• No se han encontrado resultados

Emisión sectorial global

In document BLOQUE II RESULTADOS (página 182-186)

EMISIÓN SECTORIAL. RELACIÓN CON LA CALIDAD DE AIRE

PM 10 /PST después de la

9.1.3. Emisión sectorial global

Unconditional Positive Regard is when one person is completely accepting toward another person. This is not just a show of acceptance, but is an attitude that is then demonstrated through behavior. Rogers indicated that for humanistic type of therapy to work, the therapist had to have this for the client.

SELF-ACTUALIZATION, [Psychology

Definition] Maslow believed that there are five types of needs that motivate us in our every day lives. At the top of Maslow’s hierarchy are self-actualization needs where people have reached their full potential and have become all that they can be. According to Maslow, few people in history are said to have self-actualized.

Additional Reference: The Darker Side of Goal Setting: Why Goal Setting Fails ...Beware the

5: items (valences) in opposition to one another. Any pair of these items, in opposition to each other, constitute a specific problem. (HCOB 23 Nov 62) GOALS LIST, a full list of goals including childhood goals, withheld goals, antisocial goals, and (by meter reaction on question) “Any goal you have not told me about.” Auditor gets every

possible goal until the meter is null on the question of goals the pc might have. (HCOB 6Apr 61)

Misuse of Goal Setting by Susan M. Heathfield.

[ Ed. notes – Other education sources used for these terms due to comparable entries missing in the Merriam-Webster Unabridged Medical Dictionary. See also: AUDITING, BEINGNESS, DYNAMICS, ENERGY, E-METER, FORCE, GOAL, IMPLANT GPM, MASS, OPPOSITION TERMINAL,

POSTULATE, PRECLEAR (PC), PROBLEM, REACTIVE MIND, VALENCE and WITHHOLD. ] GRIEF, 1: a ridge and is occasioned by loss. (Scn

8-8008, p. 21) 2: 0.5 on the tone scale. (SOS, p.57) 3: Grief takes place where one recognizes his loss and failure as in the death of somebody he loved and tried to help. (HFP, p.85)

GRIEF CHARGE, an out burst of tears that may continue for a considerable time, in a session, after which the preclear feels greatly relieved. This is occasioned by the discharge of grief or painful emotion from a secondary. (Scn AD)

GRIEF, [Medical Definition] deep and poignant distress caused by or as if by bereavement; also : a cause of such suffering.

WEEP, 1: to express deep sorrow for usually by shedding tears : bewail <weeping the sins and errors of his youth — Edward Gibbon> 2: to pour forth (tears) from the eyes. 3: to exude (a fluid) slowly : ooze. <a tree weeping sap>

[ Ed. note – see also: AUDITING SESSION, EMOTION, EMOTIONAL CHARGE, CHARGE, DEATH, FAILURE, HELP, PAINFUL EMOTION ENGRAM, PRECLEAR (PC), RIDGE,

SECONDARY, TONE SCALE and UNHAPPINESS. ]

GROUP REACTIVE MIND, could be

considered to lie in the actions of those individuals set up for emergency status during compressed time emergencies, which is to say, the reactive mind is composed of the composite engrams of the group itself. (NOTL, p.136)

GROUP THETA, the theta of a group would be its ideas, ideals, rationale and ethic. This is an actual force. The culture is an accumulated soul which flows over and through a number of individuals and persists after the death of those individuals via other individuals or even other groups. (DAB, Vol. II, p.136)

GROUP MENTALITY, a characteristic reflecting the one accord will of a group. People may be unaware of the contributions they make to group mentality, and they may influence other members negatively when they feel they are in conflict with group principles, norms, and objectives.

GROUP DYNAMICS, the interacting forces within a small human group; also : the sociological study of these forces.

HERD MENTALITY, [aka MOB MENTALITY] describes how people are influenced by their peers to adopt certain behaviors, follow trends, and/or

GROUP THINK, the common denominator of the group is the reactive bank. Thetans without banks have different responses. They only have their banks in common. They agree then only on bank principles. Person to person the bank is identical. So constructive ideas are individual and seldom get broad agreement in a human group. (HCO PL 7 Feb 65)

include stock market trends, fashions in apparel, cars, taste in music, superstition, religion, home décor, etc. Social psychologists study the related topics of group intelligence, crowd wisdom, and decentralized decision making.

