SC: Hinduism


Reference: Postulate Mechanics

The following key words and definitions act as stable data that help understand the fundamentals of Hinduism. For all key words, please see Glossary: Hinduism.

NOTE: “SC” is the abbreviation for Subject ClearingThe contents provided here are open to further refinement and update as long as they comply with the postulate of ONENESS

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JIVĀTMAN (Personal self)
The divine core (consciousness) of a person is the individual self, or JIVATMAN. Jivatman makes a person unique and different from others around him. Jivatman is essentially a bundle of karma (identifications) activated by atman. As a person dissolves his unsettled karma, he rises in his consciousness from Jivatman to Atman (Sākār Brahman). He loses all identifications and individuality. Upon death of an individual, the bundle of his unresolved karma continues in the form of genetic programming in his descendants; and also as the unresolved effects of his actions in the society.

ĀTMAN (Universal Self)
In Bhagavad Gita, ĀTMAN (Self) is used in the sense of universal divine essence, or pure consciousness. Atman (pure consciousness) may reside in a body, and take care of that body. But it is not identified with anything in the universe; and so, it has no individuality. Atman has the same sense as Sākār Brahman. It is realized when all unsettled karma has been resolved.

PARAMĀTMAN (Ultimate Self)
Paramatman is the ultimate state of pure consciousness. Paramatman has the same sense as Sākār Brahman. As the awareness of a person rises, it converges to this state. Selflessness is the attribute of Paramatman, where all personality/individuality vanishes.

BRAHMAN
Brahman encapsulates the sense of pure consciousness of everything. This is considered to be Brahman that is Sākār (With Form). The realization of Sākār Brahman occurs as one is able to see things as they are without assumptions and misconceptions. This is essentially becoming conscious of the knowable Universe in its purity.

Brahman also encapsulates the sense of the all-inclusive source of everything, transcending all dualities and limitations. This is considered to be Brahman that is Nirākār (Formless). The realization of Nirākār Brahman occurs as one follows the process of “neti, neti” (not this, not that). This is essentially the realization that the ultimate source of everything is “Unknowable.” 

MĀYĀ
Māyā is the process by which Nirākār (Formless) arises to be Sākār (With Form); or, in modern terms, the Unknowable becomes knowable. Māyā has been described as the cosmic illusion or creative potential; but, in modern terms, it is best described as the process of ‘postulation.’ Dictionaries define a ‘postulate’ as a creative thought that is claimed to be true, and which is then used as the starting point for reasoning. So, matter, energy, space and time are postulates, and so are Krishna, Shiva and Kali. Thus, the knowable universe is manifested through the process of postulation. The source of the postulates is Unknowable.

POSTULATE
Māyā is viewed as illusion but it is really a creative postulate. When all the postulates are consistent there exists a solid reality. That solid reality is our universe. Also consult PM: Glossary.

MOKSHA AND NIRVANA
In Hinduism, Moksha is the realization that Atman and Brahman are one and the same. Atman is the universal divine essence that is loaded with karma. As this karma is dissolved, the state of Atman approaches the state of Brahman. Moksha comes about when a person attains the state of pure consciousness of Sākār Brahman. Nirvana occurs when the person realizes that pure consciousness is constituted of māyā and the ultimate reality is unknowable as the state of Nirākār Brahman.

ONENESS
Liberation (Moksha), in Hinduism, is experiencing oneness with all reality. It is like one has become the whole reality. It is not  sameness; but a feeling of continuity, consistency and harmony everywhere. There is continuity of dimensions, consistency of realities, and harmony of relations. It is not a monotone canvas; but a beautiful painting full of colors and forms that are in perfect alignment with each other. Also consult PM: Glossary.

KARMA
Karma is action that is committed out of ignorance. When a person is dissolving his “karma,” he is basically dissolving his ignorance, which led to that action. Karma is stored in the form of “mental impressions”. Such impressions are carried forward genetically.

Kriyamana karma = Current actions being generated by one’s ignorance
Prarabdha Karma = Stored actions generated by individual ignorance
Sanchita Karma = Stored actions generated by universal ignorance

MEDITATION
The purpose of meditation is to assimilate the unassimilated content of the mind and to look beyond. Meditation has a precise technology based on the understanding of the nature of the mind. The first description of meditation is found in the ancient Rig Veda. Meditation is all about looking and investigating. It has little to do with thinking and trying to empty the mind. A person first acquires the spiritual discipline of seeing things as they are. He then practices Karma yoga, acting for the benefit of all, so as not to keep adding to his karma. He then starts practicing meditation to start reducing his accumulated karma. As he assimilates karma he acquires many insights.

ANOMALY
Anomaly is something that does not make sense because it is a violation of oneness. Anomaly represents a lack of assimilation. It generates doubts, perplexities and problems. Meditation is the key process to resolve anomalies. Also consult PM: Glossary.

ASSIMILATION
Please consult PM: Glossary.

DIVINE
The root meaning of the word DIVINE is ‘to shine’ from the observation that sun, moon and stars shine in the heavens. Divine is associated with phenomena that is amazing, inspired or prophetic. Divine attributes are those, which are “excellent in the highest degree.” Divine refers to higher ideals or spiritual qualities, such as, love, inspiration, excellence, selflessness, and the ability to resolve difficulties. Divinity is that, which has these attributes and qualities.

GOD
God is visualized as a being that has divine attributes. In Hinduism, different gods and deities emphasize different divine attributes or principles. For example, Ganesha is a god in Hinduism, who is viewed as the remover of obstacles. Such a visualization of a god helps the devotee absorb god’s spiritual attributes both intuitively and descriptively. It is intuitively felt that all spiritual attributes integrate into a oneness. Thus, Hindus may worship different gods on different occasions, and even worship the gods of other religions.

DEITY
A deity is the symbolic representation of a postulate or a system of postulates. For example, Hindu trinity of Brahma, Vishnu, Mahesh is a symbolic representation of the principle of Create, Survive, Destroy. This is a cycle that applies to the fundamentals of life. Through the “worship” of deities a person evolves to new levels of consciousness. The Bhagavad Gita visualizes Krishna as the God teaching Jnana, Karma and Bhakti yoga. The Bhagavata Purana focuses on the worship of Krishna as the cosmic deity of Bhakti yoga.

BHAKTI AND JNANA
Bhakti takes the “heart” approach. The “heart” in spiritual discourse typically refers to the source of emotions, intuition, and inner wisdom. Heart-centered approaches foster emotional intelligence, self-awareness, compassion, and a direct connection with a deeper sense of meaning or higher purpose. Bhakti Yoga centers on loving devotion to God, emphasizing emotional connection, surrender, and worship. Practices include prayer, singing hymns (bhajans), puja (rituals), pilgrimage, and developing a personal relationship with a chosen deity (Ishta Devata).

