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  1. Book I: Postulate Mechanics
  2. Postulate Mechanics (Picture Book)

Main References

  1. Book II: Subject Clearing (in progress)
  2. The Book of Mathematics
  3. The Book of Physics
  4. Grassroots Scientology
  5. Scientology OT Levels 
  6. Course on The Bhagavad Gita
  7. Patanjali Yoga Sutras
  8. The Mindfulness Approach
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SC Chapter 4: The Discipline of Looking

Reference: Book II: Subject Clearing

Beneath the practical steps of Subject Clearing sits a quiet discipline. The engine of Subject Clearing is looking — a calm, honest way of paying attention to what is actually in front of you. It asks you to observe carefully without letting expectations or wishes color what you see.

The examples below follow Raj, a man working through his confusion about the stock market, to show each aspect in action.

The 12 Aspects of Looking

1. Observe without being swayed by expectations or desires.

Wanting a certain outcome makes you guess instead of see. But you can only predict the future well once you actually know what’s in front of you.

Example.  Raj wants the market to be simple, so he keeps guessing that “price” and “value” are the same thing — because that would make investing easier. Every time he checks his desire against the actual data, he catches himself projecting instead of observing.

2.  Observe things as they are, without assuming.

Familiarity tricks you into assuming something is a certain way — a belief, a bias, a fixed idea — and that mental picture gets pasted over reality. But familiar things aren’t permanent, and the assumption might just be wrong.

Anecdote.  Raj has “known” for years that bonds are safer than stocks. He assumed this so long he never questioned it. When he finally looks closely, he learns that a bond can lose more value than a stock during a rate spike — his old assumption was just a habit, not a fact.

3.  If something is missing, don’t invent something to fill the gap.

If you don’t know, admit you don’t know. If someone asks a question and no answer comes, don’t manufacture one just to feel complete.

Story.  A colleague asks Raj why the market dropped that morning. He feels pressure to have a smart answer, almost says “probably profit-taking” just to sound informed — then catches himself. He says, “I don’t actually know,” and looks it up later instead of bluffing.

4.  If something doesn’t make sense, don’t explain it away.

Justifying an inconsistency just shifts blame without fixing anything. When you feel the urge to explain something away, get curious instead about what you’re taking for granted — sometimes it takes unconventional thinking to see what’s really going on.

Example.  Raj reads that markets are “efficient” (all information is priced in) yet also “bubble” (prices go crazy irrational). Instead of hand-waving this as “well, markets are just weird,” he digs in and discovers both ideas are true in different timeframes — a genuine insight he’d have missed by explaining it away.

5.  Use both physical and mental senses to observe.

Eyes, ears, nose, tongue, and body sense physical things like chairs and cars. But the mind is also a sense organ — it senses thoughts, feelings, and emotions. Notice both kinds of objects for what they are.

Anecdote.  While reading about “risk,” Raj notices not just the words on the page but a tightness in his chest — a mental/emotional object. That tightness turns out to be tied to a bad investment his father once made. Noticing it is as much “observing” as reading the definition.

6.  Let the mind un-stack itself naturally, in its own time.

Don’t dig for answers or force recall. Just watch what naturally comes up first, then next, then next. The mind never hands you more than you can handle if you let it unfold on its own.

Example.  Raj sits with the word “leverage.” Instead of forcing himself to remember the textbook definition, he just watches — first he recalls his uncle’s story about borrowing to buy a house, then a memory of a friend’s failed business, then finally the technical definition clicks into place on its own.

7.  Experience fully whatever is there

This is the deepest form of mindfulness. Dive into whatever shows up without resisting it. If your mind is racing, experience the racing itself — without adding fuel to it.

Story.  Realizing he misdefined “dividend” for years embarrasses Raj. Rather than brushing past the embarrassment, he lets himself fully feel it — the flush of heat, the urge to justify himself. He rides it out instead of rushing past it, and it passes in under a minute.

8.  Do not hide anything from yourself.

Follow your attention wherever it leads. Don’t dodge something because it feels shameful or painful — suppression is what causes trouble, not the material itself.

Anecdote.  Raj notices a flicker of shame about how much money he lost years ago in a bad trade. His instinct is to change the subject in his own head. Instead, he lets himself look directly at that memory. Nothing catastrophic happens — the shame just quietly dissolves once it’s actually looked at.

