Full opinion text
OPINION MEANOR, District Judge. Plaintiffs move for partial summary judgment to enjoin the teaching of the “Science of Creative Intelligence” in the public schools of New Jersey on the ground that such teaching violates the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment. The material facts are not contested, although the parties vigorously dispute the significance of those facts. The suit involves 12 named plaintiffs and 20 named defendants. Plaintiffs include eight individuals who pay federal income taxes and are liable to pay state sales taxes and, in some cases, local property taxes. Four of the taxpayers are the parents of two children who attend one of the high schools at which the course was offered; they sue in their own behalfs and as guardians ad litem for their children. The eight taxpayers comprise an unincorporated association known as the Coalition for Religious Integrity, which also is a named plaintiff in this action. The remaining plaintiffs are a clergyman who lives in New Jersey, Americans United for Separation of Church and State, a nonprofit Maryland corporation, and Spiritual Counterfeit Project, Inc., a nonprofit California corporation. The first group of defendants are organizations and individuals who are engaged in the dissemination of the Science of Creative Intelligence and in the propagation of the technique of Transcendental Meditation. The organizational defendants are three California corporations and a division of one of the corporations. These defendants seek to disseminate SCI/TM throughout the United States, primarily through the World Plan Executive Council — United States (WPEC-US) and its divisions. At the national level, the organizational structure of a World Plan Executive Council with several divisions apparently occurs in a number of countries throughout the world. See Jaryis Deposition at 786. International organizations devoted to the propagation of SCI/TM exist. The structure of the “international level” is changing and the relationship between the international and national organizations is nebulous. The organizations, primarily under the auspices of the WPECs throughout the world, are implementing a “World Plan” which “is in progress to train one teacher of the Science of Creative Intelligence for every one thousand people in all parts of the globe.” Fundamentals of Progress, Exhibit A attached to Jarvis Affidavit, at 2. The “World Plan” has seven stated goals: ' (1) To develop the full potential of the individual; (2) To improve governmental achievements; (3) To realize the highest ideal of education; (4) To eliminate the age-old problem of crime and all behavior that brings unhappiness to the family of man; (5) To maximize the intelligent use of the environment; (6) To bring fulfillment to the economic aspirations of individuals and society; (7) To achieve the spiritual goals of mankind in this generation. Id. The named organizational defendants presumably are entrusted with implementing the “World Plan” within the United States. The individual defendants are officers of these corporations, a person who taught the SCI/TM course in New Jersey high schools, and Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, the principal deviser of the Science of Creative Intelligence and primary exponent of Transcendental Meditation. The five boards of education which arranged for the teaching of the SCI/TM course at high schools within their jurisdictions also are named as defendants. The New Jersey Department of Education and the New Jersey Board of Education, as well as the Commissioner of Education, an individual employee of the Department of Education, and the State of New Jersey itself are sued. In addition, the United States Department of Health, Education and Welfare and the United States are named as defendants. Plaintiffs base their motion for partial summary judgment on the textbook used in the New Jersey high schools, a ceremony at which attendance by the student is mandatory, the deposition testimony of the president of the WPEC-US, the deposition testimony of two people who taught the SCI/TM course in four of the five high schools at which the course was offered, and a one-page affidavit of a clergyman. In opposing the motion for partial summary judgment, defendants rely on the same deposition testimony relied upon by plaintiffs and the deposition testimony of three clergymen-practitioners of the TM technique and the deposition testimony of an employee of the United States Office of Education. In addition, defendants rely on affidavits of the president of the WPECUS, of two teachers of the SCI/TM course in New Jersey high schools, of a linguist, of two professors of religion, and of eleven New Jersey high school students who were enrolled in the SCI/TM course. Transcendental Meditation, briefly stated, is a technique of meditation in which the meditator contemplates a meaningless sound. Defendants have placed in the record the result of tests which purport to show that a meditator undergoes certain physiological changes during meditation. Other tests purport to show that practitioners of the technique will develop permanent changes in their physiologies, e. g., lowered heart rate and lowered breathing rate. The “Science of Creative Intelligence” is a theory, devised or promulgated primarily by defendant Yogi, v/hich purports to explain what occurs within a meditator’s mind during meditation and to describe an entity or concept which defendants call “creative intelligence.” The “Science of Creative Intelligence” posits that during transcendental meditation a meditator reverses the process through which thought develops until the meditator’s mind reaches the entity, or “field of life,” called “the field of pure creative intelligence,” which is at the source of thought, according to the World Plan defendants. The textbook used in the New Jersey high schools states the above, but devotes most of its pages to a description of the nature and qualities of the entity called “creative intelligence.” As stated above, the SCI/TM course was offered as an elective course at five high schools in New Jersey during the 1975-76 academic year. The students at all five high schools used the same textbook and received their mantras, or sound aids, at identical ceremonies. The SCI/TM course was taught four or five days a week by teachers trained by the World Plan defendants. The teachers were paid by the WPEC-US and were not employed by any of the five defendant school boards nor certified by the State Board of Examiners. Aaron Deposition at 621. The SCI/TM course was the only course taught by the SCI/TM teachers. The undisputed material facts upon which plaintiffs rely and from which plaintiffs assert that the only conclusion possible is that teaching of the SCI/TM course violates the establishment of religion clauses of both the United States and New Jersey constitutions are the textbook and the puja used in the course. THE TEXTBOOK The “Science of Creative Intelligence” as a course of study had its genesis in 1972 when “Maharishi, in conjunction with experts in education and science, developed a structure of teaching which was labeled the Science of Creative Intelligence.” Jarvis Deposition at 913. As stated above, the “Science of Creative Intelligence” posits that during the practice of Transcendental Meditation the meditator’s mind moves from a conscious thought to the source of thought, where the mind comes