Quote:
There was once a time when we didn't have enough empiracle evidence to prove gravities existance... even though most people knew it 'worked' wether enough things had been dropped/measured/etc or not.
I think you are confused about how scientific theory develop. There has never been a question as to whether or not things move toward the ground. The question, rather, is what makes it move toward the ground. Newton and Galileo formulated the modern conception and Einstein modified that further. The conception of things falling toward the Earth has been around since Aristotle who thought that things naturally aimed to move closer to the proper sphere of heaven. Theories change over time, and science accepts and modfies those theories as more data is acquired. NLP is an explanation--and one that hasn't fit the evidence thus far.
Quote:
NLP is a rather young science, and has always been diliked a bit by the traditional psych community.
It's not really that young--Bandler and Grinder developed it in the 70s, and cognitivism and its affiliate clinical approach CBT now reigns supreme within psychology and has only been around about 10 years prior.
Quote:
I'm acutally currently writting a report on NLP and it's contrasts similiarities and complements of traditional Psycology for one of my classes.
Cool, you should post it up when you're finished.
Quote:
My prof, a Phd, and the department chair origionally advised me against writting the report, claiming that NLP had no real merit of was almost always ineffective...
I can appreciate her skepticism, but that does seem a bit excessive.
Quote:
I paced her, used tonal signals to create sub-patterns in my speach, anchored a few potential positives mentally to my concept(pleasure), and a few negatives mentally to the concept of dismissing NLP (pain), and then walked her up a yes ladder. After about 5-10 minutes she had changed her mind completely about my paper and said she was excited about the prospects of my report. I thanked her and informed her that our conversation had been an excersize in basic NLP principals.
This probably highlights the crux of my criticism--anecdotal evidence. While not to be disregarded, as a psychology student, you must have taken a research methods class where you discussed the dangers of things like small sample size, tester bias, and of course, placebo effect. Just as important, if you studied cognitive psych focusing on memory, you must have dealt with issues of belief preserverance and confirmation biases. The fact that a thing seems to be effective to you is certainly shakey grounds to base scientific knowledge on. Nutjobs believe--firmly believe--in astrology, ESP, and other such nonsense. The real test is whether it can be verified with empirical testing in controlled settings.
And the fact remains that research has been done on NLP and it has been found wanting. Of course, there are various schools of thought within NLP and PRS, for example, is only one as is eye fixations. But thus far the research seems to turn up either inconclusive or negative for NLP.
Quote:
Difficult to know what to trust... The manstream is filled with idiots... and the marginally intellegent.
I'm not sure what idiots you are referring to--I knew some geniuses at my former university. Certainly Ph.D.s make mistakes like the rest of us, but it is part of the strengths of the system of science and academia to check and recheck. That is where peer-review and the structured and meticulous logging of data for retesting and evaluation becomes valuable. It is the
fact that science moves forward with caution that it is valuable. But yes, as you say, that might be getting a bit too detailed into the philosophy of science.
Quote:
The fringes... the sub-cultures... are filled with crackpots... and geniuses... granted those two things often go together, but thats another branch of Psycology, lol.
I disagree. If you are trying to place NLP as a prescience according to Kuhn's model, I could accept that, but as such it doesn't deserve the sort of esteem that it tends to get. There should be a lot more concerted efforts on the part of the NLP community to research their techniques.
As it stands, my opinion on the matter is that of Sharpleys that NLP should be presented as a partial compendium of existing suggestive therapies, rather than presenting original material. And it is definitely not responsible for the grand claims that it does make.
Quote:
Now what things specifically would you like to be 'convinced' about? I'd be more then willing to address your questions to the best of my ability.
Well, at this point, as I said, I intend to start looking into hypnotherapy as it was something I pursued in the past, but never got very good at. Might be worth looking into. I think we can both agree that Erikson was a genius (and he was mainstream

). Right now, I'm just looking for stimulating discussion.
BTW for those interested, here are the three studies that I referred to:
http://rapidshare.com/files/89645036/cou-31-2-238.pdf
http://rapidshare.com/files/89645428/cou-32-4-589.pdf
http://rapidshare.com/files/89645734/cou-34-1-103.pdf[/i]