The Definition of INCIDENT ONE

Please refer to Subject Clearing OT III

Reference: Subject: Scientology Fundamentals

The incident one is akin to the beginning of the universe as portrayed in the Abrahamic religions. It presents the imagery of a chariot pulled by Cherubs.

A cherub is one of the unearthly beings who directly attend to God, according to Abrahamic religions. The numerous depictions of cherubim assign to them many different roles, such as protecting the entrance of the Garden of Eden.

According to Hubbard, this is the very first incident that applies to all universes. When this incident is run on OT III, it appears to the pre-OT as follows:

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Incident One

Occurs at start of track (4 quadrillion years ago).

LOUD SNAP
WAVES OF LIGHT
CHARIOT COMES OUT, TURNS RIGHT AND LEFT
CHERUB COMES OUT
BLOWS HORN, COMES CLOSE
SHATTERING SERIES OF SNAPS
CHERUB FADES BACK (RETREATS)
BLACKNESS DUMPED ON THETAN

This is probably the imagery of God and the universe emerging together. It may be referred to as the “Big Bang” of religion.

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Definition

It is an interesting code to decipher. We have from The KHTK Factors:

KHTK Factor # 1: Before the beginning was the Unknowable and the entire purpose of the Unknowable was to know itself.

KHTK Factor # 1-1: In the beginning and forever is the ability to postulate and become aware.

According to the KHTK factors, here we have something knowable emerging from the Unknowable. The Incident One must be the code for the occurrence of the very first postulate. 

The whole universe exists as a seed in this incident. All possible beingness is emerging from this incident. This means, theta (ability to postulate) as well as the thetan (definite goals and behavior characteristics) are emerging here.

When this incident is erased, the thetan is erased also. Only the Unknowable is left. This may be the meaning of “blackness dumped on thetan.”

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Vedic Hymn of Creation

The Incident One may be compared to the following:

The Creation Hymn of Rig Veda

The differences here indicate how the Eastern approach to knowledge differs from the Western approach.

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