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This is something we’ve been waiting a very long time for. The Church of Scientology uses devices called E-Meters to measure Thetans in the body. We’re not going to discuss this further… ...
Drop out, tune in, and turn on the e-meter Last week, we started a new feature on Tuesdays. We’ve asked freelancer Antoine Oman* to write us stories that look at things from Scientology’s ...
L. Ron Hubbard’s famed E-Meters are only supposed to be used by a ‘minister’ or ‘minister-in-training,’ according to the Church of Scientology. Photo: Kevork Djansezian (Getty Images ...
The Church of Scientology uses devices called E-Meters to measure Thetans in the body. We’re not going to discuss this further, because we don’t want to be murdered.
As to why a Scientology-owned group would care about such a matter, 404 Media suggested that it could have to do with Scientology E-meters, or electropsychometers.
John explained that he was handed an e-meter, a device used by the church that uses two metallic cans to measure electrical currents through the person undergoing the auditing process.
Stamos said that he was beckoned to the E-meter. "You're holding these two cans, so I started, you know, 'Hello… Peabody in the Wayback Machine!'" he said in a cartoonishly old-fashioned voice ...
Scientology’s neuroessentialist perspective is reinforced by its view of the brain as a purely computational object. Scientology sees the brain as a memory bank where auditing through e-meters ...
Stamos recalled entering the Scientology building and being summoned to a machine called the "E-Meter," which was formed from two cans. After having a fake phone conversation pretending to be ...