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href="http://skepdic.com/contents.html#C">c</a></li> <li><a href="http://skepdic.com/contents.html#D">d</a></li> <li><a href="http://skepdic.com/contents.html#E">e</a></li> <li><a href="http://skepdic.com/contents.html#F">f</a></li> <li><a href="http://skepdic.com/contents.html#G">g</a></li> <li><a href="http://skepdic.com/contents.html#H">h</a></li> <li><a href="http://skepdic.com/contents.html#I">i</a></li> <li><a href="http://skepdic.com/contents.html#J">j</a></li> <li><a href="http://skepdic.com/contents.html#K">k</a></li> <li><a href="http://skepdic.com/contents.html#L">l</a></li> <li><a href="http://skepdic.com/contents.html#M">m</a></li> <li><a href="http://skepdic.com/contents.html#N">n</a></li> <li><a href="http://skepdic.com/contents.html#O">o</a></li> <li><a href="http://skepdic.com/contents.html#P">p</a></li> <li><a href="http://skepdic.com/contents.html#Q">q</a></li> <li><a href="http://skepdic.com/contents.html#R">r</a></li> <li><a href="http://skepdic.com/contents.html#S">s</a></li> <li><a href="http://skepdic.com/contents.html#T">t</a></li> <li><a href="http://skepdic.com/contents.html#U">u</a></li> <li><a href="http://skepdic.com/contents.html#V">v</a></li> <li><a href="http://skepdic.com/contents.html#W">w</a></li> <li><a href="http://skepdic.com/contents.html#X">x</a></li> <li><a href="http://skepdic.com/contents.html#Y">y</a></li> <li><a href="http://skepdic.com/contents.html#Z">z</a></li> </ul> <webContent><h1>neuro-linguistic programming (NLP)</h1> <blockquote> <p><span class="quote">I think the more you want to become more and more creative you have to not only elicit other peoples' (plural) strategies and replicate them yourself, but also modify others' strategies and have a strategy that creates new creativity strategies based on as many wonderful states as you can design for yourself. Therefore, in a way, the entire field of NLP™ is a creative tool, because I wanted to create something new. </span> --Richard Bandler </p> <p class="quote">"..the assumptions of NLP, namely that our cognition, behavior and emotions can be 'programmed' by mimicking the more superficial aspects of those with desirable attributes (for example posture and mannerism) are wrong. The last thirty years of research have simply shown that NLP is bunk.--Steven Novella, M.D.</p> <p class="quote">...after three decades, there is still no credible theoretical basis for NLP, researchers having failed to establish any evidence for its efficacy that is not anecdotal.--Gareth<a href="http://www.emeraldinsight.com/journals.htm?articleid=1905816"> Roderique-Davies </a></p> </blockquote> <p style="text-align: left"><font face="Arial" size="3">Neuro-linguistic programming (NLP) is one of many self-help programs that emerged in the 1970s and '80s but whose popularity has waned somewhat in recent years. NLP might be seen as a competitor with <a HREF="landmark.html">Landmark Forum</a>, <a HREF="http://www.tonyrobbins.com/">Tony Robbins</a>, and legions of other enterprises promising to teach the masses the key to success, power, health, and happiness.</font></p> <p style="text-align: left"><font face="Arial" size="3"> Robbins is probably the most successful "graduate" of NLP. He started his own empire after transforming from a self-described "fat slob" to a <a HREF="firewalk.html">firewalker</a> to (in his own words) "the nation's foremost authority on the psychology of peak performance and personal, professional and organizational turnaround." The founders of NLP, <a href="http://www.richardbandler.com/">Richard Bandler</a> and <a href="http://www.johngrinder.com/">John Grinder</a>, might disagree about who is the master authority on the psychology of self-help and success.</font></p> <p style="text-align: left"><font face="Arial" size="3">NLP seems to have something for everybody, the sick and the healthy, individual or corporation. In addition to being an agent for change for <a href="http://www.altfeld.com/mastery/paths-success.html">healthy individuals</a>, NLP is also used for individual psychotherapy for problems as diverse as<a href="http://nlp-mentor.com/phobia-treatment/"> phobias</a> and<a href="http://bengkelnlp.com/images/a01schizo.pdf"> schizophrenia</a>. NLP also aims at <a href="http://www.peakpd.com/workshops_corp_nlp.html">transforming corporations</a>, showing them how to achieve their maximum potential and achieve great success.