GROUPTHINK, a pattern of thought characterized by self-deception, forced manufacture of consent, and conformity to group values and ethics.

[ Ed. note – see also: ACTION, BANK, DEATH, ENGRAM, ETHICS, RATIONALITY, REACTIVE BANK, REACTIVE MIND, THETA, THETAN, SPIRIT, THINKING and TIME. ]

GUILT COMPLEX, before you felt sympathy, you offended in some way. You did something. Then you were sorry for it. The offense may have taken place years or only minutes before your sympathy came about. This is the emotional curve of sympathy. It goes from antagonism or anger down to sympathy. This used to be called a “guilt complex.” (HFP, pp.125-126)

GUILT COMPLEX, a feeling of guilt which a person has that you consider to be exaggerated, unreasonable, or unnecessary. <She was ridden with a guilt complex about her desertion of the father she was never to see again.>

[ Ed. note – see also: ANGER, ANTAGONISM, EMOTIONAL CURVE, SYMPATHY and TONE SCALE. ]

HABIT, 1: that stimulus-response reaction dictated by the reactive mind from the content of engrams and put into effect by the somatic mind. It can be changed only by those things which change engrams. (DMSMH, p. 39) 2: simply something one cannot stop. Here we have an example of no control whatever. (POW p.46)

[ Ed. note – see also: CONTROL, EFFECT, ENGRAM, REACTIVE MIND, SOMATIC and SOMATIC MIND. ]

HABIT, 1: bodily appearance or makeup especially as indicative of one’s capacities and condition. <a man of fleshy habit> 2: a settled tendency or usual manner of behavior. 3a: a behavior pattern acquired by frequent repetition or physiological exposure that shows itself in regularity or increased facility of performance. <the daily bowel habit> 3b: an

acquired mode of behavior that has become nearly or completely involuntary. <locked the door through force of habit> 3c: addiction <was forced to steal to support his drug habit> 4: characteristic mode of growth or occurrence.

HATE, 1: a total ridge. (5904C08) 2: around 1.5 on the tone scale affinity has almost reversed itself. Its dissonance has become hate, which can be violent and is so expressed. Here, actually, we have

HATE, 1a: intense hostility and aversion usually deriving from fear, anger, or sense of injury

1b: extreme dislike or antipathy : LOATHING. <had a great hate of hard work> 2: an object of hatred <a

a factor of entheta repelling theta. (SOS, p.56)

[ Ed. note – see also: AFFINITY, ANGER, EMOTIONAL CHARGE, ENTHETA, RIDGE, THETA and TONE SCALE. ]

generation whose finest hate had been big business — F. L. Paxson>

HAVINGNESS, 1: that which permits the

experience of mass and pressure. (A&L, p.8) 2: the feeling that one owns or possesses. (SH Spec 84, 6612C13) 3: can be simply defined as ARC with the environment. (SH Spec 294, 6308C14) 4: that activity which is run when needed and when it will not violently deflect the pc’s attention. (SH Spec 85, 6111C28) 5: the result of creation. (SH Spec 19, 6106C23) 6: the ability to duplicate that which one perceives, or create a duplication of what one perceives, or to be willing to create a duplication of it. But it’s duplication. (1SHACC-10, 6009C14) 7: ability to communicate with an is-ness. The ability to conceive an is-ness and communicate with it. (17ACC-4, 5702C28) 8: havingness is the concept of being able to reach or not being prevented from reaching. (SH Spec 126, 6203C29) 9: the need to have terminals and things to play for and on. (Dn 55!, p.137) Abbr. Hav.

NO HAVINGNESS, 1: is defined as something that a person can’t reach or doesn’t permit itself to be reached. (SH Spec 103, 6201C23) 2: no

havingness is prevented reach; in other words, the concept of no reach. (SH Spec 97, 6201C09) SUBJECTIVE HAVINGNESS, one way to run this [Process] is to ask the preclear what he can mock up. Then have him mock up what he can, and shove it into his body. That is the most elementary way of running this. (PAB 154)

ACCOMPLISHMENT, 1: the act of

accomplishing : completion. 2: something that has been accomplished : achievement. 3a: a quality or ability equipping one for society. 3b: a special skill or ability acquired by training or practice.