Jnana takes the “mind” approach. The “mind” represents the faculties of understanding, discernment, and critical thinking. Jnana Yoga focuses on intellectual inquiry and self-knowledge, seeking direct realization of the Self (Atman) as one with Brahman through wisdom and discrimination. Mind-centered spirituality might focus on studying, meditating on, or intellectually understanding spiritual teachings, and is crucial for discerning truth and applying knowledge wisely.

Most contemporary spiritual teachers and philosophies suggest a holistic approach: true spiritual maturity arises when one allows the mind and heart to inform and balance each other in all aspects of life. Regular spiritual practices such as meditation, prayer, contemplation, and self-reflection can help cultivate this integration, leading to greater peace, resilience, and fulfillment.

ADVAITA AND DVAITA
In Hindu philosophy, Advaita emphasizes non-duality, meaning that the ultimate reality (Brahman) and the individual soul (Atman) are one and the same. Dvaita, on the other hand, asserts a dualistic view where the supreme being (Brahman) and individual souls (jivas) are eternally distinct realities. 

Philosophically, non-duality is looking at the whole dimension; for example, the dimension of temperature. Whereas, duality is looking at the two ends of the dimension, such as hot-cold, while ignoring all the gradients in between. The gradient between Brahman and Atman is the gradient of unresolved anomalies. The lesser are the anomalies left to be resolved the closer one is to realizing Brahman.

YAJNA
Yajna is to sacrifice one’s individuality in the process of acquiring universal consciousness. Yajna means selfless action done for the welfare of the world. For example, Jnana yajna is performed to spread jnana for larger benefit of community. The ritual of yajna is a symbol for such action. Please see SACRIFICE.

SACRIFICE (YAJNA)
Sacrifice means that our actions should be in harmony with the physical and spiritual laws of nature, and not just fixated on ourselves. The nature provides us with everything to sustain ourselves; and we must do everything to sustain the nature back. A community is part of that nature. Yajna (sacrifice) means the performance of one’s duty to foster and nourish others in their advancement in accordance with the laws of nature. Such karma is naturally assimilated.

UNDER REVIEW

REBIRTH
For a specie to continue, the DNA passes from a life organism to its progeny. Birth and death of a life organism are a part of this continuation of the specie and its evolution. This applies to humans also. Rebirth is the concept of a human being carrying forth the karma of the specie. This determines certain attributes of the person existing from birth that are unique to him, but which he shares with his ancestors. Part of such attributes are memories, which are not from the current life of the person. This makes the person believe that he has lived before.

EVOLUTION
Human evolution occurs in infinitesimal steps. The source of this evolution is resolution of karma. Such a resolution not only straightens out the earlier DNA programming; but it also updates that programming, which adds new capabilities.

DEATH AND BIRTH CYCLE
Death is the total and permanent cessation of all vital functions of a person. When the person dies, the consciousness of what he was while alive also disintegrates. But the contents of the mind continue as atman. That aspect of atman, which is assimilated thought, gets stored as knowledge in the society, culture and the universe. The other aspect, which is unassimilated thought, gets stored in the DNA of those subsequently born. This DNA storage is called KARMA because it influences the tendencies and actions of the person. The awareness of such tendencies and actions alert the person to the need of assimilation of karma. 

HINDUISM AND KARMA
Brahma of the Trinity “Brahma-Vishnu-Mahesh” is a symbolic representation of the concept of Creation. Māyā that forms the bridge between Brahman and Reality also represents the creative process. Brahma and Māyā are quite similar in this respect. They are from two different periods and from two different philosphies during the evolution of Hinduism over the centuries. The profusion of such terminology and their representation by different deities in Hinduism makes this religion to appear very complex. But all this complexity disappears when we assimilate myriads of such representations in our understanding for the purpose of dissolving Karma.

CHANTING
A chant is the iterative speaking or singing of words or sounds. Chanting may also be done mentally in a meditative mode, where a person is looking closely at postulates associated with the word or sound. A chant has an effect of calming the mind. Regular chanting can enhance focus, improve memory, and foster feelings of connection and well-being. Chanting does not erase karma absolutely, but transforms it or lessens its effects through spiritual purification and divine grace. In scientific terms, chanting brings some assimilation of thought, but complete assimilation requires the resolving of anomalies through the practice of meditation.

TANTRA
The term “Tantra” is derived from the Sanskrit root “tan” (to expand) and “tra” (instrument), signifies the use of various techniques to transcend ordinary consciousness and achieve a higher state of awareness. The ultimate goal of Tantra is liberation (moksha) or enlightenment. Tantra views the universe as a web where everything is interrelated and interconnected. Unlike some other spiritual traditions that view the body and the material world as obstacles, Tantra sees them as potential tools and manifestations of the divine. Tantra involves various meditation practices, rituals, and visualizations, often centered on deities and mandalas. Mantras (sacred sounds or words) and yantras (geometric diagrams) are used to invoke specific energies and states of consciousness. Tantric practices can involve working with the subtle body, including the chakras, nadis (energy channels), and vital winds (prana).

MYSTERY
A mystery is a lower harmonic of Unknowable. Calling something a mystery draws people’s attention to it because the most basic impulse of a person is to know. The natural action to know is to make a postulate. The lower harmonic of a postulate is an assumption. So, it is natural for the person to make an assumption when he is faced with a mystery. There is nothing wrong with making assumptions. But if that assumption generates an anomaly, then he must resolve that anomaly to know the truth. People in this world want to improve their condition, and they are searching for truth. They are already sitting with many assumptions to their credit. These assumptions are the things they have taken for granted without examining them closely. The only way for them to discover truth is to look at their assumptions, spot the related anomalies and resolve them. So, a person who finds himself in a mystery of not knowing how to go about improving his condition, must start with something that he has taken for granted to explain his condition and examine it closely. This is the only way out of the mystery.

THOUGHT
Thought is a substance where substance is anything substantial enough to be sensed. Awareness always requires a substance, or a form made of substance, to be aware of; otherwise, awareness cannot exist. This is a basic postulate.

[To be continued]

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Glossary: Scientology

Reference: Postulate Mechanics

This glossary is a compilation of definitions that are referenced in Postulate Mechanics on the subject of Scientology. For official definitions, please see Scientology Technical Dictionary.

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Glossary

—A—

ABERRATION
Aberration means departure from sound thinking. It leads to lapse of judgment. Hallucination, delusion, illusion, eccentricity, and abnormality are all aberrations. Aberration in behavior would be any conduct not supported by reason. Mental problems, such as, psychoses, neuroses, compulsions and repressions of all kinds and classifications are aberrations. A physical illness of any kind would be aberration of the body. In Scientology, the source of aberration is considered to be trauma and overwhelm suffered by a person that leaves its impression of the mind. Such traumatic experiences are recorded as facsimiles and they act as the “bugs” in the “computing” function of the mind. They then generate all the aberrations. To resolve these aberrations Scientology employs the process of auditing. An auditing process helps a person become aware of the “basic” of the chain of experiences that is responsible for the aberration.

