmination of, these accounts. The Xenu myth was released to Scientologists in the late 1960s, after teachings about thetans and their relationship to the physical body had been disseminated; its release provided the cause and origin of many of the group's teachings. Rothstein describes "space opera" as "Hubbard's introduction of a new reality, and new foundation for everything".

In a 1968 lecture, Hubbard acknowledged similarities between his teachings and the space opera. Said Hubbard: "This planet is part of an earlier federation and passed out of its control due to losses in war and other such things. Now, this larger confederacy, this isn’t its right name, but we have often called it and referred to it in the past as the Marcab Confederacy. And it has been wrongly or rightly pointed to as one of the tail stars of the Big Dipper, which is the capital planet of which this planet is. Now, all this sounds very Space Opera-ish and that sort of thing, and I’m sorry for it, but I am not one to quibble about the truth. "

Although Hubbard spoke openly about space opera in the 1950s, Scientology eventually became an esoteric faith: some teachings are withheld until followers reach a certain point in their spiritual development, and the mythological foundation of the courses are unknown to many members. Over a decade of auditing and study—and donations of tens of thousands of dollars—are required for a member to reach the highest echelons of hidden knowledge. Followers below a certain level (OT III) of growth are denied access to the church's cosmological teachings, and they are given different explanations for the church's teachings. German scholar Gerald Willms notes that in addition to the esoteric foundations, Scientology cites practical justifications for its rituals, so they can be pursued without knowledge of advanced teachings. The Church of Scientology has attempted to prevent the public release of their esoteric teachings, but, through the internet, their confidential aspects have been widely released. The church considers public discussion of their space opera teachings offensive and has asked academics not to publish their details. Scientologists maintain that the true meaning of these texts is only accessible to those who have progressed through their courses, and that those who read them prematurely risk damage to their spiritual and physical conditions. Church leaders have sometimes outright refused to discuss the subject with journalists. Rothstein observes that the church also has a strong financial motivation to keep members from accessing higher-level courses, as devotees are required to make large payments to obtain them. Free Zone Scientologists, however, are sometimes more open about space opera. Some Free Zone Scientologists believe that the Church of Scientology has been hijacked by undercover agents of the Marcabian Confederacy.

During auditing, Scientology members sometimes recall details of life in space. Rothstein states that this is part of a "mythological paradigm" that members initially partake of through Scientology's scriptures. He notes, however, that some Scientologists do not believe that there are space opera myths in the group's teachings, and that others have left the group after learning about the higher-level doctrines. Reitman relates that some members accept the space opera teachings by seeing them as similar to seemingly implausible stories of popular religions or simply remain quiet about their doubts.

Rothstein states that space opera is a "part of the total fabric of Scientological thinking and narrative, but not of prime importance." He argues that these teachings are a "second order belief", in that they exist to support the group's core teachings about thetans. Mike Rinder, a former spokesman of the Church of Scientology, stated that extraterrestrial auditing is merely "a small percent" of their canon.

Criticism and leaking

Karin Spaink, a Dutch journalist who helped publicize confidential Scientology doctrines

Scientology's space opera teachings were publicized in accounts given by former church members, most notably during court cases. One such case was filed by a former Scientologist, Larry Wollersheim, against the church in 1980. Five years later, Wollersheim offered confidential Scientology materials, including space opera teachings, to the court as evidence, a move that was vigorously protested by the church's attorneys. They were unable to prevent disclosure, however, and the documents were published by the Los Angeles Times in November 1985. This was the first time that some aspects of Scientology's space opera teachings were offered as public evidence about the church. In the mid-1990s, Wollersheim published some of the materials on a website, prompting the church to sue his organization, FACTNet. The Church attested that the space opera narratives were trade secrets; this claim was rejected by the court.

In 1990, after being sued for libel by the Church of Scientology, Steven Fishman, a former member turned critic, offered a large amount of the group's highly confidential teachings in court. The documents, contained in what is known as the Fishman Affidavit, included detailed accounts of the church's space opera narratives. This material was subsequently posted on alt.religion.scientology and a website of Dutch journalist Karin Spaink. The church filed suits against those who posted the documents, claiming copyright violations. Lengthy court battles ensued, but the church was unable to prevent the materials' dissemination over the internet.