ATTAINMENT, 1: the act of attaining : the condition of being attained. 2: something attained : accomplishment.

SUCCESS, 1 obsolete: outcome, result. 2a: degree or measure of succeeding. 2b: favorable or desired outcome; also : the attainment of wealth, favor, or eminence. 3: one that succeeds.

[ Ed. note – see also: ABILITY, ARC,

ATTENTION, COMMUNICATION, CONCEPT, CONDITIONS OF EXISTENCE, CREATE, DUPLICATION, HAVING, IS-NESS, MASS, MOCK-UP, PRECLEAR (PC), PRESSURE SOMATIC, PROCESSING, SUBJECTIVE, SUCCESS STORY and TERMINAL. ]

HAPPINESS, is not itself an emotion. It is a word which states a condition, and the anatomy of that condition is interest. Happiness, you could say, is the overcoming of not unknowable obstacles toward a known goal. (8ACC-4, 5410CM06)

HAPPINESS, 1: obsolete : good fortune : PROSPERITY. 2a: a state of well-being and contentment : JOY. 2b: a pleasurable or satisfying experience. 3: FELICITY, APTNESS.

UNHAPPINESS, unhappiness is only this: the inability to confront that which is. (N80L, p.25) [ Ed. notes – Princeton University Wordnet Lexical Database used for the second comparison

definition on this entry due to a comparable entry missing in the Merriam-Webster Unabridged Collegiate Dictionary. See also: CONFRONT, EMOTION, GOAL, INTEREST and

KNOWINGNESS. ]

UNHAPPINESS, 1: emotions experienced when not in a state of well-being : SADNESS. 2: state characterized by emotions ranging from mild discontentment to deep grief.

HYSTERIA, the phenomenon of being out of control. (AAR, p.91)

[ Ed. note – see also: CONTROL, EMOTION, INSANE and NEUROSIS. ]

HYSTERIA, 1a: a psychoneurosis marked by emotional excitability and disturbances of the psychic, sensory, vasomotor, and visceral functions without an organic basis. 1b: a similar condition in domestic animals. 2: behavior exhibiting

overwhelming or unmanageable fear or emotional excess.

INTENTION, 1: an intention is something that one wishes to do. He intends to do it; it’s an impulse toward something; it’s an idea that one is going to accomplish something. It’s intentional, which means he meant to do it, he means to do it. (SH Spec 83, 6612C06) 2: intention is the command factor as much as anything else. If you intend something to happen it happens if you intend it to happen. Verbalization is not the intention. The intention is the carrier wave which takes the verbalization along with it. (Abil 270) 3: degree of relative beingness which an individual desires to assume as plotted on the tone scale. (5203CM04A)

INTENTION, [Medical Definition] 1: a

determination to act in a certain way. 2: a process or manner of healing of incised wounds—see first intention, second intention.

MOTIVATION, 1a: the act or process of

motivating, 1b: the condition of being motivated. 2: a motivating force, stimulus, or influence :

INCENTIVE, DRIVE.

[ Ed. note – see also: ATTENTION, BEINGNESS, MOTIVATOR, POSTULATE and TONE SCALE. ]

IRRATIONALITY, the inability to get right answers from data. (DMSMH, p.16)

[ Ed. note – see also: ABILITY, HYSTERIA, NEUROTIC, RATIONALITY and RIGHT. ]

IRRATIONAL, not rational: a(1): not endowed with reason or understanding (2): lacking usual or normal mental clarity or coherence. b: not governed by or according to reason. <irrational fears> — irrationality noun

JEALOUSY, is basically an inability to confront the unknown. (SH Spec 43, 6108C22)

JEALOUSY, 1: a jealous disposition, attitude, or feeling. 2: zealous vigilance.