in contact with the unmanifest and unbounded field of pure creative intelligence, T at 29, which is present, among other places, within every human being. T at 26. Defendants state that attainment of contact with the field of pure creative intelligence places the meditator in a “fourth state of consciousness” known as “restful alertness” or “transcendental consciousness.” T at 30. The textbook states that during TM the meditator experiences the field of pure creative intelligence directly. T at 29. Contact with the field of pure creative intelligence infuses the meditator’s mind both with creativity, T at 26, and with “all the qualities of creative intelligence,” T at 38, clarifies and strengthens the meditator’s thoughts, T at 32, expands the meditator’s perceptions, T at 30, and “refines” the meditator’s nervous system, Jarvis Deposition at 866a. Regular practice of TM will “refine” the meditator’s nervous system further so that the expanded perceptions experienced during TM will carry over into the meditator’s conscious thoughts and activities. T at 38, 86. Regular practice of TM may lead the meditator to the situation in which the meditator’s mind is infused with the “expanded awareness” and perceptions that he experiences while meditating during waking, sleeping, and dreaming; this state is called “cosmic consciousness,” or “the fifth state of consciousness.” T at 86. See Jarvis Deposition at 866b. The textbook states that “[t]he field of pure creative intelligence is the home of all qualities that constitute the universe,” T at 292; “all the qualities of which we can conceive are present in the unmanifest field of pure creative intelligence.” T at 40. The field of pure creative intelligence also is the source of thought. T at 26, and “a field of unlimited energy, intelligence and happiness.” T at 56. The field of pure creative intelligence also is “unbounded.” T at 24, and “an inexhaustible reservoir of energy and intelligence, the fountainhead of all currents of creative intelligence.” T at 26. The textbook defines “creative intelligence” as “that impelling force which continually gives rise to new expressions of life and order, progressive and evolutionary in nature.” T at 20. Thus creative intelligence is a force which springs from the field of pure creative intelligence, e. g., T at 26, which is the source of everything in the universe, e. g., T at 26, 40, 260. Creative intelligence, like the unbounded field of pure creative intelligence, possesses all the qualities that can be conceived of: “Every quality that is ever expressed in creation is the expression of creative intelligence.” T at 40. The textbook specifically lists and discusses fifty “qualities of creative intelligence.” “The qualities of creative intelligence can be seen as currents of consciousness arising from the field of pure consciousness, the field of pure creative intelligence.” T at 40. The unbounded field of pure creative intelligence is unmanifest and silent. E. g., T at 29, 40. Creative intelligence ranges from the unmanifest field of pure creative intelligence to its manifestations in the universe. T at 22. Manifestations of creative intelligence include everything. “From the individual to the universe, all that we see is the display of creative intelligence.” T at 240. The textbook devotes 225 pages to the discussion of fifty specific “qualities of creative intelligence.” The textbook states that “[w]hen the conscious mind reaches the field of pure creative intelligence, it becomes saturated with all qualities of creative intelligence . . . .” T at 38. The fifty qualities of creative intelligence which are discussed in the textbook are progress, evolution, purposefulness, intelligence, order, beauty, precision, truth, dynamism, rest, stability, adaptability, gentleness, strength, efficiency, kindness, independence, helpfulness, vigilance, resourcefulness, spontaneity, analysis, synthesis, decisiveness, sweetness, universality, harmony, diversity, joy or happiness, life or liveliness, insight, foresight, thoughtfulness, specificity, expansiveness, courage, generosity, economy, love, justice, cleanliness, purity, freedom, responsibility, creativity, eternity, practicality, success, holism, and fulfillment. The textbook states that during meditation, the meditator’s mind becomes saturated with all qualities of creative intelligence, and then, in whatev- | er area of living these qualities are needled, they express themselves more. That is why when a man meditates, he becomes more efficient in every field of thinking and decision-making, more capable in any undertaking he may choose. Wherever he puts his attention, he begins to display more expressed values of creative intelligence. One point that should be emphasized is that the qualities of creative intelligence develop very naturally and spontaneously through regular contact with the field of pure creative intelligence. We should never try to exhibit qualities of creative intelligence, because their expression must be spontaneous. Every breath of life is spontaneously under the control of creative intelligence, and therefore any trying from our side can only result in stress and strain. Life must be lived very spontaneously, very naturally. We experience in our meditation how very naturally the mind arrives at the goal of all progress, unbounded awareness. We know from our experience how the slightest effort on our part not only stops progress but produces stress. Therefore, we should never try to imitate any quality of creative intelligence. We simply meditate and allow all the qualities of creative intelligence to be displayed spontaneously in our thinking and action. T at 38. The textbook thus states that a person attains the qualities of creative intelligence, e. g., truthfulness, efficiency, freedom, through regular contact with the field of pure creative intelligence during the practice of Transcendental Meditation. The process is automatic: “We simply meditate and allow all the qualities of creative intelligence to be displayed spontaneously in our thinking and action.” Statements of the automatic nature of the process of infusing an individual with all the qualities of creative intelligence through Transcendental Meditation appear throughout the textbook. E. g., T at 49, 260. The textbook states that Transcendental Meditation is not only the automatic means of attaining all the qualities of creative intelligence, but also is the exclusive manner of obtaining all the qualities of creative intelligence. See T at 94,132, 217, 262. In this connection, the above-quoted passage states that “[w]e should never try to exhibit qualities of creative intelligence, because their expression must be spontaneous.” Since these qualities must be expressed spontaneously and since spontaneous expression of these qualities is developed only through the practice of Transcendental Meditation, it follows that “we should never try to imitate any quality of creative intelligence.” The textbook thus appears to indicate that a person should never consciously strive to be kind, truthful, brave, independent, successful, etc. Rather, “[w]e simply meditate and allow all the qualities of creative intelligence to be displayed spontaneously in our thinking and action.” T at 38. The textbook states that the field of pure creative intelligence is the source of everything. For example, the textbook states that the field of pure creative intelligence “is the very source of life-energy, the reservoir of wisdom, the origin of all power in nature, and the fountainhead of all success in the world.” T at 98. The textbook states that the field of pure creative intelligence “is the home of all qualities that we can conceive of in the fields of knowledge and action, existence and evolution.” T at 260. “The field of pure creative intelligence is the home of all qualities that constitute the universe.” T at 292. “[EJverything in creation is nothing other than the expression of unmanifest creative intelligence.” T at 260. “[E]very quality that is ever expressed in creation is the expression of creative intelligence.” T at 40. “[A]ll aspects of life [are] all manifestations of unmanifest creative intelligence.” T at 262. “The entire field of life, 'from the individual to the cosmos, is nothing but the expression of never-changing pure creative intelligence in the relative ever-changing expressions of life.” T at 92. The field of pure creative intelligence “is at the basis of the ‘comprehensive, orderly integrity of the universe.’ ” T at 174, quoting from a speech given by Maharishi Mahesh Yogi in 1971. The textbook is replete with statements that pure creative intelligence is “the basis of life” or “at the basis of life.” E. g., T at 78,107,129,188, 242, 245, 260, 264, 271. For example, the textbook states that the field of pure creative intelligence is “the universal basis of life.” T at 188,129. The textbook also indicates that pure creative intelligence is “the source, course, and goal of all existence.” T at 171. The citations to the textbook listed above by no means form an exhaustive list of statements attributing the source of everything to the field of pure creative intelligence. Among other qualities specifically mentioned as having their source in the field of pure creative intelligence are thought, e. g., T at 26, 30, 62, 162, 242, activity, T at 32, 102, 192, feelings, T at 102, and “all cultural traditions and values,” T at 245. This list also is not exhaustive of the specific qualities which the textbook states have their source in the field of pure creative intelligence. Defendant Jarvis, president of World Plan Executive Council — United States, agreed in deposition testimony that pure creative intelligence is the source of all creation, but stated that “[i]t is the source in that it is the ultimate constituent.” Jarvis Deposition at 1050. Defendant Jarvis thus attributed a passive role to the entity of “level of life,” Jarvis Deposition at 1019, called pure creative intelligence. As stated in the textbook and reiterated by defendant Jarvis, the field of pure creative intelligence is the source of creative intelligence, which possesses all the qualities of pure creative intelligence. E. g., T at 40; Jarvis Deposition at 1036. Creative intelligence is the “impelling life force,” T at 86, which expresses all the qualities in the universe, which are contained in the field of pure creative intelligence. Creative intelligence ranges from its source in the unmanifest field of creative intelligence to activity in all manifest aspects of life. See T at 20. Creative intelligence is coextensive with the field of pure creative intelligence in the sense that both the field of pure creative intelligence and creative intelligence contain “all the qualities of which we can conceive.” T at 260. Creative intelligence manifests itself in all aspects of the universe while the field of pure creative intelligence. remains always unmanifest, at the core of everything in the universe. T at 292. Creative intelligence thus can be seen as an active extension or projection of the field of pure creative intelligence. While the field of pure creative intelligence is described as silent, nonchanging, and immovable, the textbook describes creative intelligence as perpetually active in all aspects of the universe. In scores of places, the textbook ascribes activity to creative intelligence, and to qualities of creative intelligence. Identifying creative intelligence as “this impelling life force,” T at 86, the textbook later states that creative intelligence “guides and sustains every aspect of the universe.” T at 174. The textbook asserts that “the activity of nature is conducted by creative intelligence.” T at 114. “Every breath of life is spontaneously under the control of creative intelligence . .” T at 38. “Creative intelligence is always giving an evolutionary direction to our thoughts, feelings, and actions.” T at 52. “Creative intelligence is always gracefully arranging the parts of our life to form a pleasing whole.” T at 62. “We discover that the creative intelligence that structures the blueprint of life in our genes also regulates the movements of the far-distant galaxies and inspires a musician to give expression to the fullness of life.” T at 171. The textbook refers to the “activating power of creative intelligence,” T at 60, 65, to the “inherent activity” of creative intelligence, T at 82, and to the “endless creative activity of creative intelligence,” T at 240, and states that creative intelligence “perpetually creates.” T at 242. “Creative intelligence is always acting, ever vigilant to unfold its unbounded resources in every particle of existence.” T at 126, see, e. g,, T at 110, 128. “Creative intelligence has structured the body in a manner that allows unbounded awareness to display its full value and enjoy the play of life.” T at 224. “It is the love of a mother for her children that inspires her to greatness. Creative intelligence instills unbounded love in her, and this spontaneously generates the limitless creativity and energy needed for all her activities.” T at 270. “Creative intelligence is comforting. It provides a family to soothe and nourish us.” T at 274. “Creative intelligence is life-supporting. It creates a society that strengthens and upholds the fullness of life in each of its members.” T at 282. In addition to the ascription of activity to creative intelligence, anthropomorphism pervades the textbook’s description of creative intelligence. Twenty-five of the textbook’s thirty-two lessons begin with the assertion that creative intelligence possesses certain qualities. For example, “Creative intelligence is thoughtful and spontaneous,” T at 160, “Creative intelligence is loving and just,” T at 214, “Creative intelligence is decisive and sweet,” T at 178, “Creative intelligence is precise and truthful,” T at 72, “Creative intelligence is independent and helpful,” T at 250. While all the qualities attributed to creative intelligence by the textbook are not exclusively human characteristics, some of them are. For example, neither an animal nor a plant nor an inorganic element nor a law of nature could be said to be thoughtful, just, and truthful. The textbook also anthropomorphizes creative intelligence in many other statements. For example, the textbook states that “[e]ven when we are asleep, creative intelligence is ayrake, working to refresh us.” T at 128. Among the other characteristics of creative intelligence is omnipotence. In addition to stating repeatedly that “everything in creation is nothing other than the expression of unmanifest creative intelligence,” T at 260; see, e. g., T at 92, the textbook states that the field of pure creative intelligence is “the origin of all power in nature.” T at 98, and that “the activity of nature is conducted by creative intelligence.” T at 114. The textbook speaks of “the unlimited power