-------------
Reasoning that questions arising from his experiments would best
be answered by those who were paid to know about the mind, Ron
took these discoveries to the psychology department. Rather than
answers, however, he found that the George Washington University
psychologists had no comprehension or understanding of the results
but more importantly they weren't even interested in such things.
Stunned, he soon came to the realization that no one knew how the
mind worked. And furthermore, no one in the fields of psychology
or psychiatry was about to find out.
Not only were there no answers in the East, there were none to be
found in any Western center of culture.
For more information go to the following URLs:
http://www.scientology.org
http://www.lronhubbard.org
http://www.dianetics.org
(c) 1993 Church of Scientology International. All Rights Reserved.
-------------
In an attempt to resolve this problem, Navy physicians were
administering testosterone, a male hormone. This medical treatment,
however, was not getting effective results on all patients, and
Mr. Hubbard utilized the opportunity to not only help his fellow
servicemen, but to test a theory he had developed in application.
"All I was trying to establish," he wrote, "was whether or not the
mind regulated the body or the body regulated the mind. Therefore,
if on some of these patients hormones did not work and on some of
them they did, there might be a mental reason. If those patients
on whom it did not work had a severe mental block, then it was obvious
that regardless of the amount of hormone or medical treatment the
person received, he would not get well. If the mind were capable
of putting this much restraint upon the physical body then obviously
the fact that was commonly held to be true, that structure monitors
function, would be false. I set out to prove this.... I was not interested
in endocrinology but in resolving whether or not function monitored
structure or structure monitored function."
In case after case, he found that by utilizing techniques he had
developed, previously unresponsive patients immediately improved
with medical treatment once the mental blocks were removed.
In fact, function did monitor structure. As Ron noted at the time,
"Thought is boss."
This was a revolutionary concept, cutting across misconceptions which
had plagued Eastern philosophy and science for centuries.
-------------
Reasoning that questions arising from his experiments would best
be answered by those who were paid to know about the mind, Ron
took these discoveries to the psychology department. Rather than
answers, however, he found that the George Washington University
psychologists had no comprehension or understanding of the results
but more importantly they weren't even interested in such things.
Stunned, he soon came to the realization that no one knew how the
mind worked. And furthermore, no one in the fields of psychology
or psychiatry was about to find out.
Not only were there no answers in the East, there were none to be
found in any Western center of culture.
-------------
In an attempt to resolve this problem, Navy physicians were
administering testosterone, a male hormone. This medical treatment,
however, was not getting effective results on all patients, and
Mr. Hubbard utilized the opportunity to not only help his fellow
servicemen, but to test a theory he had developed in application.
"All I was trying to establish," he wrote, "was whether or not the
mind regulated the body or the body regulated the mind. Therefore,
if on some of these patients hormones did not work and on some of
them they did, there might be a mental reason. If those patients
on whom it did not work had a severe mental block, then it was obvious
that regardless of the amount of hormone or medical treatment the
person received, he would not get well. If the mind were capable
of putting this much restraint upon the physical body then obviously
the fact that was commonly held to be true, that structure monitors
function, would be false. I set out to prove this.... I was not interested
in endocrinology but in resolving whether or not function monitored
structure or structure monitored function."
In case after case, he found that by utilizing techniques he had
developed, previously unresponsive patients immediately improved
with medical treatment once the mental blocks were removed.
In fact, function did monitor structure. As Ron noted at the time,
"Thought is boss."
This was a revolutionary concept, cutting across misconceptions which
had plagued Eastern philosophy and science for centuries.
-------------
Reasoning that questions arising from his experiments would best
be answered by those who were paid to know about the mind, Ron
took these discoveries to the psychology department. Rather than
answers, however, he found that the George Washington University
psychologists had no comprehension or understanding of the results
but more importantly they weren't even interested in such things.
Stunned, he soon came to the realization that no one knew how the
mind worked. And furthermore, no one in the fields of psychology
or psychiatry was about to find out.
Not only were there no answers in the East, there were none to be
found in any Western center of culture.
-------------
In an attempt to resolve this problem, Navy physicians were
administering testosterone, a male hormone. This medical treatment,
however, was not getting effective results on all patients, and
Mr. Hubbard utilized the opportunity to not only help his fellow
servicemen, but to test a theory he had developed in application.
