Scientology is a set of beliefs and practices invented by the American author L. Ron Hubbard, and an associated movement. It is variously defined as a scam, a business, a cult, or a religion.[12] Hubbard initially developed a set of pseudoscientific ideas that he represented as a form of therapy, which he called Dianetics. An organization that he established in 1950 to promote it went bankrupt, and his ideas were rejected as nonsense by the scientific community. He then recast his ideas as a religion, likely for tax purposes and to avoid prosecution, and renamed them Scientology.[17] In 1953, he founded the Church of Scientology which, by one 2014 estimate, has around 30,000 members.
Key Scientology beliefs include reincarnation, and that traumatic events cause subconscious command-like recordings in the mind (termed "engrams") that can be removed only through an activity called "auditing". A fee is charged for each session of "auditing". Once an "auditor" deems an individual free of "engrams", they are given the status of "clear". Scholarship differs on the interpretation of these beliefs: some academics regard them as religious in nature; other scholars regard them as merely a means of extracting money from Scientology recruits. After attaining "clear" status, adherents can take part in the Operating Thetan levels, which require further payments. The Operating Thetan texts are kept secret from most followers; they are revealed only after adherents have typically given hundreds of thousands of dollars to the Scientology organization.[18] Despite its efforts to maintain the secrecy of the texts, they are freely available on various websites, including at the media organization WikiLeaks.[19][20] These texts say past lives took place in extraterrestrial cultures.[21] They involve an alien called Xenu, described as a planetary ruler 70 million years ago who brought billions of aliens to Earth and killed them with thermonuclear weapons. Despite being kept secret from most followers, this forms the central mythological framework of Scientology's ostensible soteriology.[22] These aspects have become the subject of popular ridicule.
The Church of Scientology has been described by government inquiries, international parliamentary bodies, scholars, law lords, and numerous superior court judgments as both a dangerous cult and a manipulative profit-making business.[33] Numerous scholars and journalists observe that profit is the primary motivating goal of the Scientology organization.[34] Following extensive litigation in numerous countries,[35][36] the organization has managed to attain a legal recognition as a religious institution in some jurisdictions, including Australia,[37][38] Italy,[36] and the United States.[39]Germany classifies Scientology groups as an anti-constitutional cult,[40][41] while the French government classifies the group as a dangerous cult.[42][43] A 2012 opinion poll in the US indicates that 70% of Americans do not think Scientology is a real religion; 13% think it is. Scientology is the subject of numerous books, documentaries, and depictions in film and television, including the Emmy Award-winning Going Clear and Leah Remini: Scientology and the Aftermath, and is widely understood to be a key basis for The Master.
^Kent 1996, pp. 30–32, While researchers must not minimise financial motives for Hubbard's decision to present Scientology as a religion in the early 1950s, they must also not neglect the fact that occasionally Hubbard's followers across the United States were being arrested for practicing medicine without licenses...Hubbard proclaimed in 1950 that, with the proper application of the techniques he outlined, "arthritis vanishes, myopia gets better, heart illness decreases, asthma disappears, stomachs function properly, and the whole catalogue of ills goes away and stays away". Because of claims such as these (to which Scientology still adheres), the New Jersey State Board of Medical Examiners accused the Hubbard Dianetic Research Foundation, Inc. of "operating a school for the treatment of disease without a license" in January, 1951, which contributed to the organisation's departure from Elizabeth, New Jersey, in April—prior to its pending trial in May...in late 1953 or early 1954, a Glendale, California, Dianeticist or Scientologist apparently spent ten days in jail for "practicising medicine without a license". Reacting to an emerging pattern of arrests, Hubbard (in December, 1953) incorporated three religious organisations in New Jersey: the Church of American Science, The Church of Scientology, and The Church of Spiritual Engineering.
^Aviv, Rachel (January 26, 2012). "Religion, grrrr". London Review of Books. 34 (2). Archived from the original on May 6, 2015. Retrieved September 27, 2019.
^ abCite error: The named reference Carobene14 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
^Church of the New Faith v Commissioner of Pay-roll Tax (Vict)[1983] HCA 40, (1983) 154 CLR 120, High Court (Australia) "the evidence, in our view, establishes that Scientology must, for relevant purposes, be accepted as "a religion" in Victoria"