AUDITING
Auditing is the application of Scientology processes and procedures to someone by a trained auditor. It involves the action of asking a person a question, and getting him to look at that area of life more closely to obtain clarity on it. The prime target are the facsimiles that a person has, but which are not very visible. One follows precise symptoms or sensations through a chain of incidents (facsimiles). At the end of such a chain is the basic incident simply referred to as the “basic.” When the person becomes aware of the “basic” all the charge buried in that chain of incidents disappears. The person has a realization about his life and he obtains greater clarity. The whole idea in Scientology is to help a person handle all his facsimiles so he can live a life without aberrations.

—B—

BASIC
Any facsimile  can be traced, ultimately, to some fundamental postulate. In Scientology, it is believed that such facsimiles existing as a chain of “earlier similars” back to some “basic” in the past. When that basic is reached, the facsimile is erased forever. One may get lucky in this regard; but the reality is often much different. The facsimile is usually complex enough to have many different chains of “earlier similars”, one for each sensation. Each “earlier similar” in a chain may then be complex enough in its turn to have many more chains. In short, what may appear to be a linear chain from a distance may actually be a complex network of “earlier similars” extending back to many “basics,” all of whom may have to be taken care of to erase the original facsimile.

BODY THETAN (BT)
In Scientology, the concept of Body thetan is used on OT Levels. It is described as a degraded thetan that attaches itself to a person’s body and interferes with the control and running of his body. It is associated with thoughts that are running by themselves and are out of control. To spot a BT a person must spot the source of such automatic and independent actions going on within him. He does that by questioning whatever appears to be out of place in his mental space. Scientology associates many esoteric ideas with the BTs; but the idea of BT makes sense only in the context of auditing each sensation by following its chain to its basic until it is erased. 

—C—

CHAIN
CHAIN means a series of recordings of similar experiences. A chain has engrams, secondaries and locks. Example—Head injury chain in the sequence encountered by an auditor and run by R3R—sporting goods display window seeing it (lock), losing a bat (secondary), hit in the head with a bat (engram). The engram is the earliest date, the secondary a later date, the lock the most recent.

—D—

—E—


ENGRAM
An ENGRAM is a mental image picture which is a recording of a time of physical pain and unconsciousness. It must by definition have impact or injury as part of its content.

ERASURE
In Dianetics auditing, the assimilation of traumatic experience is called erasure. It is accomplished by focusing on the time period of the incident and recounting the incident from beginning to end over and over again, picking up all the uncomfortable sensations and perceptions present just as though the incident were happening at that moment. The incident does not always erase fully with the mechanical action of recounting alone because complete erasure requires resolution of anomalies. Therefore, other auditing questions and processes are used to direct the attention to different aspects of the incident and its general context to spot and resolve anomalies. Dianetics lacks a systematic procedure to handle anomalies.

EXTERIORIZATION
Exteriorization is a feeling of being separate from the body, which is commonly known as “out of body experience.” Scientology believes in this phenomena literally as the thetan separating from the body. This is an anomaly because the thetan is not a thing. Thetan is a postulate. But exteriorization is a phenomenon that is considered significant in Scientology because it distances a person from his aberrations. It makes sense when we look at exteriorization as the attention becoming free from its fixation on the body, which the person was not aware of.

—F—

FACSIMILE
Scientology describes a facsimile as that section of thought which has a physical universe impression on it. Such facsimiles are responsible for the aberrations in a person. A facsimile consists of the picture, sound, smell and all other perceptions, effort, emotion, conclusions and speculations along with a time tag. It is unknowingly created and becomes part of the time track as a recording. It is not dependent upon an organism for its continued existence. The facsimiles are hidden from a person until he recalls and reviews them through the process of auditing. Upon a thorough review the facsimile loses its hold on the  thinking and behavior of the person. The Scientology theory assumes that the sensations that make up the facsimile, acquire their meaning when they are recorded in the mind, while they remain  unknown to theta. This is an anomaly because it is theta (thought) that assigns meanings to the physical sensations received from the MEST universe. 

—G—

GRADES PROCESSING
The Scientology Grades focus on the suppositional reality of a person. The suppositional reality is made up of assumptions, justifications, beliefs, fixed ideas, etc. It exists because of the person is identifying himself with the universe. These grades are audited in a certain order. Different technologies are used to audit different grades. Once the suppositional reality is cleared, the facsimiles can be audited to complete erasure.

—H—

HAVINGNESS
Havingness is having such an intimate awareness of the environment (along with the situations in it), such that one can flow with it and control that flow according to the natural laws. 

—I—

—J—

—K—

KEY-IN
KEY IN is the action of recording a lock on a secondary or engram. It is moment when the environment around the awake but fatigued or distressed individual is itself similar to the dormant engram. At that moment the engram becomes active. It is keyed-in and can thereafter be dramatized.

KEY-OUT
KEY OUT is an action of the engram or secondary dropping away without being erased.

KNOW
Ordinarily, to know is to perceive or understand as fact or truth; to apprehend clearly and with certainty. But, more precisely, to know is to have certainty that there are no holes in the information presented, all the data that is available is consistent, and all that is knowable is in harmony. If there is any discontinuity, inconsistency or disharmony then one knows that there are anomalies to be sorted out. Much of human inquiry—science, philosophy, education—aims to deepen, challenge, and expand what we know.

—L—

LIFE STATIC
The Life Static is another postulate in Scientology, which is consistent with the postulate of Static. Life is viewed in Scientology as a quality and an ability with no quantitative factor. But both quality and quantity are knowable; and these are aspects of the knowable universe. A Life Static represents the most basic ability associated with life, which is the ability to postulate and to perceive. It animates the body. 

LOCK
A LOCK is a mental image picture of an incident where one was knowingly or unknowingly reminded of a secondary or engram. It does not itself contain a blow or a burn or impact and is not any major cause of misemotion. It does not contain unconsciousness. It may contain a feeling of pain or illness, etc, but is not itself the source of it. Example: One sees a cake, feels sick. This is a lock on an engram of being made sick by eating cake. The picture of seeing a cake and feeling sick is a lock on (is locked to) the incident (unseen at the moment) of getting sick eating cake. When one finds a lock it can be run like any other mental image picture.

—M—

MEMORY
In Scientology, facsimiles reduce to memories when their charge is erased. Memory is considered to be the data stored in the standard memory banks, which is potentially recallable by “I.” Scientology does not differentiate between a facsimile and a memory; but a memory is not a literal recording like the facsimile. Each time a memory is recalled it is reconstructed from elementary data stored in standard banks, by activating the time stamps. Not being a fixed recording, a memory adjusts itself to different points of view.

MEST
In Scientology, MEST represents the physical universe that is created by theta, and which is mechanical in nature. The symbol MEST is created from the first letters of Matter, Energy, Space and Time, which are concepts defined in Physics. The physical universe is thus limited to the same scope that the subject of Physics is limited to. Thought is not viewed as an integral part of the physical universe, instead it is considered to be a part of theta. This lack of integration of thought and MEST is an anomaly that goes against the reality of the oneness of the universe.

