Absolutely agree with that. Was not suggesting wholesale acceptance of NLP (which is quite non-monolithic mind you) either, merely pointing at something and saying “let’s find out if there’s some value to that thing there”.
The way I figure it, NLP is about hacking the psyche through manipulating the individual experience at a lower level than mainstream psychology (although there seems to be some overlap with eg CBT in the linguistic part of NLP). I can’t think of any other therapy form that asks the subject to manipulate their mental images in order to achieve results, for instance. That part alone makes NLP very interesting to me.
I may be biased since I’m not so interested in eg quantum physics, Bayes probability, or AI theory, as many here are. My main interests lie in my own personal development/improvement. Hence my openness to checking out somewhat fringe topics.
Ordinarily, “great claims require great evidence” is a great attitude, but in the field of self help my heuristic is a little bit more liberal. In this area, I tend to think “great claims are worth investigating even if the evidence is a bit lacking”.
So now you guys know where I’m coming from, and that I really meant no harm, and you may now continue wrecking my karma *sulk* :-)
Absolutely agree with that. Was not suggesting wholesale acceptance of NLP (which is quite non-monolithic mind you) either, merely pointing at something and saying “let’s find out if there’s some value to that thing there”.
The way I figure it, NLP is about hacking the psyche through manipulating the individual experience at a lower level than mainstream psychology (although there seems to be some overlap with eg CBT in the linguistic part of NLP). I can’t think of any other therapy form that asks the subject to manipulate their mental images in order to achieve results, for instance. That part alone makes NLP very interesting to me.
I may be biased since I’m not so interested in eg quantum physics, Bayes probability, or AI theory, as many here are. My main interests lie in my own personal development/improvement. Hence my openness to checking out somewhat fringe topics.
Ordinarily, “great claims require great evidence” is a great attitude, but in the field of self help my heuristic is a little bit more liberal. In this area, I tend to think “great claims are worth investigating even if the evidence is a bit lacking”.
So now you guys know where I’m coming from, and that I really meant no harm, and you may now continue wrecking my karma *sulk* :-)