9.  Let your mind associate ideas freely.

Mindfulness means being comfortable with thinking itself — let the mind connect ideas on its own instead of forcing a direction.

Example.  Thinking about “bull markets,” Raj’s mind wanders to a childhood trip to a rodeo, then to his grandfather’s stubbornness, then back to market optimism. He lets the tangent run instead of stopping it — and it turns out the rodeo memory helps him remember the term more vividly than any definition would.

10.  Do not get hung up on names and forms.

A name is just a pointer; a form is just one way something is represented. Real understanding goes beyond the label. Fixating on the name can quietly act as a judgment before you’ve actually looked.

Story.  Raj hears the term “hedge fund” and immediately pictures a villain in a movie — a fixed image tied to the name. Once he sets the label aside and looks at what a hedge fund actually does (pooled money, various strategies, risk management), his flat mental picture turns into real understanding.

11.  Contemplate thoughtfully.

With mindfulness, thinking becomes contemplation: looking non-judgmentally at relationships between things, and going out to find missing information rather than straining to force an answer from what’s already in your head.

Anecdote.  Raj can’t figure out why “market efficiency” and “bubbles” coexist. Instead of straining to reason it out from memory, he goes and reads about behavioral economics — new information that resolves what pure “figuring out” couldn’t.

12.  Let it all be effortless.

Effort only shows up when you resist letting things be. Let body and mind unwind at their own pace. Trouble comes from anxiety and digging, not from the material itself.

Example.  Near the end of a long study session, Raj feels the urge to force one more insight before stopping. He notices the urge, lets it go, and closes his notebook. The insight he was straining for shows up on its own, unprompted, the next morning in the shower.

“Looking” in Practice

Taken together, these aspects create the open, unhurried state of mind in which confusions can surface and dissolve on their own. They are less a checklist than a way of being with a subject.

When you’re studying a subject or watching it directly, you might sense some tension or fuzziness. Pause and ask:

“What doesn’t make sense here?”

Then look closer:

“What kind of anomaly is this — made-up filler, a contradiction, or something missing?”

Keep looking, and more detail surfaces. Follow whatever’s unclear until it resolves.

The key is to stay relaxed and let your mind hand you the data — don’t avoid, resist, suppress, or deny any thought, feeling, or sensation. Let it associate and unwind at its own pace, the way Raj let the rodeo memory and the leverage definition surface on their own instead of forcing them.

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SC Chapter 5: Looking at a Postulate

Reference: Book II: Subject Clearing

Resolution = Find the Postulate + Trace the Breakdowns

The Main Idea

Whenever you face a problem, a situation, or an event, the most useful thing you can do is find the core belief — the postulate — behind it. A postulate is simply the basic thought or assumption that shapes what you are looking at.

Once you find that core belief, you have already made the situation much simpler. You can then ask: does anything about this belief seem off, contradictory, or incomplete?

Consider, for example, a long-running conflict between nations. The driving belief underneath it often turns out to be a single, deep fear. That one belief explains a great deal of the situation. Once you see it, things start to become clearer.

Where Does a Postulate Come From?

The honest answer is: we do not know. Just as we cannot fully trace where the universe itself came from, we cannot trace where a basic belief ultimately originates.

We often assume there is a “self” that creates beliefs. But that self is itself just another belief. So chasing after the ultimate origin of a belief is a dead end — it is not where the useful work happens.

The useful work is this: find the belief, find where it breaks down, and follow those breakdowns until the whole picture becomes clear.

How to Trace the Breakdowns

You know something is off when you notice:

  • Disharmony — things are not fitting together
  • Inconsistency — things contradict each other
  • Gaps — something is simply missing

These are your clues. Follow them. Look closely at the areas where things feel the most tangled or confused. The most important clues are things that seem arbitrary — data or actions that do not make sense given the stated belief.

Keep looking, keep tracing, and at some point the whole thing suddenly snaps into focus. You will know exactly what is going on and what to do about it.

Exercises

These exercises help you practice spotting postulates — the basic assumptions that give shape to what you observe.

Exercise 1 — Physical objects:

  1. Look around the room and pick an object.
  2. Ask yourself: what basic assumption or idea gives this object its form and meaning?
  3. Repeat until this becomes easy.

