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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › E-meterE-meter - Wikipedia

    Hubbard set out his theory of how the E-meter works in his book Understanding the E-Meter: For the meter to be read, the tiny flow of electrical energy through the preclear (person) has to remain steady. When this tiny flow is changed the needle of the E-Meter moves. This will happen if the preclear pulls in or releases mental mass.

  2. 19 de jul. de 2018 · E-Meters are essentially ways of measuring electrodermal activity, or the ebb-and-flow of electrical activity on the surface of the skin. For scientologists,...

  3. How The E-Meter Works . The Book Introducing the E-Meter. Gives basic data on the Mark V. The E-Meter, chapter 14 of the Report of the Board of Inquiry into Scientology ("The Anderson Report", Victoria, Australia, 1965.) The E-Meter, chapter 18 of Paulette Cooper's historic book, The Scandal Of Scientology.

  4. 19 de jul. de 2018 · 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. In reality, the E-Meter...

  5. When the E-Meter is operating and a person holds the meter’s electrodes, a very tiny flow of electrical energy (about 1.5 volts—less than a flashlight battery) passes down the wires of the E-Meter leads, through the person’s body and back into the E-Meter.

  6. wiki-gateway.eudic.net › wikipedia_en › E-meterE-meter

    The E-meter is a device for displaying and/or recording the electrodermal activity (EDA) of a human being. The device is used frequently for auditing in Scientology [1] and divergent groups, [2] [3] but devices similar to the Scientology E-meter have been used for more than a century by counselors of psychology and psychoanalysis.Such devices have been used as a research tool in many human ...

  7. www.scientology.org › the-practice-of-scientology › how-the-e-meter-worksHow the E-Meter Works - Scientology

    HOW THE E-METER WORKS. When the E-Meter is operating and a person holds the meter’s electrodes, a very tiny flow of electrical energy (about 1.5 volts—less than a flashlight battery) passes down the wires of the E-Meter, through the person’s body and back into the E-Meter.