</font> If you shop around, you'll find <a href="http://www.nlp.com/training/?gclid=CIWUw5m-y7oCFWqCQgodYQsAUg">NLP Practitioner Certification Training for under $100</a> and only a couple of days of your time. What is NLP? "NLP is the comprehensive training that covers everything you need to know to succeed (and help others succeed) in any area of life including business, relationships, career and any other area of life."</p> <p align="center"><font color="#006699" face="Arial" size="3"><strong>Who discovered NLP?</strong></font></p> <p style="text-align: left"><font face="Arial" size="3">NLP was begun in the mid-seventies by a linguist (Grinder) and a<a href="http://www.nlpu.com/bandbio.htm"> student of mathematics (Bandler)</a> who had strong interests in (a) successful people, (b) psychology, (c) language and (d) computer programming. It is difficult to define NLP because those who started it and those involved in it use such vague and ambiguous language that NLP means different things to different people. While it is difficult to find a consistent description of NLP among those who claim to be experts at it, one metaphor keeps recurring. <em>NLP claims to help people change by teaching them to program their brains.</em> We were given brains, we are told, but no instruction manual. NLP offers you a user-manual for the brain. The brain-manual seems to be a metaphor for NLP training, which is sometimes referred to as "software for the brain." Furthermore, NLP, consciously or unconsciously, relies heavily upon (1) the notion of the<a href="unconscious.html"> unconscious mind</a> as constantly influencing conscious thought and action; (2) metaphorical behavior and speech, especially building upon the methods used in Freud's <i>Interpretation of <a href="dreams.html">Dreams</a></i>; and (3) <a href="hypnosis.html">hypnotherapy</a> as developed by <a href="http://www.creativity.co.uk/creativity/guhen/erickson.htm">Milton Erickson</a>. NLP is also influenced by the work of <a href="http://www.creativity.co.uk/creativity/guhen/bateson.htm">Gregory Bateson</a> and <a href="http://chomsky.info/">Noam Chomsky</a>. </font> </p> <p style="text-align: left"><font face="Arial" size="3">One common thread in NLP is the emphasis on teaching a variety of communication and persuasion skills, and using self-hypnosis to motivate and change oneself. Most NLP practitioners advertising on the WWW make grand claims about being able to help just about anybody become just about anything. Below is an excerpt from a website called <a href="http://www.hypnosiseducation.com/NLP.htm">The National Board of Professional and Ethics Standards</a> on the wonders of NLP:</font> </p> <blockquote> <p>NLP can enhance all aspects of your life from improving your relationships with loved ones, learning to teach effectively, gaining a stronger sense of self-esteem, greater motivation, better understanding of communication, enhancing your business or career, bending steel bars in a single bound and an enormous amount of other things that involve the use of your brain. </blockquote> <p>The National Board of Professional and Ethical standards is not an accredited board, but <a href="http://thenationalboard.blogspot.com/2009/01/national-board-of-professional-and.html">a name pulled out of the air by a guy in Florida named D. A. "Doc" Brady</a>. Brady says he has three doctorates, but he doesn't say where he got them, and he is certified in NLP. One <a href="http://thenationalboard.blogspot.com/2009/01/national-board-of-professional-and.html">critic claims</a> he got his doctorates from a <a href="diplomamill.html">diploma mill</a>. Brady doesn't say where he got certified in NLP.