of creative intelligence.” T at 108. On the same page, the textbook states that creative intelligence “accomplishes all great things with no effort.” Id. A few pages later, the textbook states that “creative intelligence is able to accomplish everything effortlessly by remaining behind the scenes of relative life.” T at 118. The textbook states that creative intelligence is self-sufficient and self-illuminating. T at 122, 118. Although self-sufficiency and self-illumination are not necessarily aspects of omnipotence, the context of ultimateness and universality in which the textbook speaks of creative intelligence — “universal existence,” T at 292 — eliminates all possible conclusions except that the self-sufficiency and self-illumination of creative intelligence is absolute and all-encompassing. The textbook refers to the field of pure creative intelligence as “the universal basis of all knowledge,” T at 189, “the home of all knowledge,” T at 149, 189, and “the stable basis of all knowledge.” T at 97. The textbook asserts that creative intelligence “uphold[s] all the different fields of knowledge and every expression of life.” T at 172. The textbook states that the activity of nature is conducted by creative intelligence, by that comprehensive, unbounded intelligence, by that enormous computer which takes into account all possible avenues in designing a single channel of action. Because every activity of nature is taken into account and is guided by creative intelligence, nature takes the shortest course.” T at 114. It is true, as pointed out by defendants’ counsel at oral argument, that a mundane computer is not omniscient because it contains only that data which has been fed into it. A self-activating computer which is “the home of all knowledge,” however, is omniscient by definition. The textbook also asserts that the field of pure creative intelligence is “the reservoir of wisdom.” T at 98 (emphasis supplied). Creative intelligence is omnipresent, according to the textbook. Attestations of the omnipresence of creative intelligence appear scores of times throughout the textbook. For example, in “Lesson 1” the textbook states that “creative intelligence is present everywhere, within us as well as outside us.” T at 23. In the central section of the textbook appears the following passage: Creative intelligence is universal and specific. * * * * * * It is present in all forms, words, smells, tastes, and objects of touch. In all objects of experience, in all senses of perception and organs of action, in every phenomenon, in the doer and the work done, in all directions — north, south, east, and west — in all times — past, present, and future — it is uniformly present. In front of man, behind him, to the left and right of him, in him — everywhere, and under all circumstances, creative intelligence is permeating everything.” T at 186. Four pages from the end of the textbook, the book states that “creative intelligence is present everywhere, deep within everything as well as on the surface.” T at 292. Creative intelligence is eternal, according to the textbook. The textbook states that the field of creative intelligence “has existed for all times. It is, always has been, and always will be the nonchanging basis of life, the fountainhead of all currents of creativity.” T at 242. The textbook asserts that creative intelligence has existed “in all times — past, present, and future . . .” T at 186. The textbook asserts: From the individual to the universe, all that we see is the display of creative intelligence. It is an all-time reality; it goes on and on. And because it is creative, it keeps on creating. In its perpetual play the creation goes on, on the steps of progress. There is no end to it. T at 240. The textbook states repeatedly that creative intelligence is both unmanifest or unseen, e. g., T at 30, 41, 107, 132, 252, 295, and unbounded or illimitable or infinite, e. g., T at 24, 44, 74, 100, 126, 157, 180, 208, 244. The textbook frequently uses synonyms for creative intelligence and for the field of pure creative intelligence. For example, the textbook refers to the field of pure creative intelligence as “pure intelligence.” T at 257. In one passage the textbook refers to the field of pure creative intelligence first as “pure intelligence” and in the following line of type as “intelligence.” T at 82. Numerous additional references to the field of pure creative intelligence as simply “intelligence” appear throughout the textbook. E. g., T at 56, 60, 62, 89,114,157, 172. The textbook also refers to the field of pure creative intelligence as “the unbounded reservoir of intelligence.” T at 102. The field of pure creative intelligence alternatively is called “the field of unlimited happiness,” T at 32, 56, and “the unbounded ocean of bliss,” T at 152; see T at 80, and “that field of unbounded bliss-consciousness,” T at 122. The field of pure creative intelligence is “a field of unbounded happiness.” T at 162. The textbook gives creative intelligence the synonym “bliss-consciousness." E. g., T at 55, 144. During the practice of Transcendental Meditation, bliss-consciousness, or creative intelligence, is said to “infuse” and “saturate" the meditator’s mind. T at 38, 55, 56, 145, 180, 221; see, e. g., T at 95. The textbook synonymously refers to the field of pure creative intelligence as “universal existence,” T at 292, and “perfection of existence,” T at 118. The textbook labels the unmanifest field of pure creative intelligence as “the most fundamental field of life.” The textbook describes the field of pure creative intelligence as “the unmanifest center of life,” T at 36, “the unmanifest field of life,” T at 41, “the nonchanging basis of life,” e. g., T at 74, 98, “the universal basis of life,” T at 188-89, 129, “the wholeness of life,” e. g., T at 178, 262, “the holistic field of life,” T at 262, “the holistic basis of life,” T at 264. The field of pure creative intelligence repeatedly is called the “basis of life,” e. g., T at 245, 107, and the textbook uses “the source of life” as a synonym for the field of pure creative intelligence. See T at 78. See also Jarvis Deposition at 1035. Another aspect of the field of pure creative intelligence is that it is “full.” The textbook uses the word “fullness” as a synonym for the field of pure creative intelligence. For example, the textbook states that “[t]he fullness from which creativity begins is the unmanifest aspect of intelligence. From that fullness the waves of creative intelligence arise and dance into manifestation.” T at 22. In other sections of the book, the textbook states that creativity begins in the field of pure creative intelligence and that the waves or currents of creative intelligence also arise from the field of pure creative intelligence. E. g., T at 121, 242. The textbook, especially in the first lesson, states repeatedly that “fullness is the source, course, and goal of existence and progress.” E. g., T at 22 (emphasis in original). The textbook later equates “the unbounded wholeness of pure creative intelligence” with “the source, course, and goal of all existence.” T at 171. The textbook equates “the goal of all growth and progress” with “the unbounded field of pure creative intelligence.” T at 44. The subtitle for Lesson 27 is “Applying Fullness for Success in Life.” T at 250. The text of Lesson 27 speaks of applying the field of pure creative intelligence for success in life, thus substituting that