Exercise 2 — Situations in your mind:

  1. Call to mind any situation you are dealing with.
  2. Ask yourself: what is the core belief or assumption that is shaping this situation?
  3. Repeat until this becomes easy.

The core skill here is simple: find the belief, find where it cracks, and follow the cracks. That is how a confusing situation becomes clear.

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SC Chapter 3: Introduction to Looking

Reference: Book II: Subject Clearing

Looking = Direct Observation Without Judgment

What Is Looking?

The mind’s first job is simply to notice what is there. This is different from thinking about it. Looking is necessary to notice anomalies

You don’t need words or labels to know something. When you truly look at something, you are just observing it directly — no analysis, no commentary.

Looking vs. Thinking

When you look at something, thoughts will naturally arise. That’s fine. The key is: don’t fight them, and don’t get caught up in them. Just notice that a thought appeared, and keep looking.

Many meditation techniques teach you to blank out your mind or focus on one thought while blocking others. This actually gets in the way of pure looking. Real looking doesn’t require suppressing anything.

The rule is simple: look without judging, without expecting, and without trying to reach any conclusion.

When you do this, you see things as they actually are.

Exercises in Looking

Each exercise below has the same structure: look around the room, notice what your mind does, and simply observe that activity without stopping it.

Exercise 1 — Notice labeling

Look at objects around you. Your mind may say “that’s a lamp.” Don’t stop it. Just notice that it’s labeling.

Exercise 2 — Notice evaluating

Look at objects around you. Your mind may say “that’s an expensive lamp.” Don’t stop it. Just notice that it’s evaluating.

Exercise 3 — Notice conclusions

Your mind may jump to “I would never buy that lamp.” Don’t stop it. Just notice that it’s drawing conclusions.

Exercise 4 — Notice thoughts in general

Look at objects while simply watching whatever thoughts arise. Don’t suppress any of them. Just keep looking and noticing.

Connection to Postulate Mechanics

Every object has an underlying “thought” that the mind uses to model it — this is called a postulate. When you look at an object, you can also look at that underlying postulate. Acknowledge the postulate and any other stray thoughts that appear, then move on. This is the starting point for all of Postulate Mechanics.

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SC Chapter 7: The Steps of Subject Clearing

Reference: Book II: Subject Clearing

Subject Clearing is a method for taking any topic that confuses you and systematically dissolving the confusion. Think of it like decluttering a messy room — but the room is your mind, and the clutter is half-understood ideas. Here is each step, made plain, with a running example to show how it works.

1. Pick a Subject to Clear

Subjects usually come from four places: childhood, school, your profession, or life itself. Many of them jostle for attention at once. The simplest move is to start where your mind is already pulling you.

When you can’t decide, ask: “What subject, or part of life, is creating the most confusion in my mind?” List every answer that surfaces. Rank them from most to least relevant. Take the top one. That’s your starting subject.

Example. Imagine a man named Raj who feels vaguely uneasy about money but can’t say why. He lists what’s nagging him: “investing,” “inflation,” “taxes,” “budgeting,” “the stock market.” The one that makes his stomach tighten most is “the stock market.” That’s where he begins — not because it’s easiest, but because it’s pulling the loudest.

2. Clear the Subject Title

Before diving in, make sure you actually grasp what the subject is about. Often the title itself tells you. If it doesn’t, look at the postulate — the core assumption the whole subject rests on.

Example. Raj picks “the stock market.” Before reading a single article, he asks: what is this subject really about? He realizes the title alone is vague. The underlying postulate, he finds, is something like: people buy and sell shares of companies, and prices move with perceived value. Now he has a handle. The title is no longer a fog — it’s a starting postulate.

3. List and Arrange the Key Words

Brainstorm the key words the subject brings to mind. Then arrange them from the broadest to the most specific, starting from the subject’s postulate. You’ll likely need to clear each word’s definition as you go.

It helps to build a glossary — all the key terms with their definitions, kept alphabetical for quick lookup. Expect to refine these definitions as you learn. A glossary is a living document, not a finished product.

Example. Raj starts his glossary: company, share, price, value, dividend, bull market, bear market, index. He arranges them broadly-to-specifically: company → share → price → value → dividend → index → bull/bear market. Already, just by ordering them, he sees that “value” sits beneath “price” — price is what you pay, value is what something is worth. That one ordering cleared up a confusion he’d carried for years.