</p> <p style="text-align: left"><font face="Arial" size="3">Some advocates claim that they can teach a <a href="http://undergroundhealthreporter.com/neuro-linguistic-programming#axzz2jixwruUy">highly reliable method of telling when a person is lying</a>, but <a href="https://web.archive.org/web/20050308011058/http://www.kinesic.com/interrogation_nlp.htm">others recognize</a> that this is not possible. One <a href="https://web.archive.org/web/20150811005328/http://www.rain.org/~da5e/nlpfaq.html">NLP guru</a>, Dale Kirby, informs us that one of the presuppositions of NLP is "No one is wrong or broken." So why seek remedial change? On the other hand, what Mr. Kirby does have to say about NLP which <i>is</i> intelligible does not make it very attractive. For example, he says that according to NLP "There is no such thing as failure. There is only feedback." Was NLP invented by the U.S. Military to explain their "incomplete successes"? When the space shuttle blew up within minutes of launch, killing everyone on board, was that "only feedback"? If I stab my neighbor and call it "performing non-elective surgery" am I practicing NLP? If I am arrested in a drunken state with a knife in my pocket for threatening an ex-girlfriend, am I just "trying to rekindle an old flame"?</font></p> <p style="text-align: left"><font face="Arial" size="3">Another NLP presupposition which is false is "If someone can do something, anyone can learn it." This comes from people who claim they understand the brain and can help you reprogram yours. They want you to think that the only thing that separates the average person from Einstein or Pavarotti or the World Champion Log Lifter is NLP.</font></p> <p style="text-align: left"><font face="Arial" size="3">NLP is said to be the study of the structure of<i> subjective experience</i>, but a great deal of attention seems to be paid to observing <i>behavior</i> and teaching people how to read "body language." But there is no common structure to non-verbal communication, any more than there is a common structure to dream symbolism. There certainly are some well-defined culturally determined non-verbal ways of communicating, e.g., pointing the back of the hand at another, lowering all fingers but the one in the middle, has a definite meaning in American culture. But when someone tells me that the way I squeeze my nose during a conversation means I am signaling him that I think his idea stinks, how do we verify whether his interpretation is correct or not? I deny it. He knows the structure, he says. He knows the meaning. I am not aware of my signal or of my feelings, he says, because the message is coming from my subconscious mind. How do we test these kinds of claims? We can't. What's his evidence? It must be his brilliant intuitive insight because there is no empirical evidence to back up this claim. Sitting cross-armed at a meeting might not mean that someone is "blocking you out" or "getting defensive". She may just be cold or have a back ache or simply feel comfortable sitting that way. It is dangerous to read too much into non-verbal behavior. Those splayed legs may simply indicate a relaxed person, not someone inviting you to have sex. At the same time, much of what NLP is teaching is how to do <a HREF="coldread.html">cold reading.</a> This is valuable, but an art not a science, and should be used with caution.</font></p> <p style="text-align: left"><font face="Arial" size="3">Finally, NLP claims that each of us has a Primary Representational System (PRS), a tendency to think in specific modes: visual, auditory, kinaesthetic, olfactory or gustatory. A person's PRS can be determined by words the person tends to use or by the direction of one's eye movements. Supposedly, a therapist will have a better rapport with a client if they have a matching PRS. None of this has been supported by the scientific literature.<a href="http://web.archive.org/web/20021216094638/http:/easyweb.easynet.co.uk/~dylanwad/morganic/art_nlp.htm">*</a></font> <a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ISBN=0709947798/roberttoddcarrolA/">Dr. Michael Heap</a> evaluated some 70 papers on NLP and concluded: "...the assertions of NLP writers concerning the representational systems have been objectively and fairly investigated and found to be lacking." </p> <p align="center"><font color="#006699" face="Arial" size="3"><strong>Bandler's Institute</strong></font></p> <p style="text-align: left"><font face="Arial" size="3">Bandler's First Institute of Neuro-Linguistic Programming™ and Design Human Engineering™ has this to say about NLP: </font> </p> <blockquote> <p>"Neuro-Linguistic Programming™ (NLP™) is defined as the study of the structure of subjective experience and what can be calculated from that and is predicated upon the belief that all behavior has structure....Neuro-Linguistic Programming™ was specifically created in order to allow us to do magic by creating new ways of understanding how verbal and non-verbal communication affect the human brain. As such it presents us all with the opportunity to not only communicate better with others, but also learn how to gain more control over what we considered to be automatic functions of our own neurology."