Neuro-linguistic programming

Neuro-linguistic programming" (NLP) is a field concerned with studying and modeling human performance and excellence, and attempts to build transferable skill sets. It is based on the assumption that the unconscious mind might be "programmed" like a computer through the use of language, as well as through images, sounds, and other sensory input. It is promoted for various applications, including psychotherapy, modelling excellence, speed learning, speed reading, breast (Note 1) enhancement, penis enlargment (Note 2), sales, seduction (note 4), and the development of psychic powers (Note 6).

Contents

History

NLP was co-created in the early 1970s by Richard Bandler and John Grinder, with the collaboration of Robert Dilts and Judith Delozier, from patterns derived from "modeling" several well-known psychotherapists, namely Fritz Perls, Virginia Satir, and Milton Erickson.

Bandler, then a student at the University of California, Santa Cruz, and Grinder, then an Assistant Professor of Linguistics, were strongly influenced by the mentoring of Gregory Bateson, and they drew their inspiration from many fields, including Alfred Korzybski's cybernetics and his General Semantics.

NLP and Psychology

NLP falls under the broadest heading of popular psychology, and perhaps most closely relates to cognitive psychology. But while Grinder had an undergraduate degree in psychology, NLP began quite outside the academic mainstream, and it remains largely divorced from mainstream academic psychology to this day, even though many NLP practitioners do have traditional credentials in psychology and psychiatry.

It is claimed that NLP offers a "practical epistemology," i.e., it attempts to explain in specific terms "how we know what we know": by inquiring of any human experience, memory, or theory, "How do you know this to be 'true'?" -- that is to say, when one says, "I know this to be true," on what visual, auditory, kinesthetic, gustatory, or olfactory information is one relying? When such information has been elicited, NLP then seeks to explore in detail such "representations" of reality (often described in terms of "four-tuples" of visual, auditory, kinesthetic, and olfactory/gustatory experiences), and to modify them when they are inadequate or unhelpful by offering specific techniques for revising such representations.

Goals

NLP as a discipline is pragmatic; practitioners generally take interest in models only insofar as those models have useful applications. Some NLP practitioners claim to be unconcerned with explaining how a technique works or with predicting whether a technique will work in the future or in different situations. Nevertheless, most NLP practitioners seek to discover "how people do what they do" in the general sense, and are especially interested in how experts and superior performers in a given area achieve their results; they are interested in discovering what is "the difference that makes the difference", and then in modeling those behaviors to create transferable skill-sets.

As a small example, consider the task of spelling English words. (Note that here we refer to the simple task of recalling the spelling of words one has seen in print before, rather than the more complex task of guessing how a word might be spelled based only on hearing it pronounced.) According to NLP practicioners, some people remember spellings phonetically, and some even remember them by physically writing the words out, whether on paper or in the air. The spellers with the quickest and most accurate recall, however, tend to remember the spelling of words visually, i.e., they literally see the printed word in their "mind's eye." People can therefore learn to excel in spelling by changing their approach to the task: instead of writing out or sounding out words, they will improve by learning to visualize words and by regularly applying this technique to the task of spelling.

Methods

The field of NLP has, over time, gathered to it many "mini-models" and associated techniques that can be applied to various situations. These models and techniques range in purpose from information gathering and building rapport, to anchoring and the triggering of internal states, to trance induction and changing beliefs.

Models of internal representations include such as visual, auditory, kinesthetic, gustatory, and olfactory (along with their various submodalities), as well as their concomitant effects on emotions, beliefs, and behaviors. (As mentioned above, the subtitle of one early book on NLP is "the study of the structure of subjective experience".)

As fallout from the modeling process, NLP has also developed specific techniques that can be applied to areas ranging from psychotherapy -- e.g. curing phobias, handling criticism and flattery, handling grief, stopping unwanted habits and behaviors, etc. -- to sales and persuasion techniques, to learning techniques, to curing some allergies, among many others.

NLP is best learned through live training programs, but can also be learned through self-study by using the techniques presented in books or tapes and then exploring them.

NLP principles

In contrast to its numerous mini-models and techniques, NLP lacks a central theory, and this is partly by design. Nevertheless, several principles have generally guided the development of NLP, most of them borrowed from other disciplines. Practitioners often explicitly formulate these principles as "presuppositions."