[ Ed. note – see also: ABILITY, CONFRONT and EMOTION. ]

JEALOUS, 1a: intolerant of rivalry or

unfaithfulness. 1b: disposed to suspect rivalry or unfaithfulness. 2: hostile toward a rival or one believed to enjoy an advantage. 3: vigilant in guarding a possession. <new colonies were jealous of their new independence — Scott Buchanan> KEY-IN, v. 1: the action of recording a lock on a

secondary or engram. (HCOB 23 Apr 69) –n. 1: the first time an engram is restimulated is called a key-in. A key-in is merely a special kind of lock, the first lock on a particular engram. (SOS, Bk.2, p.29) 2: a 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. (SOS, Bk.2, p.136)

KEY-OUT, v. 1: an action of the engram or secondary dropping away without being erased. (HCOB 23 Apr 69) –n. 1: the person without knowing what the earlier instance was has had the lock vanish. That’s a key-out. (SH Spec 122, 6203C19) –adj. 1: released from the stimulus- response mechanisms of the reactive mind . (PXL, p.18) 2: release or separation from one’s reactive mind or some portion of it. (PXL, p.252)

TRAUMATISM, [Medical Definition] the development or occurrence of trauma <periodontal traumatism>; also : TRAUMA.

COGNITIVE RESTRUCTURING, a cognitive therapy process of learning to refute cognitive distortions, or fundamental “faulty thinking,” with the goal of replacing one’s irrational, counter-factual beliefs with more accurate and beneficial ones. [ Ed. notes – Wikipedia and used for the second term above due to comparable entries missing in the Merriam-Webster Unabridged Medical Dictionary. See also: ACTION, AUDITING, ENGRAM, KEYED-OUT OT, LOCK, REACTIVE MIND, RELEASE, RESTIMULATION and SECONDARY. ]

MOTIVATOR, 1: an aggressive or destructive act received by the person or one of the dynamics. It is called a motivator because it tends to prompt that one pays it back –it “motivates” a new overt. (HCOB 20May68) 2: something which the person feels has been done to him, which he is not willing to have happen. (HCO Info Ltr 2 Sept 64) 3: an act received by the person or individual causing injury, reduction or degradation of his beingness, person, associations or dynamics. (HCOB 1 Nov 68II) 4: an overt act against oneself by another. In other words, a motivator is a harmful action performed by somebody else against oneself. (8ACC-14, 5410CM20)

INSTIGATE, to goad or urge forward : PROVOKE.

PROVOKE, 1a: archaic : to arouse to a feeling or action. 1b: to incite to anger. 2a: to call forth (as a feeling or action) : EVOKE. <provoke laughter> 2b: to stir up purposely. <provoke a fight> 2c: to

provide the needed stimulus for. <will provoke a lot. of discussion>

[ Ed. note – see also: ACTION, BEINGNESS, DEGRADATION, DYNAMICS and OVERT ACT. ]

ORGANIC, internal sensations and, by new definition, emotion. (Abil 71)

[ Ed. note – see also: EMOTION, MEST BODY, ORGANIC PERCEPTIONS, ORGANIC

SENSATION, ORGANICALLY INSANE and SENSATION. ]

ORGANIC, 1: archaic : INSTRUMENTAL. 2a: of, relating to, or arising in a bodily organ. 2b: affecting the structure of the organism. 3a(1): of, relating to, or derived from living organisms. <organic

evolution> 3a(2): of, relating to, yielding, or involving the use of food produced with the use of feed or fertilizer of plant or animal origin without employment of chemically formulated fertilizers, growth stimulants, antibiotics, or pesticides. <organic farming> 3b(1): of, relating to, or containing carbon compounds. 3b(2): relating to, being, or dealt with by a branch of chemistry concerned with the carbon compounds of living beings and most other carbon compounds. 4a: forming an integral element of a whole :

FUNDAMENTAL. <incidental music rather than organic parts of the action — Francis Fergusson> 4b: having systematic coordination of parts : ORGANIZED. <an organic whole> 4c: having the characteristics of an organism : developing in the manner of a living plant or animal. <society is organic> 5: of, relating to, or constituting the law by which a government or organization exists.