"All I was trying to establish," he wrote, "was whether or not the
mind regulated the body or the body regulated the mind. Therefore,
if on some of these patients hormones did not work and on some of
them they did, there might be a mental reason. If those patients
on whom it did not work had a severe mental block, then it was obvious
that regardless of the amount of hormone or medical treatment the
person received, he would not get well. If the mind were capable
of putting this much restraint upon the physical body then obviously
the fact that was commonly held to be true, that structure monitors
function, would be false. I set out to prove this.... I was not interested
in endocrinology but in resolving whether or not function monitored
structure or structure monitored function."
In case after case, he found that by utilizing techniques he had
developed, previously unresponsive patients immediately improved
with medical treatment once the mental blocks were removed.
In fact, function did monitor structure. As Ron noted at the time,
"Thought is boss."
This was a revolutionary concept, cutting across misconceptions which
had plagued Eastern philosophy and science for centuries.
-------------
Reasoning that questions arising from his experiments would best
be answered by those who were paid to know about the mind, Ron
took these discoveries to the psychology department. Rather than
answers, however, he found that the George Washington University
psychologists had no comprehension or understanding of the results
but more importantly they weren't even interested in such things.
Stunned, he soon came to the realization that no one knew how the
mind worked. And furthermore, no one in the fields of psychology
or psychiatry was about to find out.
Not only were there no answers in the East, there were none to be
found in any Western center of culture.
-------------
In an attempt to resolve this problem, Navy physicians were
administering testosterone, a male hormone. This medical treatment,
however, was not getting effective results on all patients, and
Mr. Hubbard utilized the opportunity to not only help his fellow
servicemen, but to test a theory he had developed in application.
"All I was trying to establish," he wrote, "was whether or not the
mind regulated the body or the body regulated the mind. Therefore,
if on some of these patients hormones did not work and on some of
them they did, there might be a mental reason. If those patients
on whom it did not work had a severe mental block, then it was obvious
that regardless of the amount of hormone or medical treatment the
person received, he would not get well. If the mind were capable
of putting this much restraint upon the physical body then obviously
the fact that was commonly held to be true, that structure monitors
function, would be false. I set out to prove this.... I was not interested
in endocrinology but in resolving whether or not function monitored
structure or structure monitored function."
In case after case, he found that by utilizing techniques he had
developed, previously unresponsive patients immediately improved
with medical treatment once the mental blocks were removed.
In fact, function did monitor structure. As Ron noted at the time,
"Thought is boss."
This was a revolutionary concept, cutting across misconceptions which
had plagued Eastern philosophy and science for centuries.
-------------
Reasoning that questions arising from his experiments would best
be answered by those who were paid to know about the mind, Ron
took these discoveries to the psychology department. Rather than
answers, however, he found that the George Washington University
psychologists had no comprehension or understanding of the results
but more importantly they weren't even interested in such things.
Stunned, he soon came to the realization that no one knew how the
mind worked. And furthermore, no one in the fields of psychology
or psychiatry was about to find out.
Not only were there no answers in the East, there were none to be
found in any Western center of culture.
-------------
In an attempt to resolve this problem, Navy physicians were
administering testosterone, a male hormone. This medical treatment,
however, was not getting effective results on all patients, and
Mr. Hubbard utilized the opportunity to not only help his fellow
servicemen, but to test a theory he had developed in application.
"All I was trying to establish," he wrote, "was whether or not the
mind regulated the body or the body regulated the mind. Therefore,
if on some of these patients hormones did not work and on some of
them they did, there might be a mental reason. If those patients
on whom it did not work had a severe mental block, then it was obvious
that regardless of the amount of hormone or medical treatment the
person received, he would not get well. If the mind were capable
of putting this much restraint upon the physical body then obviously
the fact that was commonly held to be true, that structure monitors
function, would be false. I set out to prove this.... I was not interested
in endocrinology but in resolving whether or not function monitored
structure or structure monitored function."
In case after case, he found that by utilizing techniques he had
developed, previously unresponsive patients immediately improved
with medical treatment once the mental blocks were removed.
In fact, function did monitor structure. As Ron noted at the time,
"Thought is boss."
This was a revolutionary concept, cutting across misconceptions which
had plagued Eastern philosophy and science for centuries.
-------------
Reasoning that questions arising from his experiments would best
be answered by those who were paid to know about the mind, Ron
took these discoveries to the psychology department. Rather than
answers, however, he found that the George Washington University
psychologists had no comprehension or understanding of the results
but more importantly they weren't even interested in such things.
Stunned, he soon came to the realization that no one knew how the
mind worked. And furthermore, no one in the fields of psychology
or psychiatry was about to find out.
Not only were there no answers in the East, there were none to be
found in any Western center of culture.