phrase for the word “fullness.”: When the unmanifest field of pure creative intelligence is incorporated in our awareness through regular practice of Transcendental Meditation, it can be practically applied in all phases of relative life; so we spontaneously succeed in every undertaking. T at 252. Another instance of synonymous use of “fullness” and “the field of pure creative intelligence” occurs when the textbook refers to both terms as the “nature of life.” In Lesson 7, the textbook states that during the practice of Transcendental Meditation “we experience the true nonchanging nature of life.” T at 74. In Lesson 27, the textbook states that “the nature of life is fullness, bliss-consciousness . . . .” T at 252. The textbook states that the field of pure creative intelligence is perfect: “The field of pure creative intelligence is self-sufficient. It is fullness of life, perfection of existence, and therefore unattached to anything in the relative field, free from the influence of action.” T at 118. “[N]o sorrow can enter bliss-consciousness, nor can bliss-consciousness know any gain greater than itself.” T at 144. The field of pure creative intelligence of course is pure and possesses all qualities in their pure form. The textbook speaks of certain goals of man and nature. For example, the textbook teaches that “the goal of life [is] perceiving the fullness of life in the waves of practical living.” T at 250. The “living of the fullness of life” is the “ultimate success” of an individual. T at 257. The field of pure creative intelligence is the “goal of all existence,” as well as its source. T at 171. The textbook instructs that the “true status” of each individual’s mind “is unbounded bliss-consciousness.” T at 55. If bliss-consciousness “could become permanently established in the mind, the mind would have accomplished its ultimate purpose . . . Id. Establishing bliss-consciousness in the mind of course occurs only through the practice of Transcendental Meditation. “The purpose of man’s life is to gain a state of unlimited energy, intelligence, power, creativity, and bliss.” T at 52. If this is the purpose of man’s life, how can this purpose be fulfilled? The textbook answers four pages later by stating that this purpose can be fulfilled by contacting the field of pure creative intelligence, T at 56, which is “the inexhaustible fountainhead of energy, creativity, intelligence, and happiness,” T at 121, and “the origin of all power in nature.” T at 98. It is “the goal of all progress,” T at 44, and “[t]he goal of all activity.” T at 52. The textbook frequently states that contact with the field of pure creative intelligence is the exclusive means of obtaining fulfillment. For example, “[t]he experience of the holistic field of pure creative intelligence is an experience of wholeness, fullness, which alone can bring fulfillment to every phase of life.” T at 260. Continuing in the same vein, the textbook states: Our life has so many aspects. All the diverse aspects cannot possibly be attended to individually; fullness of life cannot be gained by amending the parts. What we can do is take care of the holistic value of creation, which lies in the unmanifest field of pure creative intelligence, by opening our awareness to it through Transcendental Meditation. T at 262. A fundamental teaching of the textbook is the existence of an unmanifest or uncreated level of life: “LIFE RANGES FROM GROSS TO SUBTLE TO UNMANIFEST.” T at 152; see, e. g., T at 41. The textbook explains: We know from physics that physical existence is composed of many different layers. Beyond the gross surface level of the object are increasingly subtle layers of existence, one within the other — molecular, atomic, subatomic. Beyond the subtlest level, of the object is the unmanifest, unbounded value of the object. T at 152. The unmanifest level of life is the field of pure creative intelligence: “The ultimate reality of every object is unmanifest creative intelligence.” T at 154. In summary, the textbook teaches that there exists an unmanifest or uncreated field of life which is illimitable or unbounded or infinite. This field of life is present everywhere, both within and without everything and every abstraction in the universe. This field of life is active, has “unlimited power,” and encompasses all knowledge. This field of life is pure and perfect. Synonyms for this field of life are “perfection of existence,” bliss, and intelligence. This field of life is the field of pure love, see T at 218, pure truth, see T at 76, and pure justice, see T at 220. This field of being has always existed. Defendants seek to refute the statements in the textbook with conclusional assertions in affidavits and in their briefs the substance of which can be encapsulated thus: no matter what statements appear in the textbook, those statements are “not intended or understood as an [sic] religion, religious study or study of God.” Jarvis Affidavit ¶ 27. Although defendants’ counsel stated at oral argument that he would not call the Science of Creative Intelligence either a philosophy or a science or a religion, defendants’ affidavits and brief argue and state that the Science of Creative Intelligence is a “philosophical study,” Jarvis Affidavit ¶ 25, or “essays in philosophy,” Harned Affidavit ¶27; see Db at 24. Based on this assertion, defendants seek to dismiss Creative Intelligence as merely “a philosophical idea,” Harned Affidavit ¶ 28, or a “philosophic concept,” Jarvis Affidavit ¶ 46 and Db at 29. The textbook directly and explicitly contradicts these statements: “Creative intelligence is not just an abstract concept or idea; it is a concrete reality that can be practically applied to bring success and fulfillment to every phase of living.” T at 250. In their papers in opposition to plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment, defendants also select certain descriptions of creative intelligence from the textbook and attempt to refute their obvious meanings. Some of these attempted refutations are supported by imprecise and unpersuasive analogies; others stand as bald assertions of belief by the affiants. For example, the textbook states that creative intelligence “guides and sustains every aspect of the universe.” T at 174. Defendants state: Creative intelligence is not understood or taught as sustainer of the universe in a religious sense.