Former Scientologists and members of the anti-cult movement often discuss Scientology's space opera teachings. They generally take a rationalistic approach to the narratives and see them as absurd, or even as drug-fueled delusions, using them as a source of humor. The doctrines have been satirized in popular culture, most notably in the South Park episode "Trapped in the Closet". The anti-Scientology website Operation Clambake prominently uses space opera doctrines in their criticisms of the church, casting the implausibility of the stories as a clear reason to reject the group. Anti-cult critics of Scientology argue that the content of these teachings demonstrates that Scientology misleads its followers; many aspects of the narratives, such as the age of the volcanoes that Xenu is said to have used, contradict scientific consensus. The space opera teachings are, in fact, incompatible with scientific consensus on the age of the universe: around 14 billion years. Rothstein notes that scholars of religion usually do not pursue this line of analysis because all myths contain unscientific content; he notes that cultural conditioning determines whether religious narratives appear reasonable.

Analysis

Hubbard's beliefs and practices, drawn from a diverse set of sources, influenced numerous offshoots, splinter groups, and new movements.

According to Susan Raine, Hubbard's concept of "space opera" significantly diverges from traditional definitions by asserting that it is not a fictional genre but rather a factual account of human history. Although an official Scientology dictionary defines space opera as a sub-genre of science fiction, Hubbard's writings and lectures from the early 1950s present it as a genuine reflection of human events spanning millions of years across galaxies. He characterizes space opera as encompassing elements like space travel, intergalactic conflicts, and various civilizations, claiming these are actual occurrences rather than mere fiction. This redefinition illustrates how Hubbard intertwined his passion for science fiction with his views on human behavior, presenting a unique perspective on human history as shaped by these grand narratives. The concept of "the whole track" in Scientology serves as a framework for understanding this expansive history. The fluid nature of the term "space opera" reflects its evolving interpretations within both literary and religious contexts.

Rothstein argues that in the construction of the space opera narratives, Hubbard drew from tropes common to his audience. The concept of a Galactic Confederation, Rothstein observes, was present in other UFO religions of the 1950s;

  • In contrast to the overpopulation and atomic bombs were often discussed therein. Urban cites UFO encounters and alien invasions as popular themes during the Cold War;
  • Rothstein draws parallels between Hubbard's teachings and the beliefs of UFO religions, citing similarities between thetans trapped in human bodies and the walk-in hypothesis of the Ashtar Command. Andreas Grünschloß notes Scientology's space opera teachings place them in the tradition of the ancient astronaut hypothesis; he states the group's teachings about thetans bears similarities to "star seeds" found in UFO religions.

Grünschloß speculates the UFO-contact narratives may have played a role in the group's development of space opera, specifically citing the resemblance of Hubbard's description of life in Xenu's time to statements by George Adamski, a UFO contactee of the 1950s. Rothstein notes the group's teachings about extraterrestrials varies greatly from most of the UFO movement, particularly in Hubbard's descriptions of demonic characters.

Hubbard was a science fiction writer before starting Scientology, and some aspects of the church's space opera bear similarities to his previous writings. Noting similarities between Hubbard's fiction writing and creation of religious myths, Rothstein argues; "perhaps no division between such categories should be made". Kent posits some of his cosmology, such as the priests and psychiatrists loyal to Xenu, were modeled after events in Hubbard's life, such as his distaste for Christianity and clashes with the psychiatric establishment. Hubbard theorized science fiction writers sometimes recalled portions of events from past lives and incorporated it into their works, and Urban writes Hubbard's science fiction writings "contain more than a few seeds of Hubbard's religious movement, the Church of Scientology".

Rothstein argues Scientology's space opera identify Xenu as the root of evil and Hubbard as the hero, for having uncovered the mysteries of the universe. Rothstein states the group's teachings about "salvation" may be a means to encourage reverence of Hubbard. In addition, Rothstein notes the space opera teachings also provide fundamental justifications for some practical aspects of Scientology, including the rejection of psychiatry and the formation of the Sea Org. He sees space opera as similar to most types of mythology, involving superhuman beings in the far distant past. Willms states the mythology of Scientology differs from many other religions because it focuses on material beings; but argues the Xenu myth is a religious narrative, although the Church of Scientology has never used this claim in their efforts to be recognized as a religion.