<a href="http://web.archive.org/web/20020205090633/http://www.purenlp.com/whatsnlp.htm"><sup>*</sup></a></p> </blockquote> <p style="text-align: left"><font face="Arial" size="3">We are told that Bandler took as his first models <a href="http://web.archive.org/web/20040925075113/http:/www3.mb.sympatico.ca/~gomori/virginia.html">Virginia Satir</a> ("The Mother of Family System Therapy"), <a href="http://web.archive.org/web/20031204003439/http:/www.erickson-foundation.org/milton.htm">Milton Erickson</a> ("The Father of Modern Hypnotherapy") and<a HREF="http://www.gestalt.org/fritz.htm"> Fritz Perls</a> (who coined the expression 'Gestalt Therapy') because they "had amazing results with their clients." The linguistic and behavioral patterns of such people were studied and used as models. These were therapists who liked such expressions as 'self-esteem', 'validate', 'transformation', 'harmony', 'growth', 'ecology', 'self-realization', 'unconscious mind', 'non-verbal communication', 'achieving one's highest potential'--expressions which serve as beacons to New Age transformational psychology. No neuroscientist or anyone who has studied the brain is mentioned as having had any influence on NLP. Also, someone who is not mentioned, but who certainly seems like the ideal model for NLP, is Werner Erhard. He started <a HREF="est.html">est</a> a few miles north (in San Francisco) of Bandler and Grinder (in Santa Cruz) just a couple of years before the latter started their training business. Erhard seems to have set out to do just what Bandler and Grinder set out to do: help people transform themselves and make a good living doing it. NLP and est also have in common the fact that they are built up from a hodgepodge of sources in psychology, philosophy, and other disciplines. Both have been brilliantly marketed as offering the key to success, happiness, and fulfillment to anyone willing to pay the price of admission. Best of all: no one who pays his fees fails out of these schools!</font></p> <p align="center"><font color="#006699" face="Arial" size="3"><strong>the ever-evolving Bandler</strong></font></p> <p style="text-align: left"><font face="Arial" size="3">When one reads what Bandler says, it may lead one to think that some people sign on just to get the translation from the Master Teacher of Communication Skills himself: </font> </p> <blockquote> <p>One of the models that I built was called strategy elicitation which is something that people confuse with modeling to no end. They go out and elicit a strategy and they think they are modeling but they don't ask the question, "Where did the strategy elicitation model come from?" There are constraints inside this model since it was built by reducing things down. The strategy elicitation model is always looking for the most finite way of accomplishing a result. This model is based on sequential elicitation and simultaneous installation.</p> </blockquote> <p style="text-align: left"><font face="Arial" size="3">Many would surely agree that with communication like this Bandler must have a very special code for programming his brain.</font></p> <p align="left"><font face="Arial" size="3">Bandler claims he keeps evolving. To some, however, he may seem mainly concerned with protecting his economic interests by trademarking his every burp. He seems extremely concerned that some rogue therapist or trainer might steal his work and make money without him getting a cut. One might be charitable and see Bandler's obsession with trademarking as a way to protect the integrity of his brilliant new discoveries about human potential (such as <a href="http://www.charismaenhancement.com/">charisma enhancement</a>) and how to sell it. Anyway, to clarify or to obscure matters--who knows which?