- It “guides and sustains” in a scientific-philosophic sense, much in the same manner that gravity guides and sustains the path of the planets. Jarvis Affidavit ¶ 36. The weakness of the analogy requires little comment. Unlike creative intelligence, gravity is not, inter alia, the source of life-energy, the home of all knowledge and wisdom, and the origin of all power in nature. See T at 98, 149. Unlike creative intelligence, gravity is not kind, or adaptable or practical; nor is gravity an ocean of love. T at 214, 216. Furthermore, gravity does not control everything in the manner in which the textbook states that creative intelligence does. For example, “the activity of nature is conducted by creative intelligence . . .” T at 114. “Every breath of life is spontaneously under the control of creative intelligence . . . .” T at 38. The textbook states that The activity of nature is conducted by creative intelligence, by that comprehensive, unbounded intelligence, by that enormous computer which takes into account all possible avenues in designing a single channel of action. T at 114. Plaintiffs contend that this statement and a number of others in the textbook indicate that creative intelligence is “the determining force of the universe.” Defendants reply: Nor is creative intelligence the determining force in the universe. It may be said to conduct “the activity of nature” in the same way that the DNA molecule conducts growth in the individual and may be likened to an “enormous computer.” Jarvis Affidavit ¶ 37. Some of the problems with this weak analogy are similar to those encountered in the previous analogy. There is no reason to believe that DNA molecules are kind or that DNA molecules are an ocean of love or that DNA molecules are “the ultimate reality” of every object, movement, and activity. See T at 154, 192. Moreover, DNA molecules are tangible; they are not the product of someone’s imagination or belief, i. e., they are not “philosophic concepts” or “philosophical ideas.” In addition, if DNA molecules can be said to contain the code or blueprint for the development of individual organisms, the textbook teaches that creative intelligence places that blueprint there: “the creative intelligence that structures the blueprint of life in our genes also regulates the movements of the far-distant galaxies . . .” T at 171. Not only does creative intelligence structure “the blueprint of life in our genes,” but also “[creative intelligence has structured the [human] body . . . .” T at 224. Defendants state that “bliss-consciousness” is not intended or understood as a religious concept; rather it is merely a term to characterize experiences accompanying a specific level of personal growth.” Jarvis Affidavit ¶ 38. The textbook’s use of the term “bliss-consciousness” directly contradicts this definition of “bliss-consciousness.” At a number of points, the textbook uses “bliss-consciousness” as synonymous with creative intelligence. For example, “[a]s creative intelligence, bliss-consciousness, becomes more infused in the conscious mind, every object becomes more charming, because we are able to perceive more of its full value.” T at 55. Again, the textbook states that “[w]e know that the true nature of the self is unbounded pure creative intelligence, bliss-consciousness — that most self-sufficient field of life.” T at 121. Still another example is the following quotation: In cosmic consciousness a person’s whole life is permeated by the light of pure creative intelligence. . . . He is established on that level of existence which is deep within everything — that field of unbounded bliss-consciousness which is self-sufficient and self-illuminating. T at 122. Of course, “that level of existence which is deep within everything” is referred to elsewhere in the textbook as the field of pure creative intelligence. See, e. g., T at 292. Defendants state: The mere fact that qualities such as beauty, creativity, intelligence and orderliness, are associated with creative intelligence does not make creative intelligence the source of aesthetic values. A Rembrandt painting can be described using similar values, yet it is not the source of aesthetic values in a religious sense. Jarvis Affidavit ¶39. To say that these qualities are merely “associated with creative intelligence” states a far more modest position than that taken by the textbook. According to the textbook, the field of pure creative intelligence is the “home” of all of these qualities as well as “the home of all qualities that constitute the universe.” E. g., T at 292. The field of pure creative intelligence and creative intelligence possess these qualities in their pure and perfect forms. For example, the textbook states that the field of pure creative intelligence is “the field of perfect orderliness.” T at 63. The textbook also states the field of pure creative intelligence is “the source of all creativity.” T at 242. The implicit analogy to a Rembrandt painting is not well drawn. Surely no one would suggest that a Rembrandt painting is “the source of all creativity,” as the field of pure creative intelligence is said to be. Creativity, beauty, intelligence, and orderliness existed long before Rembrandt put brush to canvas. Neither has any Rembrandt painting “existed for all times,” as creative intelligence has; nor has any Rembrandt painting all the other qualities attributed by the textbook to creative intelligence. Finally and most obviously, a Rembrandt painting is a specific and tangible object, not an abstraction produced by belief or imagination. Defendants admit that creative intelligence is eternal and state that “[pjurely secular ideas and principles, such as freedom and the concepts of truth and justice, are eternal and ‘go on and on,’ devoid of religious connotations.” Jarvis Affidavit ¶ 42. As with defendants’ other analogies, one of the weaknesses with this one is that freedom, truth, and justice do not have the other characteristics attributed to creative intelligence by the textbook. For example, neither freedom nor truth nor justice is a “concrete reality,” T at 250, which “can be contacted,” T at 13, and which “accomplishes all great things with no effort.” T at 108. The textbook applies all three of the quotations to creative intelligence. Furthermore, the textbook states that freedom, truth, and justice are merely three of the multitude of qualities contained within the field of pure creative intelligence. E. g., “justice is a quality of creative intelligence.” T at 220; see, e. g., T at 72-81, T at 118-125, T at 214-221. Freedom, truth, and justice thus can be seen as eternal as aspects of creative intelligence just as a religious person could see these three concepts as being eternal as aspects of God. Indeed, a person who believes in the existences of both God and creative intelligence theoretically could see creative intelligence as an aspect of God. To an atheist, however, creative intelligence must take on the role of an ultimate essence or supreme being. While an atheist might be able to accept statements that freedom, truth, and justice all were eternal concepts with no relation to God, acceptance of the eternal existence of the field of pure creative intelligence or of creative intelligence, with all its extraordinary characteristics, would require the belief in an essence or being beyond human existence. Defendants contend that creative intelligence is not all-powerful: “Creative intelligence is understood as ‘the origin of all power’ in the sense that the stability of mind and body which results from the practice of the TM technique, enables a person to be healthier, to exercise better judgment and thereby be more powerful.” This statement differs substantially through understatement and truncation of the relevant textbook quotation from that which is stated in the textbook. The textbook asserts that the field of pure creative intelligence is “the origin of all power in nature.” T at 98. Defendants’ statement, by truncating the quotation from the textbook, implies that creative intelligence is the origin of all power only in an individual. The textbook, however, speaks of creative intelligence in terms of universality. E. g., T at 126,188-89. In the entire phrase of which defendants quote only a part, the textbook asserts that the field of pure creative intelligence is “the origin of all power in nature.” T at 98. The textbook repeatedly refers to “the unlimited power of creative intelligence,” T at 108, and “the unbounded power of creative intelligence,” T at 