Talk:Golden Age of Tech

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is the talk page for discussing improvements to the Golden Age of Tech article.
This is not a forum for general discussion about the article's subject.

Article policies
This article is supported by WikiProject Scientology, a collaborative effort to help develop and improve Wikipedia's coverage of Scientology.
The aim is to write neutral and well-referenced articles on Scientology-related topics.
See WikiProject Scientology and Wikipedia:Contributing FAQ.
Stub This article has been rated as Stub-Class on the Project's quality scale.
(If you rated the article please give a short summary at comments to explain the ratings and/or to identify the strengths and weaknesses.)

As the Golden Age of Tech keeps being brought up, even though this is a term mainly used by Scientologists internally, I decided it would be a good idea to have a page describing it.

[edit] IF it is going to be an article

Then it will need to state the Church of Scientology's reason for creating it as a separate idea. And, having defined what the idea of the Golden age of Technology (as manifested by the CoS) is, then it would need to tell of the context / difference between church practices under the golden age of tech and before the golden age of tech. I don't believe it is defined in the article as the article stands right now. First of all, Scientology (knowing how to know) has two paths by which a person learns. One path is standard, sit down to it and read it. This path is both an education and a training (parishoner training) which can be used in the other path. The other path is auditing (parishoner trained auditors, auditing parishoners). The Golden age of Tech simply adds a step into the training, it is an addition. Particularly it is an inserted gradient step which addresses steps in the training pathway which were large enough steps so that parishoners sometimes stumbled as they took the steps. There was a close examination by the management of a broad scope which looked for other gradient steps which might be too large and result in stumbles. The result is the golden age of technology. The article as it stands doesn't clearly present what the golden age of tech is. As I recall, the modern E-Meter was included as part of the total golden age technology, too. Terryeo 08:54, 2 January 2006 (UTC)