See also

Notes

  1. Former scientologist Mark Rathbun discussed an account of the origin of psychiatrists that he says was passed from Hubbard to David Miscavige. The account casts psychiatrists as originating on the planet Farsec and being sent to Earth to control its population. There they took the form of priests and shamans before becoming psychiatrists. (Rathbun 2013, p. 238)

References

  1. America's Alternative Religions, by Timothy Miller, 1995, ISBN 0-7914-2398-0;page 386
  2. "About Us". Observation Mountain Academy. Retrieved 2 April 2015.
  3. "e-meter". Ron's Org Grenchen. 2015. Archived from the original on 3 April 2015. Retrieved 2 April 2015.
  4. Urban 2011, p. 103.
    • "OT III Scholarship Page". David S. Touretzky. Retrieved April 1, 2023.
    • Hubbard, L. Ron, Assists 6810C03, lecture #10 of Class VIII course, What it was was the loyal officers were the body, the elective body, and they called them the loyal officers and they were there to protect the populations and so forth. And they had elected a fellow by the name of Xemu — could be spelled X-E-M-U — to the supreme ruler.
  5. Urban 2011, p. 57–59.
  6. Bromley 2009, p. 90.
  7. Urban 2011, p. 61.
  8. Bromley 2009, pp. 90–91.
  9. Urban 2011, p. 64–65.
  10. Urban 2011, p. 66.
  11. Urban 2011, pp. 68–69.
  12. Urban 2011, pp. 69–71.
  13. Urban 2011, pp. 71–72.
  14. Urban 2011, p. 72.
  15. ^ Urban 2011, p. 74.
  16. ^ Urban 2011, p. 75.
  17. ^ Bromley 2009, p. 91.
  18. Urban 2011, pp. 81–82.
  19. ^ Grünschloß 2004, p. 427.
  20. ^ Kent 1999.
  21. ^ Urban 2011, p. 76.
  22. Urban 2011, pp. 75–76.
  23. Reitman 2011, p. 99.
  24. ^ Urban 2011, pp. 103–104.
  25. Rothstein 2009, p. 380.
  26. ^ Rothstein 2009, p. 381.
  27. ^ Reitman 2011, p. 100.
  28. ^ Reitman 2011, p. 49.
  29. ^ Sappell & Welkos 1990.
  30. Grünschloß 2009, p. 230.
  31. Reitman 2011, p. 40.
  32. ^ Rothstein 2009, p. 366.
  33. Urban 2011, pp. 78–79.
  34. Urban 2012, p. 106.
  35. Urban 2012, p. 107.
  36. Wolf 2005.
  37. Grünschloß 2004, p. 428.
  38. ^ Rothstein 2003, p. 263.
  39. Urban 2011, pp. 107–108.
  40. Rothstein 2009, p. 376.
  41. Rothstein 2009, p. 378.
  42. Rothstein 2009, p. 377.
  43. "SOURCE CODE: Actual things L. Ron Hubbard said on this date in history | the Underground Bunker".
  44. Urban 2011, pp. 135–136.
  45. ^ Urban 2011, p. 198.
  46. Willms 2009, p. 249.
  47. ^ Rothstein 2009, pp. 367–369.
  48. Mail & Guardian, November 22, 2009.
  49. Grünschloß 2009, p. 231.
  50. ^ Rothstein 2003, p. 264.
  51. Rothstein 2009, p. 370.
  52. Rothstein 2003, p. 265.
  53. Reitman 2006.
  54. Urban 2011, pp. 183–184.
  55. Urban 2011, pp. 186–188.
  56. ^ Rothstein 2009, p. 371.
  57. ^ Rothstein 2009, p. 383.
  58. Feltmate 2011, p. 347.
  59. Raine, Susan (2015). "Astounding History: L. Ron Hubbard's Scientology Space Opera". Religion. 45 (1): 66–88. doi:10.1080/0048721X.2014.957746.
  60. Rothstein 2009, pp. 379–380.
  61. Urban 2011, p. 73.
  62. ^ Rothstein 2009, p. 375.
  63. Rothstein 2009, p. 374.
  64. Urban 2011, pp. 35–36.
  65. Rothstein 2009, p. 379.
  66. Rothstein 2009, pp. 376–379.
  67. Rothstein 2009, pp. 381–382.
  68. Willms 2009, p. 248.

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