MIND
In Scientology, mind is described as the THETA command post of a life organism. The mind is concerned wholly with the estimation of effort to solve the problems of survival. It does its thinking by combining the perceptions of the immediate environment with facsimiles of the past. The mind is inherently analytical like a “computer”, but “bugs” in its circuits introduce reactions. The analytical mind is the one which is alert and aware and the reactive mind simply reacts without analysis. An optimally functioning mind focuses on the assimilation of sensations, perceptions, and knowledge. Reactions will occur only in situations where assimilation is lacking and fixation is present. Therefore, the fixation of the mind on survival may be seen as an anomaly.

MISEMOTION
MISEMOTION is anything that is unpleasant emotion such as antagonism, anger, fear, grief, apathy or a death feeling.

—N—

—O—

OBJECTIVE PROCESSING
To audit the mind a person needs free attention that he can control. The purpose of Objective processes is to free enough attention so a person can look at his mind objectively. These processes involve putting attention on objects in the current environment and observing them closely. This includes observation of body and its motions. The person uses all his physical and mental senses to do so. Anyone can be brought more into present time with objective processes.

OT PROCESSING
OT processing handles facsimiles to complete erasure. OT processes do so by auditing every sensation to its basic (see BASIC) and recovering the underlying postulate. This OT processing also has several levels. These levels are audited in a certain order. Each OT level has its own technology. 

—P—

PLEASURE MOMENTS
PLEASURE MOMENTS are mental image pictures containing pleasure sensations. They respond to standard Dianetics processing (R3R). One seldom addresses them unless the preclear is fixated on some type of “pleasure” to a point where it has become highly aberrated.

POSTULATE
The purpose of a postulate is to give meaning to a simple or complex sensation. In Scientology, postulate is a self-created truth, which is simply a consideration generated by self. Thus, a typical postulate is, generally, associated with the idea of self. Here self is the sense of “I”, which itself is a postulate. This tells us that the actual source of a postulate is unknowable.

—Q—

—R—

—S—

SCIENTOLOGY
Scientology derives from Latin and Greek roots meaning “knowing” and “study,” and is defined as “the study of knowing how to know.” Its doctrines center on spiritual self-understanding and methods for achieving mental and spiritual freedom.

SECONDARY
A SECONDARY is a mental image picture of a moment of severe and shocking loss or threat of loss which contains misemotion such as anger, fear, grief, apathy or “deathfulness”. It is a mental image recording of a time of severe mental stress. It may contain unconsciousness. When it is restimulated by a similar but lighter experience another mental image picture is recorded which becomes a lock on the secondary and serves to keep the secondary alive. A secondary is called a secondary because it itself depends upon an earlier engram with similar data but real pain, etc.

SOMATIC
SOMATIC means essentially body sensation, illness or pain or discomfort. “Soma” means body. Hence PSYCHO SOMATIC or pains stemming from the mind.

STATIC
In Scientology, Static is a motionless AGENT that generates and controls all motion. Static claims to be unknowable having no mass, no wavelength, no time and actually without position; but then it is identified as a knowable Cause-point that can create and destroy mass and energy, and which can locate itself in space and time. Thus, the Static is both unknowable and knowable. This presents an anomaly of contradiction.

This anomaly is resolved when we see Static to be a postulate underlying the philosophy of Scientology. This postulate is substantial, and its substance may be identified as thought. So, Static is not without substance. Mathematically, static is the motionless reference point from which all motion can be assessed, just like zero is the reference point from which all numbers can be assessed. Static makes sense only when considered relative to kinetic (motion). However, Static is being considered as the absolute source of all motion. This presents another anomaly. 

Therefore, Static is neither unknowable nor absolute. Static is a knowable postulate that is a part of the knowable universe. Beyond the knowable universe is the Unknowable. The postulate of Static can be examined for its consistency with other postulates for the knowable universe in Scientology philosophy.

SURVIVAL
Survival is to endure or live through some difficult, adverse or unusual circumstance. If a person is fixated on the survival of himself then that would be an aberration, because the beingness (self) is changing from moment to moment. Beingness is not something fixed. A person survives naturally as he focuses on resolving anomalies of life. 

—T—

THETA
In Scientology, theta is used as a symbol for Life Static. It is considered to be the absolute source of life and its motion. The idea of theta being absolute presents an anomaly. Scientifically, all motion of life is inherent to a life organism. At most, theta would represents the assimilated vector of complex motions of the life organism. 

THETA-MEST THEORY
In Scientology, theta is considered to be something having no-substance; but which creates the substance called MEST, and infuses it with life. Theta is separate and independent of MEST. Theta is thought. Thought is actually a substance because it is substantial enough to be sensed. This presents an anomaly because thought is not considered to be a substance yet it is sensed all the time. The Theta-MEST theory simply wraps up in scientific garb the religious idea that God has created the world, and God is separate from the world. The postulate that THETA and MEST are inherently separate, and not integrated, presents an anomaly.

THETAN
Scientology uses the term THETAN for a person, with the connotation that the person is a “spiritual being”, who is inherently independent of the physical body. It parallels the idea of “soul” in Abrahamic religions that exists apart from the body. However, the notion of PERSON comes from the role one plays in life. It is the “center” that controls the thoughts and the body. Scientifically, this would be the resultant vector of the inherent motions of an organism.  It would not exist without the organism. It would be a part of the scientific model of the mind. The idea in Scientology that the control center of all thoughts and the body can exist by itself independent of the body presents an anomaly.

TIME TRACK
The TIME TRACK is the consecutive record of mental image pictures which accumulates through the preclear’s life or lives. It is very exactly dated.

—U—

—V—

—W—

—X—

—Y—

—Z—

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PM: The Laws

Reference: Postulate Mechanics

The following key words and definitions act as stable data that introduce the very first postulate and the laws of Postulate Mechanics. For all key words, please see PM: Glossary.

NOTE: “PM” is the abbreviation for Postulate Mechanics. The content of this subject is open to further refinement and update as long as they comply with the postulate of ONENESS.

VEDIC RELIGIONS
In the ancient Vedic religions ((Hinduism, Buddhism, Sikhism, etc.) there is the concept of Unknowable (Brahma) that functions as the reference point for all things that are knowable. The knowable appears as the universe; whereas, the Unknowable cannot be talked about, since it is unknowable.

ABRAHAMIC RELIGIONS
The Abrahamic religions (Judaism, Christianity and Islam) there is the concept of Cause or Creator (God) that has created the physical world, and has infused it with life. The created appears as the universe; whereas, the God appears as the all-knowing entity.

