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(ig)Nobel prize award
http://www.improbable.com/ig/ig-pastwinners.html
Hubbard won the prize for "literature" in 1994.
"L. Ron Hubbard, ardent author of science fiction and founding
father of Scientology, for his crackling Good Book, 'Dianetics,'
which is highly profitable to mankind or to a portion thereof."
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International Social Control by the Church of Scientology
Stephen A. Kent
Department of Sociology
University of Alberta
Edmonton, Alberta, CANADA
T6G 2H4
March 23, 1992 (3rd Draft)
[....]
In the early 1980s Scientologists undertook a dramatic
plan to establish their leader among the world's elites.
Called the Nobel Peace Prize Project, it "was intended
to win the Prize for Hubbard's development of the Purification
Rundown" (Atack, 1990: 260), which the group claims eliminates
drug residues from people's bodies. Despite the fact that
Hubbard "authorized the expenditure of unlimited Scientology
funds" to the effort (Armstrong, 1983: 6), Hubbard never
was nominated {7}.
[....]
[6] In relation to Narconon, it seems highly unlikely that
Hubbard ever will get nominated for international prizes
of any kind, since the program continues to be negatively
scrutinized by professionals. About a Narconon program
running at a center in Chilocco, Oklahoma, the Oklahoma
Board of Mental Health ruled that "[t]here is substantial
credible evidence ... that the Narconon Program is unsafe
and ineffective" in treating chemical dependency (Board
of Mental Health, 1991: 2; see also Wagner, 1992: 1).
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Hubbard introduced "Dianetics" in the May, 1950, issue of
"Astounding Science Fiction," the earlier version of the magazine
now called "Analog." He was a popular contributor to "Astounding."
According to Hubbard, it was in 1938 that he first discovered the
basic axioms of dianetics and began his twelve years of research.
Many of his friends insist, however, that these twelve research
years are entirely mythical, and that it was not until 1948 that
dianetics was hatched. At any rate, one of his earliest patients was
John Campbell, Jr., editor of "Astounding Science Fiction." Campbell
was suffering, among other things, from chronic sinusitis. His
treatment by Hubbard so impressed him, that in May 1950, he
published in his pulp magazine the first public report on dianetics.
It was an article by Hubbard, written in a few hours, and in a style
resembling the broadcast of a football game. The article apparently
aroused science-fiction fans to such a pitch of anticipation that
when Hubbard's book, "Dianetics: The Modern Science of Mental
Healing," was published a few weeks later by Hermitage House, they
grabbed the first copies they could lay their hands on.
"Hubbard reveals a deep-seated hatred of women....When Hubbard's
Mama's are not getting kicked in the stomach by their husbands or
having affairs with lovers, they are preoccupied with AA [attempted
abortion]--usually by means of knitting needles." --Martin Gardner,
Fads & Fallacies in the Name of Science (New York: Dover
Publications, 1957), p.267.
The late Theodore Sturgeon, a distinguished science- fiction
writer knew Hubbard fairly well, and told people that at a
sci-fi convention the previous year Hubbard had told him and
several other writers something like this: "You guys just wait.
I've thought up a racket that's going to make me very rich.
You'll hear about it in a few months." The book "Dianetics: The
Modern Science of Mental Health" was the result.
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From Desertphile:
Based on the concept that what ails us humans stems from a
run-in with the evil-doing ghosts of aliens ostracized from
their home galaxy and vaporized by their leader Xenu some 75
million years ago, "Dianetics: The Modern Science of Mental
Health" is a treasury of self-help humor, replete with
screwball explanations for such things as constipation (which,
by the way, "can be caused or cured by positive suggestion with
remarkable speed and facility"), gays and lesbians ("The sexual
pervert ... is actually quite ill physically") and even the
common douche bag (not a recommended tool for abortion).
This book could be more accurately titled "Dianetics: one
crackpot's collection of abortion fantasies." As I was reading
this book, I could not help but also think about such crackpots
as Velikovsky, Erich Von Daniken, Flat Earthers, and Young
Earth Creationists. This book can sit comfortably along side
such intellectual giants as "Chariots of the Gods, "Worlds in
Collision," and "Flood Geology."
When the author does not have women aborting their pregnancies
by the hundreds every year, he is having women being beat up
and tortured by men. It seems unlikely to me that any woman can
read this book and not be insulted by the authors seemingly
insane hatred of women.
As the author's son, Ron DeWolf said in a magazine interview:
"All the examples in the book --- some 200 'real-life
experiences' --- were just the result of his obsessions with
abortions and unconscious states... In fact, the vast majority
of those incidents were invented off the top of his head." And
this shows up very well in the book: I found the "examples" are
so absurd and inane that one can only wonder at why the
publisher was willing to inflict this nonsense on its
readership.
The book's poor grasp of reality also shows just how much
effort the author put into both "researching" and writing it:
roughly one month from concept to finished product.
Though the author claims "12 years of research," his family
members reported a different story. "Dianetics" was first
thought of by the author in May of 1950: it was a science
fiction short story published in the pulp science fiction
magazine "Astounding Science Fiction" (now called "Analog").
The editor, John Campbell, Jr., was so impressed by the letters
the science fiction story generated, that he asked the author
to write more on the subject. The author accepted the task and
few weeks later he had expanded the science fiction story into
the book "Dianetics: The Modern Science of Mental Health,"
which was very soon published by Hermitage House.
If Dianetics is "modern science,"
God help us all!
By the way, the author didn't start by using the term "engram,"
which of course he borrowed from biochemistry. In the
Astounding science fiction story that introduced Dianetics, he
called them "Norns," after the witches of Norse mythology. When
the book was published, his Norns had been transmogrified into
engrams.
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