PAIN, 1: is composed of heat, cold, electrical, and the combined effect of sharp hurting. If one stuck a fork in his arm, he would experience pain. When one uses PAIN in connection with clearing one means awareness of heat, cold, electrical or hurting stemming from the reactive mind. According to experiments done at Harvard, if one were to make a grid with heated tubes going vertical and chilled tubes going horizontal and were to place a small current of electricity through the lot, the device, touched to a body, would produce the feeling of PAIN. It need not be composed of anything very hot or cold or of any high voltage to produce a very intense feeling of pain. Therefore what we call PAIN is itself, heat, cold and electrical. If a pc experiences one or more of these from his reactive mind, we say he is experiencing PAIN. Symbol: PN. (HCOB 8 Nov 62) 2: the sharp impulse or dull impulse of heat, cold and electrical. (SH Spec 202A, 6210C23) 3: the sensation of pain is

PAIN, [Medical Definition] 1a: a state of physical, emotional, or mental lack of well-being or physical, emotional, or mental uneasiness that ranges from mild discomfort or dull distress to acute often unbearable agony, may be generalized or localized, and is the consequence of being injured or hurt physically or mentally or of some derangement of or lack of equilibrium in the physical or mental

functions (as through disease), and that usually produces a reaction of wanting to avoid, escape, or destroy the causative factor and its effects. <was in constant pain> 1b: a basic bodily sensation that is induced by a noxious stimulus, is received by naked nerve endings, is characterized by physical

discomfort (as pricking, throbbing, or aching), and typically leads to evasive action.

[ Ed. note – see also: AWARENESS, BEINGNESS, COUNTER-EFFORT, DEATH, EFFECT, EFFORT,

actually a sensation of loss. It is a loss of beingness, loss of position and awareness. (COHA, p. 210) 4: too much motion too fast. (5203CM05B) 5: pain, technically, is caused by an effort counter to the effort of the individual as a whole. (Scn Jour 5-G) 6: pain is the randomity produced by sudden or strong counter-efforts. (AP&A, p.100) 7: the sudden impact of theta and mest together could be considered a turbulence which creates dissonance in theta. This is registered and recorded as pain. (SOS, p. 40) 8: theta and mest coming together too hard get into a turmoil which we call pain. (SOS, p. 5) 9: pain is a warning of non-survival or potential death. (SA, p.27)

MEST, MOTION, PAIN ASSOCIATION, PAINFUL EMOTION ENGRAM, PAINFUL INCIDENT, REACTIVE MIND, SENSATION, SURVIVAL and THETA. ]

PAIN ASSOCIATION, the person is made to associate his “wrong ideas” with pain so that he “will not have these ideas,” or will be “prevented from doing these things.” A crude current example is to electric shock a person every time he smokes a cigarette. After several “treatments” he is supposed to associate the pain with the idea and so “give up smoking.” (HCOB 16 Jul 70)

AVERSION THERAPY, [Medical Definition] therapy [psychological treatment for behavior modification] intended to suppress an undesirable habit or behavior (as smoking or overeating) by associating the habit or behavior with a noxious or punishing stimulus (as an electric shock).

[ Ed. note – see also: PAIN and PSYCHOTHERAPY. ]

PAN-DETERMINISM, 1: would mean a

willingness to start, change and stop on any and all dynamics. That is its primary definition. A further definition, also a precision definition, is: the willingness to start, change and stop two or more forces, whether or not opposed, and this could be interpreted as two or more individuals, two or more groups, two or more planets, two or more like- species, two or more universes, two or more spirits whether or not opposed. This means that one would not necessarily fight, he would not necessarily choose sides. (Dn55!, p.100) 2: defined as

determining the activities of two or more sides in a game simultaneously. (PAB84) 3. the ability to regulate the considerations of two or more

identities, whether or not opposed. (COHA, p.110) 4: full responsibility for both sides of a game. (Scn 0-8, p.119)

PAN- , [Medical Definition] 1: all : completely. <panagglutinable> 2: whole : general. <pancarditis>

DETERMINISM, a philosophical theory holding that all events are inevitable consequences of antecedent sufficient causes; often understood as denying the possibility of free will.

ADROIT, having or showing skill, cleverness, or resourcefulness in handling situations. <an adroit leader>

DUPLICITY, 1: contradictory doubleness of thought, speech, or action; especially : the belying of one's true intentions by deceptive words or action. 2: the quality or state of being double or twofold. …

[ Ed. note – see also: ABILITY,

In document BLOQUE II RESULTADOS (página 182-186)