-------------
In an attempt to resolve this problem, Navy physicians were
administering testosterone, a male hormone. This medical treatment,
however, was not getting effective results on all patients, and
Mr. Hubbard utilized the opportunity to not only help his fellow
servicemen, but to test a theory he had developed in application.
"All I was trying to establish," he wrote, "was whether or not the
mind regulated the body or the body regulated the mind. Therefore,
if on some of these patients hormones did not work and on some of
them they did, there might be a mental reason. If those patients
on whom it did not work had a severe mental block, then it was obvious
that regardless of the amount of hormone or medical treatment the
person received, he would not get well. If the mind were capable
of putting this much restraint upon the physical body then obviously
the fact that was commonly held to be true, that structure monitors
function, would be false. I set out to prove this.... I was not interested
in endocrinology but in resolving whether or not function monitored
structure or structure monitored function."
In case after case, he found that by utilizing techniques he had
developed, previously unresponsive patients immediately improved
with medical treatment once the mental blocks were removed.
In fact, function did monitor structure. As Ron noted at the time,
"Thought is boss."
This was a revolutionary concept, cutting across misconceptions which
had plagued Eastern philosophy and science for centuries.
-------------
Reasoning that questions arising from his experiments would best
be answered by those who were paid to know about the mind, Ron
took these discoveries to the psychology department. Rather than
answers, however, he found that the George Washington University
psychologists had no comprehension or understanding of the results
but more importantly they weren't even interested in such things.
Stunned, he soon came to the realization that no one knew how the
mind worked. And furthermore, no one in the fields of psychology
or psychiatry was about to find out.
Not only were there no answers in the East, there were none to be
found in any Western center of culture.
-------------
In an attempt to resolve this problem, Navy physicians were
administering testosterone, a male hormone. This medical treatment,
however, was not getting effective results on all patients, and
Mr. Hubbard utilized the opportunity to not only help his fellow
servicemen, but to test a theory he had developed in application.
"All I was trying to establish," he wrote, "was whether or not the
mind regulated the body or the body regulated the mind. Therefore,
if on some of these patients hormones did not work and on some of
them they did, there might be a mental reason. If those patients
on whom it did not work had a severe mental block, then it was obvious
that regardless of the amount of hormone or medical treatment the
person received, he would not get well. If the mind were capable
of putting this much restraint upon the physical body then obviously
the fact that was commonly held to be true, that structure monitors
function, would be false. I set out to prove this.... I was not interested
in endocrinology but in resolving whether or not function monitored
structure or structure monitored function."
In case after case, he found that by utilizing techniques he had
developed, previously unresponsive patients immediately improved
with medical treatment once the mental blocks were removed.
In fact, function did monitor structure. As Ron noted at the time,
"Thought is boss."
This was a revolutionary concept, cutting across misconceptions which
had plagued Eastern philosophy and science for centuries.
-------------
Reasoning that questions arising from his experiments would best
be answered by those who were paid to know about the mind, Ron
took these discoveries to the psychology department. Rather than
answers, however, he found that the George Washington University
psychologists had no comprehension or understanding of the results
but more importantly they weren't even interested in such things.
Stunned, he soon came to the realization that no one knew how the
mind worked. And furthermore, no one in the fields of psychology
or psychiatry was about to find out.
Not only were there no answers in the East, there were none to be
found in any Western center of culture.
-------------
In an attempt to resolve this problem, Navy physicians were
administering testosterone, a male hormone. This medical treatment,
however, was not getting effective results on all patients, and
Mr. Hubbard utilized the opportunity to not only help his fellow
servicemen, but to test a theory he had developed in application.
"All I was trying to establish," he wrote, "was whether or not the
mind regulated the body or the body regulated the mind. Therefore,
if on some of these patients hormones did not work and on some of
them they did, there might be a mental reason. If those patients
on whom it did not work had a severe mental block, then it was obvious
that regardless of the amount of hormone or medical treatment the
person received, he would not get well. If the mind were capable
of putting this much restraint upon the physical body then obviously
the fact that was commonly held to be true, that structure monitors
function, would be false. I set out to prove this.... I was not interested
in endocrinology but in resolving whether or not function monitored
structure or structure monitored function."
In case after case, he found that by utilizing techniques he had
developed, previously unresponsive patients immediately improved
with medical treatment once the mental blocks were removed.
In fact, function did monitor structure. As Ron noted at the time,
"Thought is boss."
This was a revolutionary concept, cutting across misconceptions which
had plagued Eastern philosophy and science for centuries.