Non-violent communication is the intellectual heir of E-prime which was the heir of semantic concerns in General Semantics. Recent books on the subject are well reviewed. It is a useful tool in communicating across large value rifts.
Non-violent communication is the intellectual heir of E-prime which was the heir of semantic concerns in General Semantics.
I don’t think it makes sense to speak of a single framework as the heir of General Semantics. General Semantics influenced quite a lot.
General Semantics itself is quite complex. Nonviolent communication is pretty useless when you want to speak about scientific knowledge.
General Semantics notions of thinking about relations and structure are on the other hand are quite useful.
Does Rosenberg cite Bourland (or Korzybski) anywhere? I thought these were independent inventions that happened upon some tangential ideas about non-judgmental thinking.
I had thought that there was a link in someone Rosenberg worked with developing it but now I can’t find anything. The elimination of the “to-be” verb forms does not seem explicit in NVC methodology. I think you are correct and they are independent.
Non-violent communication is the intellectual heir of E-prime which was the heir of semantic concerns in General Semantics. Recent books on the subject are well reviewed. It is a useful tool in communicating across large value rifts.
I don’t think it makes sense to speak of a single framework as the heir of General Semantics. General Semantics influenced quite a lot.
General Semantics itself is quite complex. Nonviolent communication is pretty useless when you want to speak about scientific knowledge. General Semantics notions of thinking about relations and structure are on the other hand are quite useful.
Does Rosenberg cite Bourland (or Korzybski) anywhere? I thought these were independent inventions that happened upon some tangential ideas about non-judgmental thinking.
I had thought that there was a link in someone Rosenberg worked with developing it but now I can’t find anything. The elimination of the “to-be” verb forms does not seem explicit in NVC methodology. I think you are correct and they are independent.