110. The textbook states that creative intelligence conducts the activity of nature, T at 114, including the structuring of the human body, T at 224, and the structuring of the blueprint of each individual’s life in his or her genes, T at 171. The textbook states that creative intelligence “can permeate anything,” T at 107, “accomplishes all great things with no •effort,” T at 108, and “is able to accomplish everything effortlessly,” T at 118. Creative intelligence is absolutely self-sufficient and self-illuminating, T at 121-22, has “unbounded resources,” T at 126, and can know no gain greater than itself, T at 144. Defendants also contend that [wjhile the textbook attempts to describe certain qualities of creative intelligence, it contains nothing intended or understood as inherently religious. Thus, attributes such as loving, just, gentle, strong, efficient, kind, clean, purifying, “a person of full heart,” self-sustaining and self-sufficient, are simply human qualities that develop as a result of personal growth. Jarvis Affidavit ¶41. These statements again diverge substantially from what is stated in the textbook. While it may be true that these qualities do develop in an individual as a result of personal growth, the textbook attributes these “simply human qualities,” with the exception of “a person of full heart,” to a nonhuman, unmanifest, uncreated “concrete reality,” T at 250; e. g., T at 214-221, 100-107, 108-117, 222-229. Creative intelligence not only is loving, just, gentle, strong, efficient, kind, clean, purifying, and self-sufficient, but also possesses these qualities, and all other qualities in the universe, e. g., T at 36, 292, in their pure and infinite or “unbounded” states. Defendants state that [t]he fact that the textbook mentions that creative intelligence is “the basis of all growth and progress” does not warrant the inference that it is the Creator of the universe. Rather, it is the basis of all growth and progress in a similar sense that physics considers matter and energy to be the basic elements of everything. In addition, concepts such as energy and gravity go “on and on;” however, they are not understood as creators of the universe. Jarvis Affidavit ¶ 35. Once again, defendants’ statements differ substantially from what is stated in the textbook and their analogy is poorly drawn and unpersuasive. While the textbook does state that “[cjreative intelligence is at the basis of all growth and progress,” T at 19, this statement must be read in conjunction with the many other assertions in the textbook concerning creative intelligence. The textbook states that creative intelligence is the source of “all existence.” T at 171. Creative intelligence is the eternal, “nonchanging basis of life,” T at 242, and “the source of all creativity.” T at 243. The laws of nature themselves, “which are directly responsible for the creation, maintenance, and evolution of everything in the universe,” T at 242, are merely “currents of creative intelligence.” T at 110. Creative intelligence uses these laws of nature, or currents of creative intelligence, when creative intelligence creates the manifest universe: “When we investigate more closely the mechanics of manifestation, we find that creative intelligence creates by means of certain traditions, certain specific laws, which themselves are nonchanging. There are innumerable laws of nature functioning at every level of life . .” T at 242. “The endless creative activity of creative intelligence takes place within the traditional structure of the laws of nature and is ultimately founded on the most fundamental field of life — the unmanifest field of pure creative intelligence.” T at 240. The textbook instructs that “everything in creation is nothing other than the expression of unmanifest creative intelligence . . . .” T at 260. Creative intelligence “structures the blueprint of life in our genes. . . . ” T at 171. According to the textbook, “[t]he ultimate reality of every object is unmanifest creative intelligence. Every object, every expressed value in the phenomenal world, is an expression of the nonexpressed, unbounded value of creative intelligence.” T at 154. Creative intelligence thus is not merely “the basis of all growth and progress,” but also is the eternal, nonehanging “source of all creativity and the source of ‘all existence;’ ” the textbook continues this theme by stating that “everything in creation is nothing other than the expression of unmanifest creative intelligence . . . T at 260. Defendants’ attempt at analogizing creative intelligence to matter and energy, Jarvis Affidavit ¶ 35, is as weak and unpersuasive as defendants’ previously discussed analogies and comparisons. Neither matter nor energy has more than the tiniest fraction of the characteristics of creative intelligence. Neither matter nor energy is bliss-consciousness or unbounded awareness or a field of “unlimited power, energy, existence, intelligence, peace, and happiness,” as is creative intelligence, according to the textbook. E. g., T at 121, 262, 102. Neither matter nor energy possess the “simply human qualities,” Jarvis Affidavit ¶41, of creative intelligence. Neither matter nor energy engages in the variegated activities which are conducted by creative intelligence. For example, neither matter nor energy “is always unfolding greater levels of happiness within us,” nor are they “always refining our thinking, perception, and action to give clear, truthful expression to the nature of life,” as creative intelligence does, to name but a couple of the multitude of activities attributed to creative intelligence by the textbook. T at 144, 74. Defendants also state that “[ejlectricity, the wheel, the printing press and water can each be considered to be at the basis of all growth and progress within different contexts, yet none can properly be considered the Creator of the Universe.” Harned Affidavit ¶ 28. In this statement, defendants passingly mention a crucial consideration, which is the obvious observation that words take their meaning from the context in which they are used. The textbook speaks of creative intelligence only in terms of universality and illimitability. For example, the textbook states that creative intelligence “expresses itself throughout the entire universe. Creative intelligence is always acting, ever vigilant to unfold its unbounded resources in every particle of existence.” T at 126. The textbook repeatedly states that creative intelligence is “the universal basis of life,” e. g., T at 189, and “the home of all qualities that constitute the universe,” e. g., T at 292. Creative intelligence, according to the textbook, has an unlimited supply of resources. T at 126. One of the recurrent promises of the textbook is the experience of universality gained from contact with pure creative intelligence. E. g., T at 188. It is in this context of universality that creative intelligence must be evaluated. Almost needless to say, the implicit comparisons of creative intelligence to electricity, the wheel, the printing press, and water add nothing to defendants’ arguments. As can be seen from the foregoing discussion, one of defendants’ methods of refuting the obvious import of textbook statements is to suggest a worldly entity or concept to which the textbook statement arguably might be applied. For example, faced with the textbook statement that creative intelligence “guides and sustains every aspect of the universe,” T