Practicality

NLP is not so much about discovering what is "true" as it is about discovering what is useful, what "works" in a given situation. But beyond mere utility, NLP aims for efficiency and elegance.

If one technique can effect a desired change in an hour, then the search is on for another technique that can accomplish the same change in ten minutes. Example: It's not uncommon for the turnaround on a phobia such as heights or spiders to be under 10 minutes. The work can be tested objectively afterwards for delivery of the client's desired result by asking the client to actually visit a tall building or find a spider, and report back on their experience. The practicality of NLP may only go as far as explaining after the fact. As the practice is not concerned with predicting an outcome in the long term through rigorous scientific testing and inference to generalizability, the practicality of NLP in this sense is extremely limited.

Experimentation, observation and feedback

NLP emphasizes observation skills, and these are often the first skills taught in basic NLP training. Practitioners and students of NLP are admonished not to take any model for granted, but rather are challenged to try them out in the real world and observe what happens. A principle borrowed from cybernetics is that of the feedback loop. The NLP practitioner, when consciously engaged in some activity, especially an activity involving one or more other people, is continually gathering information and using it as feedback to adjust his or her own behavior.

One aspect of this is captured in the aphorism "The meaning of your communication is the response you get." Also important is that some of the most important information is gathered from physiological cues and signals (gestures, posture, eye movement, breathing patterns, facial expressions, etc), the vast majority of which are given unconsciously, and that these signals must be calibrated to the individual who is providing them.

NLP often teaches specific meanings to particular visual cues, such as eye movements, in that they can show whether the subject is accessing particular parts of their brain. Empirical research into this has found the practice, in addition to cues from body language, to be erroneous.

Client centered

According to NLP, the client, having the resources they need (Although perhaps not yet having developed or explored them fully) is the person able to say what works and what does not. If they are observed carefully, NLP assumes that they will actually show it quite clearly in their words and body language, what the problem is, how they experience it, and which ways will or will not work, or will be blocked. So the NLP practitioner will by and large use these cues to help the client explore their 'map' (perceptions and preconceptions) of reality, encouraging them to explore "what if" and use their existing experience and approaches to the full to identify new approaches, working within the client's world rather than imposing the practitioner's own beliefs upon them. So NLP proponents attempt to use NLP in this way to understand, work and communicate respectfully and effectively within another person's world view, just as conventional psychotherapists do.

Structure

A key element is that NLP is very much based upon structure and sequence. Individual tools within NLP can be treated as building blocks, put together to most effectively communicate with each individual human being. It is syntax based, in that the order and structure of what is done is felt to have a significant impact on how effective it is.

Examples:

  1. The spelling example above is a case where one structure (phonetic spelling) is less effective than another (visual spelling).
  2. For many simple phobias, the key problem is in fact a very powerful "once-off" learning experience which formed a structural link of the form "See X → Feel Y". In the absence of any underlying issue, where the sole problem is the discomfort and inconvenience of a phobia, there are tools which effectively help a client reduce/remove this dysfunctional link.
(In the latter case, good NLP practice would explore carefully for connected issues and potential side effects (ecology), equally it might act pragmatically once enough information is obtained, and trust the client to say if any further work is needed thereafter)

Clarity of thought

NLP teaches that communication is extremely precise and key aspects are often very subtle. It's important to be very clear in thinking and overall approach. For example, a goal is not just a vague wish, but a Well defined outcome that should meet very specific criteria, or else is likely to prove problematic at some future stage.

Multiple viewpoints

A situation (internal or external) can be perceived from many viewpoints, such as "whose point of view", "past, present, future", "part of/outside of" (ie associated/dissociated), in terms of physiology or logical thought (body/mind), consciously or unconsciously, at different neurological levels of significance.

NLP strongly encourages enhanced and multiple viewpoints, on the basis that many problems which are symptomatic of a perceived restriction or limitation, result from a lack of awareness and belief in other possible choices.

Adaptation and Innovation

While students are taught set patterns and models during NLP trainings with very specialised terminology, once they have mastered the basic techniques, students are encouraged to try to use these to innovate new ways, without being tied to mere repetition of existing techniques. The principle here, again borrowed from cybernetics, is that the more flexible and adaptable a person is and the more options they have in their behaviour, the more successful they are likely to be in their endeavors. Along these lines are statements such as "If what you are doing is not working, try something -- anything -- else."; the view that there is no failure, only feedback; and the attitude that any skill, belief or behaviour of one person can in principle be modeled and learned by another, who can use it to improve their own skill.

