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Well Fiction, I've given a review of NLP from what I've read and heard from others as well as things I've viewed on youtube. I'd recommend checking out Introducion NLP by Joseph O'Connor and John Seymour and on youtube look up Derren Brown for some more info.
I suppose I might, but I still feel that you're ignoring the larger issue at hand, which is that NLP has been trashed by the larger, professional scientific community--whereas NLP seems to be embraced by a fringe, albeit vocal, group of non-professionals.
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The think about NLP is that it is merely a term given to a group of skills and theories and such, there ISN'T anything empircal to it really, because it's all psychology, just like most psychology doesn't have much empirical evidence to look at,
Um...I don't mean this condescendingly at all, because a lot of people don't--but do you know anything about psychology? Since John Watson and behaviourism took over the field in the early 1900s, psychology has established it quite strongly as an empirical field of study. Even prior to this, Pavlov and James had been blazing the way for experimental research. I'd be interested to know what theoretical model of psychological research does not at least have very strong experimental roots.
I have a stack of psychological journals on my desk at home. All of the research within purports to be empirical in nature. Are you disputing that the research is indeed empirical and they are mistaken, or are you claiming that psychological theories are fundamentally untestible? If the former is the case, I'd like some examples, if the latter--what is it that these psychologists are doing?
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but if you see the results, then you can understand that it is real.
This seems a bit like the claims of the New Agers who talk of ESP, reflexology, and faith healing. Don't you think there is good reason that we have at least attempted with the scientific method to aim at something like objectivity and not rely on anecdotal evidence? You are aware of the potent power of the placebo effect right?
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NLP is very much like the study of non-verbal communication, only it encompasses that as well as verbal communication, so there is a lot more too it.
I'm not sure what you mean here.
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Unfortunately you're probably gonna remain opposed to NLP, unless you allow yourself to see the power and uses it has, so if you truly want to learn about it,
I am here because I want to have a serious discussion of the system's merits. I want to know if I ought to devote time to its serious study, instead of, say, dancing--which has definite payoffs. There is a lot of things I'd like to learn, and I'd like to weed the bullshit from the serious study. I'm teaching myself Chinese at the moment, but the Pimsleur language methods are more well supported than taking a Chinese dictionary and hitting my head with it for an hour a day. In short, I don't like wasting my time, so if I should learn NLP I'd like people to tell me why.
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then you have to have an open mind and let yourself believe some of what you read/hear.
If this means what it sounds like, it is a little disturbing.
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The mood of your original post made it sound like you were concerned with whether it was ethical or not though and that was mostly what my post was in regards to.
Sorry the confusion was there.
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You can use NLP to completely rewire someone to your whim and give them a whole new personality, or make them deathly afraid some something if you wanted, or you can use it just to understand that person that you are communcating with better and avoid misunderstandings, then use it to respond to them in such a way that they won't misunderstand you either.
Yes, I am aware of the rather strong claims that NLP makes. That is what I was challenging.
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Again, I haven't referenced articles to support my points, but I've given you an outline of what NLP is and if you want to substantiate my claims, then check out the book and some youtube videos,
Shouldn't the burden be on you to substantiate your own claims?
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otherwise, disputing my claims is just as unfounded when it sounds like you've only been reading negative reviews.
No, I haven't. In fact, I specifically mentioned avoiding the more harshly skeptical material out there (and there is a
lot of it). I have just been reading the literature out there. I even mentioned that Sharpley's initial study was criticized (by Eric Einspruch and Bruce Forman) for having methodological errors and not assessing the whole of NLP. Sharpley's second review was aimed at addressing those criticisms and concluded "there are conclusive data from the research on NLP, and the conclusion is that the principles and procedures of NLP have failed to be supported by those data. ... Certainly research data do not support the rather extreme claims that proponents of NLP have made as to the validity of its principles or the novelty of its procedures."
Forgive me if I restrict myself to the professional literature, but I think peer-review is an important part of the scientific community. Anyone can write a book about anything. Perhaps I should read a book on how to summon up my chi energy to deliver the Dim-Mak death strike? Sorry to sound patronizing, but I expected a little stronger defense on the part of the NLPers and not just criticizing my "narrowmindedness".