DICHOTOMY
It is observed that all other dichotomies, such as, “Creator-created,” “Cause-effect,” “Spiritual-physical” are included in the dichotomy “Unknowable-knowable” in the sense that both aspects of the former dichotomies are knowable. Please note that all dichotomies may be represented as two opposite ends of a scale. The concept of Unknowable is found exclusively in the Vedic religions.

UNKNOWABLE
Unknowable is beyond knowable. It is the Nirākār Brahman of the Vedas that is manifested through Māyā. It is Kant’s thing-in-itself that our senses interpret. We perceive the unknowable by making postulates about what could be there; and then reasoning from these postulates. Thus, the Unknowable serves as the reference point for all things that are knowable. This means all things knowable are related to each other like values on a scale. The only difference here is that there are infinite number of scales, which we call dimensions. This makes everything knowable to be continuous, consistent and harmonious in one way or another. It is this continuity, consistency and harmony that underlies all natural laws, whether physical or spiritual.

NOTE: When we make the postulates to “perceive the Unknowable,” we come to know only the postulates. The Unknowable remains unknowable.

CONSIDERATION
A consideration is a continuing Postulate.

NOTE: The following are the laws of Postulate Mechanics. Study these laws in the given sequence. As you study a law look up the key words indicated for that law in PM: Glossary. Carefully sort out any disagreement.

LAW OF POSTULATE MECHANICS # 1
Beyond what we know, there is much that we do not know. (see UNKNOWABLE)

LAW OF POSTULATE MECHANICS # 2
We know only what we can sense and perceive. (See SENSATION, PERCEPTION)

LAW OF POSTULATE MECHANICS # 3
We can perceive only that which is substantial enough to be sensed. (See SUBSTANCE)

LAW OF POSTULATE MECHANICS # 4
We perceive sensations only when they acquire meaning in association with postulates. (See POSTULATE)

LAW OF POSTULATE MECHANICS # 5
The accuracy of perception depends on the consistency among the underlying postulates. (See ONENESS)

LAW OF POSTULATE MECHANICS # 6
We know only what we have sensed, postulated and perceived. (See KNOWLEDGE)

LAW OF POSTULATE MECHANICS # 7
The knowable universe is the outcome of what we have sensed, postulated and perceived. (See KNOWABLE)

LAW OF POSTULATE MECHANICS # 8
All our spiritual and physical knowledge is part of this knowable universe. Nothing lies beyond it.

LAW OF POSTULATE MECHANICS # 9
The spiritual elements are perceived as thought. This includes postulates.

LAW OF POSTULATE MECHANICS # 10
The physical elements are perceived as radiation and matter.

LAW OF POSTULATE MECHANICS # 11
The knowable universe consists of an integration of both spiritual and physical elements.

LAW OF POSTULATE MECHANICS # 12
The knowable universe is a single Universe.

LAW OF POSTULATE MECHANICS # 13
This knowable Universe is differentiated only from the Unknowable.

LAW OF POSTULATE MECHANICS # 14
All experience is knowable. This includes experience that is supposedly difficult to describe. (See EXPERIENCE)

LAW OF POSTULATE MECHANICS # 15
The “experience of void” is a sense of emptiness. It is a sensation that is knowable.

NOTE: “Void” often refers to a space that is completely empty, lacking any contents or substance. For example, outer space can be described as a void. But outer space is empty only of matter; it is not empty of radiation or thought.

LAW OF POSTULATE MECHANICS # 16
Space may not contain matter or radiation, but it will always contain thought. (See SPACE)

LAW OF POSTULATE MECHANICS # 17
Time is a duration relative to the infinite duration (eternity, or no change) of a “black hole.” (See TIME)

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Glossary: Buddhism

Reference: Postulate Mechanics

This glossary is a compilation of definitions that are referenced in Postulate Mechanics on the subject of Buddhism.

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Glossary

—A—

ABSOLUTE TRUTH
The Absolute Truth is that there is nothing absolute in the world, that everything is relative, conditioned and impermanent, and that there is no unchanging, everlasting, absolute substance like Self, Soul, or Ātman within or without. There is no unmoving mover behind the movement. It is only movement. In other words there is no thinker behind the thought. If you remove the thought, there is no thinker to be found. 

AGGREGATE OF CONSCIOUSNESS
Consciousness is a reaction or response which has one of the six faculties (eye, ear, nose, tongue, body and mind) as its basis, and one of the six corresponding external phenomena (visible form, sound, odour, taste, tangible things and mind-objects, i.e., an idea or thought) as its object. For instance, visual consciousness has the eye as its basis and a visible form as its object. Mental consciousness has the mind as its basis and a mental object, i.e., an idea or thought as its object. So consciousness is connected with other faculties. Thus, like sensation, perception and volition, consciousness also is of six kinds, in relation to six internal faculties and corresponding six external objects.

AGGREGATE OF MATTER
In this term ‘Aggregate of Matter’ are included the traditional Four Great Elements (cattari mahabhutani), namely, solidity, fluidity, heat and motion. It also includes sense-organs of six kinds, i.e., the faculties of eye, ear, nose, tongue, body and mind, and their corresponding objects in the external world, i.e., visible form, sound, odor, taste, tangible things and mind-objects (dharmayatana) of thoughts, ideas or conceptions. ; and one mental sense-organ, i.e., the faculty mind, and its corresponding  Thus, the material form or body-mind system, and all physical and mental phenomena, both internal and external, is included in the Aggregate of Matter. 

AGGREGATE OF MENTAL FORMATIONS
In this group are included all volitional activities both good and bad. What is generally known as karma (or kamma) comes under this group. Volition is ‘mental construction, mental activity. Its function is to direct the mind in the sphere of good, bad or neutral activities.’ Just like sensations and perceptions, volition is of six kinds, connected with the six internal faculties and the corresponding six objects (both physical and mental) in the external world. Sensations and perceptions are not volitional actions. They do not produce karmic effects. It is the only volitional actions- such as attention, will, determination, confidence, concentration, wisdom, energy, desire, repugnance or hate, ignorance, conceit, idea of self, etc.—that can produce karmic effects. There are 52 such mental activities which constitute the Aggregate of Mental Formation.

AGGREGATE OF PERCEPTIONS
Like sensations, perceptions also are of six kinds, in relation to six internal faculties and the corresponding six external objects. Like sensations, they are produced through the contact of our six faculties with the external world. It is the perception that recognize objects whether physical or mental. NOTE: This recognition comes from sensations acquiring meaning through postulates and previous experience to turn into perceptions.

AGGREGATE OF SENSATIONS
In this group are included all our sensation, pleasant or unpleasant or neutral, experienced through the contact of physical and mental organs with the external world. They are of six kinds: the sensations experienced through the contact of the eye with visible forms, ear with sounds, nose with odour, tongue with taste, body with tangible objects, and mind (which is the sixth faculty in Buddhist Philosophy) with mind-objects or thoughts or ideas. All our physical and mental sensations are included in this group.