at 174, defendants claim that creative intelligence is really like gravity guiding the paths of the planets; faced with the textbook statement that creative intelligence conducts the activity of nature, T at 114, defendants argue that creative intelligence is functioning in a fashion similar to that of a DNA molecule; faced with statements in the textbook that creative intelligence is the home of all qualities including beauty, creativity, intelligence, and orderliness, defendants assert that a “Rembrandt painting can be described using similar values. . . . ” Jarvis Affidavit ¶ 39. The problem with this approach is that creative intelligence, as described in the textbook, is not truly similar to any of the items to which defendants have compared or analogized it. For defendants’ analogies to have any validity, one must, in examining- the analogies, exclude from consideration the fact that creative intelligence possesses a plethora of qualities which are not possessed by the items to which it is compared. The weakness of defendants’ comparisons perhaps is underscored by juxtaposing and noting the lack of similarity among the items and concepts to which they have compared creative intelligence: gravity, DNA, a Rembrandt painting, energy, the wheel, water, matter, electricity. The dissimilarity of -concepts to which creative intelligence has been compared is not surprising in light of the teachings of the textbook. Since “[t]he ultimate reality of every object is creative intelligence,” T at 154, creative intelligence presumably is ultimately similar to everything in the universe. Defendants state that “[cjreative intelligence is not intended to be understood as an all-pervasive ‘being’ like God.” Jarvis Affidavit ¶ 37. No elaboration on this statement is made in the affidavit. The textbook repeatedly asserts that creative intelligence is all-pervasive. For example, the textbook states that creative intelligence is present in all forms, words, smells, tastes, and objects of touch. In all the objects of experience, in all the senses of perception and organs of action, in every phenomenon, in the doer and the work done, in all directions — north, south, east, and west — in all times — past, present, and future — it is uniformly present. In front of man, behind him, to the left and right of him, in him — everywhere, and under all circumstances, creative intelligence is permeating everything. T at 186. The textbook repeatedly states that “creative intelligence is present everywhere.” E. g., T at 23, 36. “The ultimate reality of every object is unmanifest creative intelligence.” T at 154. “The universe is a continuous, unified whole, an unbroken field of creative intelligence.” T at 137. Creative intelligence, according to the textbook, clearly is all-pervasive. Whether creative intelligence is a “being,” essence, principle, intelligence, or entity has no bearing on plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment. In opposition to plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment, defendants also rely upon the depositions of three clergymen. All three clergymen, a Catholic priest, a United Presbyterian minister, and a rabbi, have attended their own pujas, have taken full or partial courses on the Science of Creative Intelligence, which they believe to have been substantially similar in content to that taught in the New Jersey High schools, and practiced Transcendental Meditation. At least one of the clergymen was active in an attempt to introduce the Science of Creative Intelligence into the curriculum of the public high schools in his place of residence and has a daughter who is a teacher of SCI/TM. All three clergymen, based on their understandings of SCI, testified that they did not view their courses in the Science of Creative Intelligence as courses in religion or religious philosophy. Each of the clergymen also testified, based on his understanding of SCI, that he found nothing in the Science of Creative Intelligence course which he took which conflicted with his religion. Two of the clergymen examined the textbook which was used in the New Jersey schools for the first time on the day of their depositions. Prendeville Deposition at 146; Roberts Deposition at 26. The third clergyman testified that he had had a copy of the textbook in his possession for several weeks and had “looked it over kind of carefully.” Essrig Deposition at 59. The same clergyman testified that he had attended only a small part of a course on the Science of Creative Intelligence, but also had attended three or four weekend “residence courses” in which he heard several lectures, both live and on video tape, on the subject and had attended “many meetings” at a TM center. Id. at 19, 54, 56. One of the clergymen testified that in his course on the Science of Creative Intelligence he was provided with a copy of the Bhagavad-Gita and had purchased a copy of Commentaries on the Bhagavad-Gita by Maharishi Mahesh Yogi for use in the course. Roberts Deposition at 71, 57-58. There is no evidence that the Bhagavad-Gita or defendant Yogi’s Commentaries thereon were used in connection with the course taught in the New Jersey high schools. While the court, of course, accepts the statement of each of the clergymen that it is his understanding of the Science of Creative Intelligence course that he took that the course was not a course in religion or religious philosophy, the question whether or not the teaching of the Science of Creative Intelligence, as represented by the textbook and by the deposition testimony of two people who taught the course in New Jersey high schools, constitutes a violation of the establishment clause presents a different question and remains a legal question for resolution by the courts. In addition, it is impossible for this court to determine either what the understanding of each clergyman regarding the Science of Creative Intelligence is or the similarity between the course taken by the clergymen and that offered to New Jersey high school students. There is evidence in the record that the courses taken by the clergymen differed in content both from each other and from the course offered in the New Jersey high schools. One of the clergymen was read three excerpts from the textbook used in New Jersey schools and asked if he had been taught the substance of the quoted excerpts in the course on the Science of Creative Intelligence which he had taken. The clergyman answered “no” to two of the three questions. Prendeville Deposition at 97-101. Later, the same clergyman was asked if he had been taught that “the field of pure creative intelligence is the ocean of life and that all manifest existence and evolutionary processes are waves of that ocean,” which is a virtual quotation of a statement appearing on page 20 of the textbook used in New Jersey high schools. The clergyman answered the question with a categorical “No.” Id. at 117. The same clergyman testified that he had been taught in the SCI course 'which he had taken that the field of pure creative intelligence existed only within each individual. Id. at 117-18. This teaching clearly contravenes that of the textbook used in New Jersey high schools. E. g., T at 23, 36, 40, 42, 154, 292. The same clergyman’s articulated understanding of the meaning of the term creative intelligence differed substantially from the definition which appears in the textbook before the court. Compare Prendeville Deposition at 93, 97, 99 with T