4. Observe the Anomalies

As you line up the key words in logical order, notice the anomalies — the things that don’t fit. Examine definitions for arbitrary data (made-up filler that hides gaps). Strip out the arbitrariness and expose the holes. Then look for contradictions between definitions — those reveal more gaps. Finally, ask what concepts should be there but are missing.

The purpose of this step is simple: become aware of every hole in your understanding. You can’t fix what you can’t see.

Example. Raj notices an anomaly: everyone talks about “market efficiency” (prices reflect all known information), yet also about “bubbles” (prices go irrationally high). Those two ideas contradict each other. He spots the hole — his glossary has no concept for irrational behavior or crowd psychology. Something’s missing. That missing piece is now visible, which is the whole point.

5. Study the Subject

Now read the available material, hunting specifically for data that fills the holes you’ve exposed. Prioritize the subject’s postulates and beginning concepts — the foundation, not the fancy upper floors.

Read one paragraph at a time. Don’t move on until you fully understand the current paragraph. Use Word Clearing (looking up any unclear word) and stay alert for anomalies as you go. New concepts? Add them to your key-word list and glossary. Refine definitions as needed.

Example. Raj reads a beginner’s book on markets, one slow paragraph at a time. He hits the word “leverage,” doesn’t fully grasp it, stops, and looks it up — that’s Word Clearing. He adds “leverage” to his glossary with a plain definition: borrowed money used to amplify a bet. Later he reads about “margin calls” and realizes it connects directly to leverage. His glossary is weaving itself into a web of understanding rather than a pile of terms.

6. Build Up the Foundation

Keep growing the key-word list and refining the glossary until the subject’s foundations feel complete. As you do, you’ll uncover misunderstandings and anomalies in your own thinking — not just in the material. Clearing those up is what actually shrinks your confusion.

Example. Weeks later, Raj’s glossary has grown to forty-odd terms, each with a definition he actually understands. He re-reads his early notes and laughs — he’d once defined “dividend” wrongly. He fixes it. More importantly, he notices he no longer feels that stomach-tightening dread when someone mentions the stock market. The confusion hasn’t been suppressed; it has dissolved, because the holes got filled.

The Payoff

Work through subjects this way and you’ll feel a genuine relief — not the surface comfort of having “studied” something, but the deeper relief of a mind that no longer carries around unanswered questions like loose change in a pocket. Each subject you clear lightens the load, and the method itself becomes second nature: pick, clarify, arrange, find the gaps, study, rebuild.

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SC Chapter 6: Words and Anomalies

Reference: Book II: Subject Clearing

When you have looked up every definition of a word or concept and you are still confused, the problem is no longer the word — it is an anomaly hiding in the material or in your own thinking. Resolve the anomaly, and the confusion clears.

What Is an Anomaly?

An anomaly is anything that breaks the “oneness” — the sense of wholeness and coherence — of your understanding. When something “just doesn’t fit,” that feeling is your mind detecting an anomaly.

Anomalies come in three forms:

TypePlain MeaningThe Signal
DisharmonyArbitrary data“This was decided for no good reason.”
InconsistencyContradictory data“These two things can’t both be true.”
DiscontinuityMissing data“I don’t have enough to go on here.”

Disharmony (Arbitrary Data)

An arbitrary choice is one made on whim or personal preference, without reason or pattern. For example, someone schedules a meeting at 3 PM because the weather app showed a blue icon. No consideration of participants’ availability, no logical basis. The choice is random — and that randomness creates friction for everyone else.

Assumptions are arbitrary by nature. Many inherited beliefs are arbitrary too — accepted not because they were tested, but because they were never questioned. In a famous anecdote, a newlywed cook prepares a roast by cutting off both ends before putting it in the pan. Her husband asks why. “Because my mother always did it.” Curious, they call the mother — who says, “Because my mother did it.” Finally they ask the grandmother, who laughs: “Because my pan was too small.” An entire family ritual had been built on an arbitrary assumption long after the original reason had disappeared.

Many religious beliefs are arbitrary in this sense — they are held because they were inherited, not because they have been examined. This is not a judgment on faith itself, only a reminder that any belief held without examination is a candidate for disharmony in your understanding.