ARAHANT
A Fully-Enlightened One. An Arahant is a person who has liberated himself from all defilements and impurities such as desire, hatred, ill-will, ignorance, pride, conceit, etc. He has attained the fourth or the highest and ultimate stage in the realization of Nirvana, and is full of wisdom, compassion and such pure and noble qualities. 

—B—

BUDDHISM
Almost all religions are built on faith—rather ‘blind’ faith it would seem. But in Buddhism emphasis is laid on ‘seeing’, knowing, understanding, and not on faith, or belief. Buddha puts emphasis on self-reliance but he warns against complete dependence on a particular system including Buddhism. Violence in any form, under any pretext whatsoever, is absolutely against the teaching of the Buddha.

BUDDHIST CEREMONIES
In Buddhist countries there are simple and beautiful customs and ceremonies on religious occasions. They have little to do with the real Path. But they have their value in satisfying certain religious emotions and the needs of those who are less advanced, and helping them gradually along the Path.

BUDDHIST MEDITATION
Buddhist meditation, ‘Vipassana’, does not mean escape from the daily activities of life; assuming a particular posture, like a statue in some cave or cell in a monastery, in some remote place cut off from society; and musing on, or being absorbed in, some kind of mystic or mysterious thought or trance. Vipassana aims at cleansing the mind of impurities and disturbances, such as lustful desires, hatred, ill-will, etc., and cultivating such qualities as awareness, the analytical faculty, confidence, etc., leading finally to the attainment of highest wisdom which sees the nature of things as they are. It is an analytical method based on mindfulness, awareness, vigilance, and observation.

Vipassana deals with four main areas: (1) the body, (2) feelings and sensations, (3) the mind, and (4) various moral and intellectual subjects. One of the most well-known, popular and practical examples of ‘meditation’ connected with the body is called ‘The Mindfulness or Awareness of in-and-out breathing’. It is for this ‘meditation’ only that a particular and definite posture is prescribed in the text. For other forms of ‘meditation’ you may sit, stand, walk, or lie down, as you like.

—C—

CONDITIONED GENESIS (Dependent Origination)
The Doctrine of Conditioned Genesis teaches that all phenomena arise out of interconnected causes and conditions, rather than independently or from a single first cause. The classic Buddhist formula states: “When this arises, that arises; when this ceases, that ceases.” This doctrine is foundational in Buddhism and underlies the concepts of impermanence, interdependence, and the absence of a permanent, independent self. It is commonly expressed in the analysis of the  sequence showing how ignorance leads to suffering through interconnected cause and effect, resulting in birth and rebirth. This is a cyclical process also known as Dependent Origination. (see TWELVE NIDANAS)

—D—

DHAMMA (Skt. Dharma)
The term dhamma is much wider than samkhara. There is no term in Buddhist terminology wider than dhamma. It includes not only the conditioned things and states, but also the non-conditioned, the Absolute, Nirvana. There is nothing in the universe or outside, good or bad, conditioned or non-conditioned, relative or absolute, which is not included in this term. All dhammas are without Self.  There is no Self, no Atman, not only in the Five Aggregates, but nowhere else too outside them or apart from them.

—E—

ETHICAL CONDUCT
In Ethical Conduct (Sila), based on love and compassion, are included three factors of the Noble Eightfold Path: namely, Right Speech, Right Action and Right Livelihood. It should be realized that the Buddhist ethical and moral conduct aims at promoting a happy and harmonious life both for the individual and for society. This moral conduct is considered as the indispensable foundation for all higher spiritual attainments. No spiritual development is possible without this moral basis.

—F—

FIRST NOBLE TRUTH (Dukkha)
The First Noble Truth is aberration (dukkha), the nature of life, its suffering, its sorrows and joys, its imperfection and unsatisfactoriness, its impermanence and insubstantiality. With regard to this, our function is to understand the five aggregates as a fact, clearly and completely (parinneyya). These five aggregates are:

  1. Aggregate of Matter (Rupakkhandha)
  2. Aggregate of Sensations (Vedanakkhandha)
  3. Aggregate of Perceptions (Sannakkhandha).
  4. Aggregate of Mental Formations (Samkharakkhandha)
  5. Aggregate of Consciousness (Vinnanakkhandha)

FIVE HINDRANCES
The Five Hindrances to the clear understanding of Truth are: 

  1. Lustful desires
  2. Ill-will, hatred or anger
  3. Physical and mental torpor and languor, 
  4. Restlessness and Worry, 
  5. Skeptical doubts 

There is no ‘sin’ in Buddhism. The root of all evil is ignorance and false views.

FOUR GREAT ELEMENTS
The “four great elements” (cattāro mahābhūtāni) are: 

  1. Earth (solidity): The quality of firmness, density, or the ground that supports things. 
  2. Water (fluidity): The quality of being liquid, cohesive, or flowing. 
  3. Fire (heat): The quality of temperature or the process of burning and transformation. 
  4. Air (mobility/wind): The quality of movement, motion, or the breath. 

These elements are seen as the substance forming the universe and its reality.

FOUR NOBLE TRUTHS
All the Four Noble Truths are found within ourselves. This also means that there is no external power that produces the arising and the cessation of aberration (dukkha). The Four Noble Truths are as follows:

  1. Aberration (Dukkha)
  2. The arising or origin of aberration (Samudaya)
  3. The cessation of aberration (Nirodha)
  4. The way leading to the cessation of aberration (Magga)

FOURTH NOBLE TRUTH
The Fourth Noble Truth is the Path leading to the realization of Nirvana. A mere knowledge of the Path, however complete, will not do. In this case, our function is to follow it and keep to it (bhavetabba).

—G—

—H—

HINAYANA
Hinayana, which means “lesser vehicle,” is a pejorative name given by the followers of Mahayana Buddhism to the more conservative schools of early Buddhism. 

—I—

ILLUSION
Illusion continues as long as things are not seen as they are. This continuation of illusion is the continuation of aberration (tanha, ‘thirst’ or mental formation).

—J—

—K—

KARMA
Karma is the principle of cause and effect, where intentional actions, thoughts, and words create corresponding consequences. It’s not a system of rewards and punishments, but rather a natural law like gravity, where positive actions lead to positive outcomes, and negative actions lead to negative outcomes. Karma means only ‘volitional action’, not all action. karma never means its effect; its effect is known as the ‘fruit’ or the ‘result’ of karma. The essential effect of karma is its continuation. An Arahant, though he acts, does not accumulate karma, because he is free from the inflexibility of self. Ultimately, Buddhist practice aims to break free from the cycle of karma and rebirth.

—L—

—M—

MAHAYANA
Mahayana, which means “great vehicle,” is one of the two major traditions of Buddhism, now practiced in a variety of forms especially in China, Tibet, Japan, and Korea. The tradition emerged around the 1st century AD and is typically concerned with altruistically oriented spiritual practice as embodied in the ideal of the bodhisattva.