-- what Bandler calls the real thing can be identified by a license and the trademark™ from <a href="http://web.archive.org/web/20040208143347/http://www.nlpschedule.com/society.html">The Society of Neuro-Linguistic Programming™</a>. However, do not contact this organization if you want detailed, clear information about the nature of NLP, or <a href="http://www.purenlp.com/textonly/whatsdhe.htm">DHE (Design Human Engineering™</a> (which will teach you to hallucinate designs like Tesla did), or PE (Persuasion Engineering™) or MetaMaster Track™, or Charisma Enhancement™, or Trancing™, or whatever else Mr. Bandler and associates are selling these days. Mostly what you will find on Bandler's page is information on how to sign up for one of his training sessions. For example, you can get 6 days of training for $1,800 at the door ($1,500 prepaid). What will you be trained in or for? Bandler has been learning about "the advancement of human evolution" and he will pass this on to you. For $1,500 you could have taken his 3-day seminar on Creativity Enhancement (where you could learn why it's not creative to rely on other people's ideas, except for Bandler's).</font></p> <p align="center"><font color="#006699" face="Arial" size="3"><strong>Grinder and corporate NLP</strong></font></p> <p style="text-align: left"><font face="Arial" size="3">John Grinder, on the other hand, has gone on to try to do for the corporate world what Bandler is doing for the rest of us. He has joined Carmen Bostic St Clair in endorsing an organization called <a HREF="http://www.quantum-leap.com/">Quantum Leap</a>, "an international organisation dealing with the design and implementation of cross cultural communication systems." Like Bandler, Grinder claims he has evolved new and even more brilliant "codes".</font></p> <blockquote> <p><font face="Arial" size="3">...the New Code contains a series of gates which presuppose a certain and to my way of thinking appropriate relationship between the conscious and unconscious parts of a person purporting to train or represent in some manner NLP. This goes a long way toward insisting on the presence of personal congruity in such a person. In other words, a person who fails to carry personal congruity will in general find themselves unable to use and/or teach the New Code patterns with any sort of consistent success. This is a design I like very much - it has the characteristic of a self-correcting system.</font></p> </blockquote> <p style="text-align: left"><a name="paradigm">It may strike some</a> people that terms like "personal congruity" are not very precise or scientific. This is probably because Grinder has created a "new paradigm". Or so he says. He denies that his and Bandler's work is an eclectic hodgepodge of philosophy and psychology, or that it even builds from the works of others. He believes that what he and Bandler did was "create a <a href="paradigm.html"> paradigm</a> shift." </p> <p style="text-align: left"><font face="Arial" size="3">The following claim by Grinder provides some sense of what he thinks NLP is:</font></p> <blockquote> <p>My memories about what we thought at the time of discovery (with respect to the classic code we developed - that is, the years 1973 through 1978) are that we were quite explicit that we were out to overthrow a paradigm and that, for example, I, for one, found it very useful to plan this campaign using in part as a guide the excellent work of Thomas Kuhn (<i>The Structure of Scientific Revolutions</i>) in which he detailed some of the conditions which historically have obtained in the midst of paradigm shifts. For example, I believe it was very useful that neither one of us were qualified in the field we first went after - psychology and in particular, its therapeutic application; this being one of the conditions which Kuhn identified in his historical study of paradigm shifts. Who knows what Bandler was thinking?