The numbers game in more than one way.Nah. People can make a big deal even out of a simple card trick.
http://xkcd.com/628/
The numbers game in more than one way.Nah. People can make a big deal even out of a simple card trick.
Hahaha! A greatly needed laugh at the end of this week. Much appreciated, Remirol.(Pictures Martin Luther in a leisure suit...) Anyway, that does seem to be a rather unfortunate feature of these forums, in a way. Why should it be so difficult to keep a thread going without disagreeing violently about something?
![]()
Do we need to conjure up a troll?
I am surprised, I thought the 51 times would pose too big a problem. Guess I know too little of showmanship.Either way, it's a win-win outcome for me.![]()

Without people to disagree with these threads do tend to dry up don't they![]()
What's In It For Me?
MikeSun5 said:What did you think there was? Absolutely nothing. You wanted to do more than tell us how NLP works, right? Or are you content to just say it does?
Maybe I'm missing your point but I would point out didn't actually arrive here with the intention of explaining to anybody how NLP works. Nor do I think I've tried to do that in any of my posts.
Put bluntly, why should I bother, or if you return to my original question, what's in it for me?
![]()
You are most definitely missing my point. Not to be devious, but you've proven my point. What did you think there was? Absolutely nothing. You wanted to do more than tell us how NLP works, right? Or are you content to just say it does?
(Pictures Martin Luther in a leisure suit...)

Anyway, that does seem to be a rather unfortunate feature of these forums, in a way. Why should it be so difficult to keep a thread going without disagreeing violently about something?Do we need to conjure up a troll?

MikeSun5 said:CONFUSION!!!! You are most definitely missing my point. Not to be devious, but you've proven my point. Here's my previous post with the special bit highlighted:
Originally Posted by MikeSun5
What did you think there was? Absolutely nothing. You wanted to do more than tell us how NLP works, right? Or are you content to just say it does?
Embedded commands (like other NLP techniques) do not work unless you know exactly what is going on. If they did, your last post would have been an explanation.
remirol said:it's about as interesting a theoretical discussion as whether or not ants fart.

(Pictures Martin Luther in a leisure suit...)
<snip>
When the internet was in its infancy I picked Senex as my monicker. It means dirty old man in Latin (see Funny Thing Happened to Me on the Way to the Forum). It didn't apply to me then but as I age I realize you stick with your first instinct. It turned out very suitable.
When the internet was in its infancy I picked Senex as my monicker. It means dirty old man in Latin (see Funny Thing Happened to Me on the Way to the Forum). It didn't apply to me then but as I age I realize you stick with your first instinct. It turned out very suitable.
Are you saying that your text contained an embedded command (presumably the section that you've highlighted nicely in yellow) and that my response was the outcome of some experiment to prove a point of some kind?