MENTAL DISCIPLINE
Mental Discipline includes three other factors of the Eightfold Path: namely, Right Effort, Right Mindfulness (or Attentiveness) and Right Concentration. Thus the mind is trained and disciplined and developed.

—N—

NIRVANA
Nirvana is the ‘extinction of Thirst’. It is the ‘cessation of becoming’. Nirvana is no annihilation of self, because there is no self to annihilate. If at all, it is the annihilation of the illusion, of the false idea of self. Nirvana can be attained in this life. A person who has attained Nirvana knows that any sensation he experiences is impermanent, that it does not bind him. He knows that all those sensations will be pacified with the dissolution of the body, just as the flame of a lamp goes out when oil and wick give out. Buddha says: ‘O bhikkhus, I say that the destruction of defilement and impurities is (meant) for a person who knows and who sees, and not for a person who does not know and does not see.’ To see things as they are without illusion or ignorance is the extinction of craving ‘thirst’ and the cessation of aberration, which is Nirvana. There is nothing more after Nirvana. This is the Ultimate.

The ultimate state of self is attaining Nirvana and maintaining it. The traditional meaning of Nirvana is, ”the extinction of individual passion, hatred, and delusion… a transcendent state in which there is neither suffering, desire, nor sense of individuality, and the subject is released from the effects of karma.” Scientifically, Nirvana is attained when all anomalies relating to beingness are resolved. A person can be young and alive when this happens, and live long afterwards. Such a beingness has its attention totally extroverted. Its attention is now on resolving anomalies in its environment on a universal scale. It is a misconception to think that, in Nirvana, one merges with the rest of the universe and loses one’s self. 

NIRVANAHOOD
He who has realized the Truth, Nirvana, is the happiest being in the world. He is free from all ‘complexes’ and obsessions, the worries and troubles that torment others. His mental health is perfect. He does not repent the past, nor does he brood over the future. He lives fully in the present. Therefore he appreciates and enjoys things in the purest sense without self-projections. He is joyful, exultant, enjoying the pure life, his faculties pleased, free from anxiety, serene and peaceful. As he is free from selfish desire, hatred, ignorance, conceit, pride, and all such ‘defilements’, he is pure and gentle, full of universal love, compassion, kindness, sympathy, understanding and tolerance. His service to others is of the purest, for he has no thought of self. He gains nothing, accumulates nothing, not even anything spiritual, because he is free from the illusion of Self, and the ‘thirst’ for becoming.

NOBLE EIGHTFOLD PATH

  1. Right Understanding (Samma ditthi),
  2. Right Thought (Samma sankappa),
  3. Right Speech (Samma vaca),
  4. Right Action (Samma kammanta),
  5. Right Livelihood (Samma ajiva),
  6. Right Effort (Samma vayama),
  7. Right Mindfulness (Samma sati),
  8. Right Concentration (Samma samadhi). 

These eight factors are to be developed more or less simultaneously, as far as possible according to the capacity of each individual. They are all linked together and each helps the cultivation of the others. It is a way of life to be followed, practiced and developed by each individual. It is self-discipline in body, word and mind, self-development and self-purification. It has nothing to do with belief, prayer, worship or ceremony. In that sense, it has nothing which may popularly be called ‘religious’. It is a Path leading to the realization of Ultimate Reality, to complete freedom, happiness and peace through moral, spiritual and intellectual perfection.

—O—

—P—

—Q—

—R—

REBIRTH
Rebirth is the continuation of mental formation from a form in this moment to another form in the next moment. The so-called being is a mental formation. When the form of physical body is no longer functioning, the being takes on another form. A man who dies here and reborn elsewhere is neither the same person, nor another. It is the continuity of the same series. The last thought-moment of this life conditions the first thought-moment in the so-called next life.

RIGHT ACTION
Right Action aims at promoting moral, honorable and peaceful conduct. It admonishes us that we should abstain from destroying life, from stealing, from dishonest dealings, from illegitimate sexual intercourse, and that we should also help others to lead a peaceful and honorable life in the right way.

RIGHT CONCENTRATION
Right Concentration leads to the four stages of Dhyana, generally called trance or meditative contemplation. In the first stage of Dhyana, passionate desires and certain unwholesome thoughts like sensuous lust, ill-will, languor, worry, restlessness, and skeptical doubt are discarded, and feeling of joy and happiness are maintained, along with certain mental activities. In the second stage, all intellectual activities are suppressed, tranquility and ‘one-pointedness’ of mind developed, and the feelings of joy and happiness are still retained. In the third stage, the feeling of joy, which is an active sensation, also disappears, while the disposition of happiness still remains in addition to mindful equanimity. In the fourth stage of Dhyana, all sensations, even of happiness and unhappiness, of joy and sorrow, disappear, only pure equanimity and awareness remaining.

RIGHT EFFORT
Right Effort is the energetic will (1) to prevent evil and unwholesome states of mind from arising, and (2) to get rid of such evil and unwholesome states that have already arisen within a man, and also (3) to produce, to cause to arise, good and wholesome states of mind not yet arisen, and (4) to develop and bring to perfection the good and wholesome states of mind already present in man.

RIGHT LIVELIHOOD
Right Livelihood means that one should abstain from making one’s living through a profession that brings harm to others, such as trading in arms and lethal weapons, intoxicating drinks, poisons, killing animals, cheating, etc., and should live by a profession which is honorable, blameless and innocent of harm to others. One can clearly see here that Buddhism is strongly opposed to any kind of war, when it lays down that trade in arms and lethal weapons is an evil and unjust means of livelihood. However, Buddhism is not against having a strong defense.

RIGHT MINDFULNESS
Right Mindfulness(or Attentiveness) is to be diligently aware, mindful and attentive with regard to (1) the activities of the body (kaya), (2) sensations or feelings (vedana), (3) the activities of the mind (citta) and (4) ideas, thoughts, conception and things (dhamma). The practice of concentration on breathing (anapanasati) is one of the well-known exercise, connected with the body, for mental development. There are several other ways of developing attentiveness in relation to the body—as modes of meditation. With regard to sensations and feelings, one should be clearly aware of all forms of feelings and sensations, pleasant, unpleasant and neutral, of how they appear and disappear within oneself. Concerning the activities of mind, one should be aware whether one’s mind is lustful or not, given to hatred or not, deluded or not, distracted or concentrated, etc. In this way one should be aware of all movements of mind, how they arise and disappear. As regards ideas, thoughts, conceptions and things, one should know their nature, how they appear and disappear, how they are developed, how they are suppressed, and destroyed, and so on.

RIGHT SPEECH
Right speech means abstention (1) from telling lies, (2) from backbiting and slander and talk that may bring about hatred, enmity, disunity and disharmony among individuals or groups of people, (3) from harsh, rude, impolite, malicious and abusive language, and (4) from idle, useless and foolish babble and gossip. When one abstains from these forms of wrong and harmful speech one naturally has to speak the truth, has to use words that are friendly and benevolent, pleasant and gentle, meaningful and useful. One should not speak carelessly: speech should be at the right time and place. If one cannot say something useful, one should keep ‘noble silence’.