</p> </blockquote> <p style="text-align: left"><font face="Arial" size="3">One can only hope that Bandler wasn't thinking the same things that Grinder was thinking, at least with respect to Kuhn's classic text. Kuhn did not promote the notion that not being particularly qualified in a scientific field is a significant condition for contributing to the development of a new paradigm in science. Furthermore, Kuhn did not provide a model or blueprint for <em>creating</em> paradigm shifts! His is an <i>historical </i>work, describing what he believed to have occurred in the <em>history of science</em><i>. </i>Nowhere does he indicate that a single person at any time did, or even could, create a paradigm shift in science. Individuals such as Newton or Einstein might provide theories which require paradigm shifts for their theories to be adequately understood, but they don't create the paradigm shifts themselves. Kuhn's work implies that such a notion is preposterous. </font> </p> <p style="text-align: left"><font face="Arial" size="3">Grinder and Bandler should have read Kant before they set off on their quixotic pursuit. <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Immanuel_Kant">Kant's "Copernican revolution"</a> might be considered a paradigm shift by Bandler and Grinder, but it is not what Kuhn was talking about when he was describing the historical development of scientific theories. Kuhn restricted his concern to science. He made no claim that anything similar happens in philosophy and he certainly did not imply that anything NLP did, or is doing, constitutes a paradigm shift. Kuhn claimed that paradigm shifts occur over time when one theory breaks down and is replaced by another. Scientific theories break down, he claimed, when new data can't be explained by the old theories or when they no longer explain things as well as some newer theory. What Bandler and Grinder did was not in response to any crisis in theory in any scientific field and so cannot even be considered as <i>contributing </i>to a paradigm shift much less being one itself. </font> </p> <p style="text-align: left"><font face="Arial" size="3">What Grinder seems to think Kuhn meant by "paradigm shift" is something like a gestalt shift, a change in the way we look at things, a change in perspective. Kant might fit the bill for this notion. Kant rejected the old way of doing epistemology, which was to ask 'how can we bring ourselves to understand the world?' What we ought to ask, said Kant, is 'how is it possible that the world comes to be understood by us?' This was truly a revolutionary move in the history of philosophy, for it asserted that the world must conform to the conditions imposed on it by the one experiencing the world. The notion that one has the truth when one's mind conforms with the world is rejected in favor of the notion that all knowledge is subjective because it is impossible without experience which is essentially subjective. Copernicus had said, in essence, <i>let's see how things look with the Sun at the center of the universe, instead of the Earth</i>. Kant said, in essence, <i>let's examine how we know the world by assuming that the world must conform to the mind, rather than the mind conform to the world</i>. Copernicus, however, could be considered as contributing to a paradigm shift in science. If he were right about the earth and other planets going around the sun rather than the sun and the other planets going around the earth--and he was--then astronomers could no longer do astronomy without profound changes in their fundamental concepts about the nature of the heavens. On the other hand, there is no way to know if Kant is right. We can accept or reject his theory. We can continue to do philosophy without being Kantians, but we cannot continue to do astronomy without accepting the heliocentric hypothesis and rejecting the geocentric one. What did Grinder and Bandler do that makes it impossible to continue doing psychology or therapy or semiotics or philosophy without accepting their ideas? Nothing. </font> </p> <p align="center"><font color="#006699" face="Arial" size="3"><strong>Do people benefit from NLP?</strong></font></p> <p style="text-align: left"><font face="Arial" size="3">While I do not doubt that many people benefit from NLP training sessions, there seem to be several false or questionable assumptions upon which NLP is based. Their beliefs about the unconscious mind, hypnosis and the ability to influence people by appealing directly to the subconscious mind are unsubstantiated. All the scientific evidence which exists on such things indicates that what NLP claims is not true. You cannot learn to "speak directly to the unconscious mind " as Erickson and NLP claim, except in the most obvious way of using the power of suggestion.