Inconsistency (Contradictory Data)

Inconsistencies are often the easiest anomalies to spot, because two statements openly fight each other. For example, in a history class, Chapter 3 says a war ended in 1945. Chapter 9 says the same war ended in 1946. Both cannot be true. That obvious contradiction is the tip of the iceberg; beneath it is the missing data — which date is correct, and why the sources disagree.

Whenever something “doesn’t make sense,” look underneath — there is almost always missing data causing the clash. A coworker has been punctual and dependable for years. Then, without warning, she starts arriving late and missing days. Her behavior is inconsistent. The easy (and wrong) conclusion is “she’s become careless.” But the inconsistency points to missing data: a family illness, a financial crisis, a health problem. Once that data surfaces, the behavior makes complete sense. The anomaly resolves.

An inconsistency is something that does not make sense. Underlying an inconsistency, there is missing data. So when you find a contradiction, don’t just pick a side — hunt for the missing piece that makes both statements fit together.

Discontinuity (Missing Data)

As children, we couldn’t look into certain areas — not because we refused, but because we had no opportunity. So we quietly filled those gaps with assumptions. Years later, even when we finally can look, those old assumptions block us. The gap is still there; it has just been papered over. Imagine a grandmother who makes extraordinary bread but can’t write down the recipe. When asked, “How much flour?” she says, “Enough so the dough feels right.” Her grandchild tries to follow this and fails every time. The missing data — the actual measurements — is hidden under the assumption that “feel” is enough. Only when someone finally weighs the flour and measures the water does the discontinuity resolve, and the bread turns out.

Sometimes the missing data can only be reached through a new tool or invention — a telescope, a microscope, a new instrument of perception. For centuries, people assumed the heavens were perfect and unchanging — because they couldn’t see otherwise with the naked eye. The discontinuity was there, buried under assumption. Galileo’s telescope was the new invention that supplied the missing data: sunspots, moons of Jupiter, phases of Venus. Suddenly the old assumptions collapsed.

How to Actually Resolve an Anomaly

Here is the practical procedure, distilled:

  1. Notice what doesn’t make sense. The confusion itself is your compass. Don’t ignore it; don’t push past it.
  2. Look more closely. Examine the definitions available from different sources. Find out what is being taken for granted.
  3. Separate what makes sense from what doesn’t. Set the clear parts aside and follow the trail of what doesn’t make sense.
  4. Keep the big context in view. You may step back to regain the overall picture, but never let go of the trail.
  5. Stay on the trail until the anomaly comes into focus. Sooner or later you will see exactly what was missing, what was contradictory, or what was assumed arbitrarily.
  6. The resolution arrives suddenly. The keyword or concept becomes clear in a moment of insight — because the obstacle has been removed, not because you memorized more.

A student struggles with a physics formula. He looks up every symbol, memorizes every definition, and still can’t make the equation work. Following the “trail of what doesn’t make sense,” he eventually realizes that one of the symbols in his textbook uses a convention different from the one his teacher uses. The inconsistency wasn’t in his understanding — it was in a hidden assumption about notation. The moment he spots it, the whole chapter unlocks. He didn’t learn anything new; he removed what was false.

A Helpful Tip: Start with the Broadest Concepts

The procedure gets faster when you begin with key words representing broad concepts first, then work down to the details. Resolving anomalies in big ideas clears the ground, so that smaller anomalies resolve themselves more easily.

And there is a bonus: by resolving anomalies in the material, you are also resolving anomalies in your own thinking. This builds a clarity of mind that lets you think fast on your feet — not because you have more facts, but because fewer false things are in the way.

Summary Table

AnomalyWhat It Looks LikeHow to Resolve It
DisharmonyA choice made without reasonIdentify and question the assumption
InconsistencyTwo things that can’t both be trueHunt for the missing data beneath the clash
DiscontinuityA gap you filled with an assumptionFind or invent the missing data

The Heart of the Method

An anomaly is always a departure from the oneness of understanding. Resolution of anomalies restores the sense of wholeness about the subject.

You don’t resolve confusion by adding more information. You resolve it by finding the one false, missing, or contradictory piece — and removing it. Then wholeness returns on its own.

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