he walks over to the wall and pushes the button and the lights go on. He knows if he goes over to the wall and pushes that button the lights will go on, that's all. That's what's known as certainty. He doesn't hope the lights will go on, he knows they will. (ESTO 12, 7203CO6 Soil)
CERTAINTY
ScnBasic
He walks over to the wall and pushes the button and the lights go on. He knows if he goes over to the wall and pushes that button the lights will go on, that's all. That's what's known as certainty. He doesn't hope the lights will go on, he knows they will.
CERTAINTY
ScnMaster
knowingness. One is certain on a plus or minus basis and one can b e equally certain on either. One can be certain a thing is not real or he can b e equally certain that it is real. There are three sides to this. One is certain that a thing is his own illusion: this is the highest level. One is certain that a thing is a mest universereality (illusion). One can be certain that a thing is a delusion. Any certainty is a knowingness. Knowingness is sanity. Thus we have three routes of certainty by which to approach knowingness. —LRH, 8-8008 - Scientology 8-8008 Glossary Final approval c. 3 Mar 1990
CERTAINTY
ScnOEC
the magazine of the Church of Scientology of London, England (started in 1954). ...I've forgotten the exact figure - it was something like six or eight thousand Certaintys going out to six or eight thousand people, you see, each month.
CERTAINTY
ScnOEC
the magazine of the Church of Scientology of London, England (started in 1954). ...I've forgotten the exact figure - it was something like six or eight thousand Certaintys going out to six or eight thousand people, you see, each month.
1. the degree of willingness to accept the awareness of an is-ness. (SHSpec 84, 6612C13)2. knowledge itself is certainty; knowledge is not data. Knowingness is certainty. Sanity is certainty, providing only that that certainty does not fall beyond the conviction of another when he views it. To obtain a certainty one must be able to observe. (COHA, p. 187)3. knowingness—knowing one knows—a state of beingness. (PAB 29)4. measurement of the effort and locations and distances necessary to make two points coincide at a certain instant in time. And that is really a low level certainty. That is certainty in terms of motion. (5311CM17A)5. clarity of observation. (COHA, p. 190)