</font></p> <p style="text-align: left"><font face="Arial" size="3">NLP claims that its experts have studied the thinking of great minds and the behavior patterns of successful people and have extracted <i>models </i>of how they work. "From these models, techniques for quickly and effectively changing thoughts, behaviors and beliefs that get in your way have been developed."<sup><a href="http://www.hypnosisboard.com/nlp.htm">*</a></sup> But studying Einstein's or Tolstoy's work might produce a dozen "models" of how those minds worked. There is no way to know which, if any, of the models is correct. It is a mystery why anyone would suppose that any given model would imply techniques for quick and effective change in thoughts, actions and beliefs. I think most of us intuitively grasp that even if we were subjected to the same experiences which Einstein or Tolstoy had, we would not have become either. Surely, we would be significantly different from whom we've become, but without their brains to begin with, we would have developed quite differently from either of them.</font></p> <p align="center"><strong><font color="#006699" face="Arial" size="3">in conclusion</font></strong></p> <p style="text-align: left"><font face="Arial" size="3">It seems that NLP develops models which can't be verified, from which it develops techniques which may have nothing to do with either the models or the sources of the models. NLP makes claims about thinking and perception which do not seem to be supported by neuroscience. This is not to say that the techniques won't work. They may work and work quite well, but there is no way to know whether the claims behind their origin are valid. Perhaps it doesn't matter. NLP itself proclaims that it is pragmatic in its approach: what matters is whether it <a href="pragmatic.html">works</a>. However, how do you measure the claim "NLP works"? I don't know and I don't think NLPers know, either. <a href="http://www.opednews.com/articles/Why-I-Stopped-Using-NLP-by-Steven-Barnes-CHANGE_Change_NLP_Power-131018-653.html">Anecdotes and testimonials</a> seem to be the main measuring devices. Unfortunately, such a measurement may reveal only how well the trainers teach their clients to persuade others to enroll in more training sessions.</font></p> <p style="text-align: left">If you don't trust me, take a look at:</p> <blockquote> <p style="text-align: left"><a href="http://www.degruyter.com/view/j/ppb.2010.41.issue-2/v10059-010-0008-0/v10059-010-0008-0.xml">Thirty-Five Years of Research on Neuro-Linguistic Programming. NLP Research Data Base. State of the Art or Pseudoscientific Decoration?</a></p> <p style="text-align: left"><a href="http://psycnet.apa.org/index.cfm?fa=buy.optionToBuy&id=1987-11411-001">Research findings on neurolinguistic programming: Nonsupportive data or an untestable theory?</a></p> <p style="text-align: left"><a href="http://donaldclarkplanb.blogspot.com/2006/11/nlp-trainings-shameful-fraudulent-cult.html">NLP – training’s shameful, fraudulent cult</a> (for what it's worth, I would not classify NLP as a cult, but devotion to Bandler might seem so to some critics)</p> <p style="text-align: left"><a href="http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-24617644">Neuro Linguistic Programming: Mental health veterans therapy fear</a></p> <p style="text-align: left">and the <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neurolinguistic_programming">Wikipedia article on NLP</a>, which is much more thorough than the SD entry.</p> </blockquote> <p style="text-align: left"><font face="Arial" size="3"><strong>postscript: </strong>On a more cheerful note, <a href="http://web.archive.org/web/20080215233330/http://www.nlpschedule.com/random/lawsuit.html">Bandler has sued Grinder for millions of dollars</a>. Apparently, the two great communicators and paradigm innovators couldn't follow their own advice or perhaps they are modeling their behavior after so many other great Americans who have found that the most lucrative way to communicate is by suing someone with deep pockets. NLP is big on metaphors and I doubt whether this nasty lawsuit is the kind of metaphor they want to be remembered by. Is Bandler's action of putting a trademark on half a dozen expressions a sign of a man who is simply protecting the integrity of NLP or is it a sign of a greedy megalomaniac? </font> </p> <p style="text-align: left"><font face="Arial" size="3"><b>further reading</b></font></p> <p