RIGHT THOUGHT
Right Thought denotes the thoughts of selfless renunciation or detachment, thoughts of love and thoughts of non-violence, which are extended to all beings. It is very interesting and important to note here that thoughts of selfless detachment, love and non-violence are grouped on the side of wisdom. This clearly shows that true wisdom is endowed with these noble qualities, and that all thoughts of selfish desire, ill-will, hatred and violence are the result of a lack of wisdom—in all spheres of life whether individual, social, or political.

RIGHT UNDERSTANDING
Right Understanding is the understanding of things as they are, and it is the Four Noble Truths that explain things as they really are. Right Understanding therefore is ultimately reduced to the understanding of the Four Noble Truths. This understanding is the highest wisdom which sees the Ultimate Reality. According to Buddhism there are two sorts of understanding: What we generally call understanding is knowledge, an accumulated memory, an intellectual grasping of a subject according to certain given data. This is called ‘knowing accordingly’ (anubodha). It is not very deep. Real deep understanding is called ‘penetration’ (pativedha), seeing a thing in its true nature, without name and label. This penetration is possible only when the mind is free from all impurities and is fully developed through meditation.

—S—

SAMSARA
Samsara refers to the beginningless cycle of birth, death, and rebirth, characterized by suffering and unsatisfactoriness. It’s a continuous process of transmigration, driven by karma (actions and their consequences) and ignorance. Samsara is not just a concept of repeated lives, but also a description of the repetitive patterns of our daily experiences, where we often find ourselves stuck in negative cycles of emotion and behavior. Traditional Buddhist cosmology depicts Samsara as a wheel with six psychological states of being: hell, fixations, animals, humans, jealous gods, and heavenly beings. 

SAMKHARA (Skt. Samskara)
Saṅkhāra literally means “that which has been put together” or “co-doing,” referring broadly to things that are formed or constructed from multiple conditions. The term samkhara denotes all conditioned or compounded things, including all the Five Aggregates. It has different connotations in different contexts. For example, Samkhara in the list of the Five Aggregates means ‘Mental Formations’ or ‘Mental Activities’ producing karmic effects. 

SECOND NOBLE TRUTH (Tanha)
The Second Noble Truth is the Origin of Dukkha, which is desire, ‘thirst’, accompanied by all other passions, defilements and impurities (tanha). This craving fuels aberration and prevents liberation from the cycle of samsara. Buddhism identifies three main types of craving: 

  1. Craving for sensual pleasure: Desire for enjoyable sensations and experiences. 
  2. Craving for existence: The desire to be, to continue, to exist, often linked to a sense of self. 
  3. Craving for non-existence: The desire to be free from suffering, to cease to be, or to escape pain. 

A mere understanding of this fact is not sufficient. Here our function is to discard it, to eliminate, to destroy and eradicate it (pahatabba). 

SELF
Tanha has at its centre the false idea of self arising out of ignorance. A self is nothing but a combination of physical and mental forces or energies. All economic, political and social problems are rooted in this selfish ‘thirst’. It is the will, or volition of self. NOTE: The beingness has a sense of its coordination from a single control point. This single control point comes from oneness of postulates. It represents the sense of self. It is represented by “I” (being). Problem arises when this oneness of postulates is disturbed resulting in a desire (tanha) that is irrational.

—T—

THIRD NOBLE TRUTH
The Third Noble Truth is the cessation of aberration, Nirvana, the Absolute Truth, the Ultimate Reality. Here our function is to realize it (sacchikatabba). 

THREE DISCIPLINES
For a man to be perfect there are two qualities that he should develop equally: compassion (karuna) on one side, and wisdom (panna) on the other. Here compassion represents love, charity, kindness, tolerance and such noble qualities on the emotional side, or qualities of the heart, while wisdom would stand for the intellectual side or the qualities of the mind. For this a man must develop the following three disciplines.

(a) Ethical Conduct (Silo)
(b) Mental Discipline (Samadhi)
(c) Wisdom (Panna)

THERAVADA
Theravada, which means “the way of the elders,” is one of the two main schools of Buddhism. Its adherents consider Theravada to be the most authoritative branch because they believe their teachings come directly from the historical Buddha.

TWELVE NIDANAS (Links)
The twelve Nidanas represent the cyclical process of Dependent Origination as follows:

  1. Through ignorance are conditioned volitional actions (karma-formations). 
  2. Through volitional action is conditioned consciousness. 
  3. Through consciousness are conditioned mental and physical phenomena.
  4. Through mental and physical phenomena are conditioned the six faculties.
  5. Through the six faculties is conditioned (sensorial and mental ) contact.
  6. Through (sensorial and mental) contact is conditioned sensation.
  7. Through sensation is conditioned desire, ‘thirst’.
  8. Through desire (‘thirst’) is conditioned clinging.
  9. Through clinging is conditioned the process of becoming.
  10. Through the process of becoming is conditioned birth.
  11. Through birth are conditioned decay, death, lamentaion, pain, etc.

—U—

—V—

VAJRAYANA
Vajrayana Buddhism, also known as Tantric Buddhism or Esoteric Buddhism, is a branch of Buddhism that emphasizes accelerated paths to enlightenment through esoteric practices and rituals. It’s often considered a more advanced and transformative path within the broader Mahayana tradition. It incorporates tantric techniques and rituals, such as mantras (sacred sounds), mudras (hand gestures), mandalas (spiritual diagrams), and deity visualization, to transform ordinary experiences into paths toward enlightenment.

VOLITION
Volition is part of the mental formation called self. Therefore, it is same as karma. When self is rigidly directing the actions, the effects of a volitional action will continue to manifest themselves.

VOLITIONAL ACTION
A volitional action is an action taken by an individual based on his own will and conscious decision-making. It’s the capacity to choose and initiate actions intentionally, involving conscious control and purposeful striving. Essentially, it’s the difference between doing something because you chose to versus doing something out of habit or external compulsion. Volitional actions result in Saṅkhāra.

—W—

WISDOM
The remaining two factors, namely Right Thought and Right Understanding go to constitute Wisdom.

—X—

—Y—

—Z—

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Psychology Timeline (19th century CE)

Reference: SC: Psychology

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19th century

1800s

  • c. 1800 – Franz Joseph Gall developed cranioscopy, the measurement of the skull to determine psychological characteristics, which was later renamed phrenology; it is now discredited.
  • 1807 – Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel published Phenomenology of Spirit (Mind), which describes his thesis-antithesis-synthesis dialectical method, according to which knowledge pushes forwards to greater certainty, and ultimately towards knowledge of the noumenal world.
  • 1808 – Johann Christian Reil coined the term “psychiatry”.

1810s

1820s

1840s

1850s

1860s

1870s

1880s

1890s

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