Hiya guys
MikeSun5 said:
NLP admittedly doesn't work on everyone.
Ipso facto is does work for some people - glad we agree on something
MikeSun5 said:
NLP attempts to link itself to science with no proven evidence.
I'm not sure that it does. I think that some people come to that conclusion because it overlaps areas which they consider to be the exclusive domain of 'science' and something which can only be considered and discussed in 'scientific' terms.
MikeSun5 said:
NLP attempts to distance itself from being explained by placebo effect.
I'm not sure where you get this from but I would agree that trying to compare those two things is like trying to compare apples and bananas.
MikeSun5 said:
NLP (unlike all other sciences) doesn't evolve as theories are tested and disproven.
Unlike all other sciences? Didn't think you considered NLP as science
In any case as NLP is predicated upon the study of subjective experience, and the fact that we gather and process information though our five senses, how do you think it should evolve? Alongside human evolution? If a sixth sense has been proven I've not heard about it.
MikeSun5 said:
That's like NLP. It'll only work if the patient believes in it (and believes it's being used on them).
People change the ways in which they think all the time and for many different reasons. If I flip your argument on it's head for a minute then nothing that I say to another person could ever change the way they think unless I've first explained to them what 'technique' I'm using?
MikeSun5 said:
Nope. I just know it won't work for me because I believe it's crap.
Phew! At least then you don't dismiss it out of hand
You'd be absolutely right too. I doubt whether any of the 'talking therapies' could achieve optimum results without the cooperation of the person on the receiving end - no surprise there. Just like if I gave some perfectly useful advice to a friend which would help them achieve a desired outcome they could simply choose to ignore it.
MikeSun5 said:
I do however, take issue with the claims that NLP is not a placebo but a legitimate science. These claims are intentionally misleading to generate revenue. That's called a con.
NLP is not simply placebo.
Magicians mislead people in order to generate revenue.
(Derren Brown threads anyone

)
Is that a con?
Maybe it is, but it's one we're willing to accept in return for entertainment.
It's only a _bad_ when those being mislead are unaware of the fact and suffer as a result of it and, where that is the case i.e. the characters which gave rise to this thread, we are in agreement.
As far as generating revenue is concerned, I'm inclined to believe that there are very few training providers out there who don't derive a revenue from their work, if only to cover their costs.
How about if an NLP trainer sets themselves up in business and _promises_ not to call what they are doing 'science'? Would that be acceptable to you?
MikeSun5 said:
The list you made about the NLP practices isn't new. All of those things are common life-coaching techniques that have been around LONG before NLP decided to stamp it's name on them.
Yes, and they were around LONG before 'life-coaching' (whatever that means) decided to stamp _it's_ name on them too
Deciding what you want, taking action to achieve it, monitoring your progress as you go.....doesn't almost every single person on the planet do those things many times every single day? Haven't people been doing that since they first walked on the Earth?
If you don't believe me, try picking up a cup without doing any of those things
So, in a sense nobody owns those 'ideas' or 'processes' and in another sense we all do because we all do them automatically anyway because - they work!
Yet strangely, something which we do automatically and unconsciously in order to get out of bed, shower, dress etc. etc. we don't necessarily do _consciously_ and with volition in order to achieve other goals in life - hence why they are written down and made explicit in countless books around the world.
JFrankA said:
See here's the thing about NLP. There are some very legitimate psychological tricks that really do work that NLP blows up into something that just won't work.
I like the
really do work but I'm not wild about the
trick.
Trick - a cunning or deceitful action or device
You see the negative connotations in that one word
What's wrong with, say
processes or
actions?
JFrankA said:
Anchoring is one of them. It's almost like that Anchoring and Conditioning are mixed into this one big "technique".
Not surprising given that anchoring is based on the concept of stimulus/response
JFrankA said:
What the problem is that it doesn't always work.
Few things in life do
JFrankA said:
It depends on a few things.
Most things in life do
So it works some of the time and depends on a few things - something else we agree on
JFrankA said:
The other thing about this is that it's extremely temporary. Even if it did work, it won't last. I am willing to bet that by the time the person on the recieving side went to lunch, did some work, watched tv, the anchor would be gone and long forgotten.
Have you ever heard a piece of music from your past that was special to some person or some set of circumstances at that particular time in your life and instantly been 'transported' back to that time/place/person?
Or smelled a particular scent which you associate with a particular person or place and 'relived' the memories you have connected with that scent?
Some anchors last a long time.
For me one such anchor is a piece of music called
The Model by
Kraftwerk.
It was the first time I'd heard such precise, crisp electronic music played on a _proper_ hi-fi. Don' think I've ever heard vinyl sound so good since then.
Whenever I hear it I can vividly picture the room I was standing in when I first heard it, the furnishings, carpets, decor and the hi-fi it was playing on, the table that was sitting on.....
JFrankA said:
Now sometimes it does work well. For example, I use it in my shows once in a while, but then again, I have a major advantage for it to work for me. First off, it's a show, something people want to see something amazing happen. The audience I choose to experience this are willing and wanting to believe me. So the people are open and receptive to what I am doing and I've eliminated most of the forces working against me. Even with that, it is very temporary. People's memories are incredibly bad.
So, if I understand you correctly, anchoring works better under certain circumstances. Something else we agree on
JFrankA said:
People's memories are incredibly bad
Naughty JFrankA with your sweeping generalisations
One could argue that some people have 'better' memories than other people.
OR one could argue that because people experience their world _subjectively_ that they pay attention to and hence remember different things.
And one could also argue that different people place differing values / levels of importance / significance on the things they choose to remember which may or may not affect their retention of those things.
Certainly one could say that memory is _selective_.
Most memory enhancing techniques that I've come across involve increasing the number of neural pathways in the brain that are associated with a particular memory.
I'm not a scientist but I imagine that the more neural pathways that we activate when we make a memory, the more neural pathways activate when we try to recall that memory, making the memory easier to recall.
Now, maybe I'm taking a leap of faith here but I'm inclined to believe that this is probably why anchoring probably works better when it involves multiple sensory inputs i.e. sight, sound, touch, taste, smell and self talk (what we say to ourselves in our own mind).
Just a hunch.