style="text-align: left"><font face="Arial" size="3"><b><a HREF="comments/neurocom.html">reader comments</a></b> </font> </p> <p style="text-align: left"><b><font size="3">books and articles</font></b></p> <p style="text-align: left"><font face="Arial" size="3"> <a href="http://web.archive.org/web/20020822181508/http:/www.lynxfeather.net/nest/humor/2002/alteredstates.html">Barry, Dave. "Altered States"</a> in <em>The Miami Herald</em>, April 13, 1997. (Humorist Dave Barry takes Peter Lowe's SUCCESS 1997 12-hour success seminar featuring Anthony Robbins, Elizabeth Dole, Rabbi Harold Kushner, Brian Tracy, Lou Holtz, Jim Morris, Peter Lowe, Pat Riley, Dr. Ted Broer, George Bush, and Dan Kennedy.)</font></p> <p style="text-align: left"><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ISBN=0709947798/roberttoddcarrolA/">Heap, M. (1988). Neuro-linguistic programming, In M. Heap (Ed.) <em>Hypnosis: Current Clinical, Experimental and Forensic Practices</em>. London: Croom Helm, pp 268-280.</a></p> <p style="text-align: left"><a href="http://www.emeraldinsight.com/journals.htm?articleid=1905816">Roderique-Davies, Gareth. 2009. Neuro-linguistic programming: Cargo Cult Psychology? <em>Journal of Applied Research in Higher Education</em> Volume 1, Number 2. pp. 57–63.</a> "...after three decades, there is still no credible theoretical basis for NLP, researchers having failed to establish any evidence for its efficacy that is not anecdotal."</p> <p style="text-align: left"><font face="Arial" size="3"><a href="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ISBN=1400054109/roberttoddcarrolA/">Salerno, Steve. (2006). <i>Sham: How the Self-Help Movement Made America Helpless.</i> Three Rivers Press.</a></font></p> <p style="text-align: left"><font face="Arial" size="3"><font color="#000000"><a HREF="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ISBN=0465075525/roberttoddcarrolA/">Schacter, Daniel L. <i>Searching for Memory - the brain, the mind, and the past</i></a></font> <a HREF="http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ISBN=0465075525/roberttoddcarrolA/"> (New York: Basic Books, 1996).</a></font><p style="text-align: left"> <b><font size="3">websites</font></b><p style="text-align: left"><font face="Arial" size="3"><a href="http://www.rigorousintuition.ca/board2/viewtopic.php?t=27056&p=319396">The Bandler Method </a>by Frank Clancy & Heidi Yorkshire (A 1989 article from <i> Mother Jones</i> magazine that accuses Bandler of alcohol and drug addiction, and argues he was guilty of the murder he was charged with in 1986.</font><p style="text-align: left"><font face="Arial"><a HREF="http://web.archive.org/web/20050204102200/http://www.purenlp.com/rbnnn.htm"> <font size="3">"Bandler Unplugged"</font></a><font size="3"> </font> <strong style="font-weight: 400"><font size="3">An interview with the head honcho himself. Read it. He reveals it all in this interview.</font></strong></font><p style="text-align: left"><font face="Arial" size="3"><a HREF="http://www.inspiritive.com.au/grinterv.htm">1996 Interview with Dr John Grinder</a></font><p style="text-align: left"><font face="Arial" size="3"><a HREF="https://web.archive.org/web/20150303010841/http://www.rain.org/~da5e/nlpgloss.html">NLP Mega-Glossary</a></font><p style="text-align: left"><font face="Arial" size="3"><a HREF="http://www.inspiritive.com.au/nlp.htm">Inspiritive's page on NLP</a></font><p style="text-align: left"><font face="Arial" size="3"> <a href="http://web.archive.org/web/20021216094638/http:/easyweb.easynet.co.uk/~dylanwad/morganic/art_nlp.htm">A Scientific Assessment of NLP</a> by Dylan Morgan</font><p style="text-align: left"><a href="http://www.richardbandler.com/"> <font face="Arial" size="3">RichardBandler.™com</font></a> <p style="text-align: left"><strong><a name="blog" id="blog"></a>blog</strong> <p style="text-align: left">Neurologica (Dr. Steven Novella) - <a href="http://theness.com/neurologicablog/index.php/neurolinguistic-programming-and-other-nonsense/">Neurolinguistic Programming and other Nonsense </a> "...the assumptions of NLP, namely that our cognition, behavior and emotions can be 'programmed' by mimicking the more superficial aspects of those with desirable attributes (for example posture and mannerism) are wrong. 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