Eddie Dane said:Brown thinks the following techniques absolute crap:
Mirroring someone's posture to create rapport (they'll think you're a freak)*
Classifying people as Visual, Auditive etc (We are all all these things)
Reading eye movements (of no practical use, has been scientifically tested)
I recently bought "A sensous dirty old mann"* by isac Asimov, great book, I have just lend it to my father.The only thing that could stop me from becoming a dirty old man is death.
No, it just means you got spanked -- and not in the good way !Oooooooooooooooooooooo... so close!!!!!! I'm at 1457!!! Damn. Does that mean that I lose 100 posts????![]()
=JFrankA;5055277
If you are ever at one of my shows, Senex, I'll be happy to make that happen for you.![]()
Yes it did and I won't look back.Happened to you too, eh?
M.
The only thing that could stop me from becoming a dirty old man is death.
I've been re-reading Derren's Tricks Of The Mind book and have just reached the section on Hypnosis and NLP.
He does indeed pour derision on the idea of slavishly copying a person's every move in order to establish rapport.
Then he goes on to describe to the reader how it's possible to match/mirror/pace/lead the postural aspects of the behaviour of a person sitting at another table in a restaurant (only in their peripheral vision though) such that their response will be to feel rapport with him and then come over and talk to him.
On the subject of reading eye movements he does indicate that the general thrust of the argument is borne out some of the time in real life and that he is unsure how useful or reliable it really is.
After questioning the reliability of some of the scientific testing of eye patterns he goes on to say that some people undoubtedly conform to eye movement patterns with notable reliabilty.
He subsequently makes reference to one of his TV programs, The Heist in which the eye patterns displayed by the participants asked to remember images as part of the Linking System memory technique are "pretty much according to the NLP model" and "almost a text book demonstration"
I've been re-reading Derren's Tricks Of The Mind book and have just reached the section on Hypnosis and NLP.
He does indeed pour derision on the idea of slavishly copying a person's every move in order to establish rapport.
Then he goes on to describe to the reader how it's possible to match/mirror/pace/lead the postural aspects of the behaviour of a person sitting at another table in a restaurant (only in their peripheral vision though) such that their response will be to feel rapport with him and then come over and talk to him.
Derren Brown Tricks of the Mind pp 189-192 said:Some have a very NLP flavour. As I have suggested, if we remove from the NLP equation the grinning, flaccid course-junkies, delusional flower-fairies and ridiculous tactile businessmen, and some of the taken-as-read wild claims made by NLPers at all levels, there are some sensible enough tools and techniques from that world which are worth knowing about, as long as you don't become a True Believer.
I remember an interview in the Observer in the nineties with a hypnotist where the interviewer started to fell something odd was taking place. He soon realized that the interviewee was copying all his body movements. The rest of the article was concerned with how strange and unnatural the interviewer found his subject, and how he kept testing the hypnotist by crossing and uncrossing his legs, moving his hands and so on, to see him immediately follow suit. What I loved about the article was that the technique the hypnotist was employing (the mirroring of body posture) is classic NLP, and like so much of classic NLP if failed because it had been turned into a 'technique'.
Most people, when they are getting on well, will be in a state of unconscious 'rapport'. They will tend to mirror each other's body language and so on without realizing it.
Rapport may create those things (mirroring), but the question is, do those things automatically create rapport?
Even if the mirroring is done a little more subtly, the idea that by then employing these 'rapport' techniques in a social situation you are guaranteed to come across as likable and trustworthy is clearly daft.
On the subject of reading eye movements he does indicate that the general thrust of the argument is borne out some of the time in real life and that he is unsure how useful or reliable it really is.
After questioning the reliability of some of the scientific testing of eye patterns he goes on to say that some people undoubtedly conform to eye movement patterns with notable reliabilty.
Derren Brown Tricks of the Mind pg 185 said:The eye movement hypnothesis has been tested many times by scientists, and routinely it is shown not to hold up. However, it is difficult to know whether this is because the claims are not true or the tests were not conducted fairly; NLPers naturally blame the experiments. The tests normally go as follows. The subject is not told what is being looked for, and is asked a series of questions the scientist believes will elicit a clear visual, auditory or kinaesthetic response - "What would it feel like to swim in noodles?" - and note where the subject's eyes then move. Problematically, a question like this could of course elicit a visual response first (the subject pictures himself in noodles) or even an auditory one (the subject repeats the question to himself or runs through an answer), which would theoretically cause a different eye movement before the expected 'kinaesthetic' one. Although the 'correct' movement then might follow, this may not be noted in the results. Without examining the exact protocol of the experiments, its' very hard to tell how effective they are at testing these claims. Equally, thought, if they are this difficult to test by observers who are trying to take as objective a stance as possible, one could argue that they can hardly be called reliable by biased NLPers who are making no such attempt. My suspicion is that if eye movement was really as reliable as NLPers say, there would be fare more positive results in tests.
He subsequently makes reference to one of his TV programs, The Heist in which the eye patterns displayed by the participants asked to remember images as part of the Linking System memory technique are "pretty much according to the NLP model" and "almost a text book demonstration"
Incidentally, any fans of Mr Brown may like to know that he has a new TV series in the UK in the form of four Friday night specials, commencing Friday 11th September on Channel 4.
Not sure if those of you in the USA can get your hands on our Channel 4 but you may be able to watch the progams online using their On Demand service - 4OD - http://www.channel4.com/programmes/derren-brown/4od
JFrankA said:Sorry, you're cherry picking. For example:
JFrankA said:That whole mirroring thing is prefaced with the following quote from the book:......
microdot said:He does indeed pour derision on the idea of slavishly copying a person's every move in order to establish rapport.
JFrankA said:He's not promoting NLP, he's telling you something that he uses in his performances, but it's not guaranteed and it's not NLP.
JFrankA said:He then basically says that it's not a bad idea to keep the eye movement chart in the back of your mind. He doesn't say that it absolutely works. He says it may, not sure, not proven.
JFrankA said:This is the thing about Derren Brown, and again to my point. He definitely does NOT say that NLP works.
What did you think there was? Absolutely nothing. You wanted to do more than tell us how NLP works, right? Or are you content to just say it does?