Subjectivity of experience

Other principles, borrowed from sources such as General Semantics, affirm the subjective nature of our experience, which never fully captures the objective world, and that this experience differs from one individual to the next, sometimes radically, and can even differ for the same individual when compared across different contexts. As a result, one needs to be aware of these differences when interacting with others, to make few assumptions about what the other person is experiencing, and to gather information as needed to verify one's understanding of the other's experience.

Empiricism

NLP's development has always been empirical in the loosest possible sense; the techniques and patterns developed in the field come from repeated observations, and all of the most common NLP techniques are continually submitted to testing during ongoing practitioner trainings around the world. As these observations do not involve the use of empirically validated measures, they are open to a serious lack of validity and reliability, just as research has shown. Indeed, regarding empiricism, it can only be said that observation skills are taught to beginning students in NLP.

Ecology

Ecology in NLP relates to the integrity of the system as a whole in terms of the consequences to the person's life. Practically, this simple consideration entails asking questions like "What are the intended effects of this change? What other effects might this change have, and are those effects desirable? Is this change still a good idea?"

Therapeutic NLP

While it can be argued that NLP is primarily about modeling human behavior, it remains true that the first subjects of study were experts in the field of psychotherapy. As a result, many of the models and techniques of NLP, perhaps a majority of those taught in basic trainings, have application in psychotherapy. A significant number of those who take NLP training do so because they are practitioners of psychotherapy, whether as psychologists, psychiatrists, MFCCs (i.e. Marriage, Family, and Child Counselors), social workers, pastors, or lay counselors. Given the historical importance of this area of application it is worth some discussion.

Strictly speaking, NLP does not specify any approach to therapy, claiming instead that it is better to give the therapist as many options and flexibility as possible. As a result, it is easy to blend NLP models and techniques with whatever previous training they have had.

Even if they have had not previous training in psychotherapy, an NLP psychotherapist can draw on a set of psychotherapeutic principles, or a default NLP approach; Some of these principles are:

Beyond this sampling of general principles there are many specific techniques and patterns for specific situations and types of desired changes. See the references at the end of this page.

In terms of self-help, many of the NLP-derived techniques can be self-applied. But other techniques more or less require the assistance of another (skilled) person.

Modeling

The technique of Modeling is perhaps at the core of NLP.

Mechanistic toolbox or humanistic?

NLP claims to use a convenient 'toolbox' of techniques and methods, a collection of "patterns" which are said to be useful. It's important to bear in mind that the tools and their use are two distinct issues. NLP by origin is said to be pragmatic and looks for "what works".

However NLP when taught as a set of techniques directed at a specific goal, and especially when divorced from its full background, has at times been presented as very mechanistic ("this is how to do that") or manipulative ("this is how to make someone do something"). In its full context, using a broad approach based upon the clients own wishes, this is not the case. When taught as "quick fix" solution or directed to a goal such as sales or seduction, any checks and balances that NLP claims origin for are often omitted.

Criticism of NLP

Commercialism

NLP can be criticized for manner in which NLP is promoted. NLP as a whole, and NLP trainers have made unwarranted claims for the field in general or for the specific techniques that they teach. The field of NLP is largely unregulated and there is more than one guiding association or guild leading to inconsistent standards.

There are concerns that NLP, advertised as a "technology for change" is ethically neutral, and that the ethics of NLP has been compromised, because the social psychology and group aspects of NLP can be (and have been) exploited for commercial applications such as sales and marketing, activities such as seduction, and the sale of dubious products and snakeoil.

Some trainers are secretive about their techniques and only make them available through expensive courses, making it hard to assess the validity of the techniques. The techniques and skills can often only be learned in what they consider to be expensive privately taught courses. Acquiring most of the skills requires live training. The need for private courses is unlikely to change until the subject is taught more widely in more publicly accessible venues, and until the promoters decide inventing gratuituous terminology is superfluous. There are only a few training organisations, colleges or universities offering accredited courses in NLP. In The Netherlands, one can attend a number of modes as an extension on dramatic therapy, communication, management, psychology and other such courses with which communication is concerned.

Moreover, NLP practitioners often invent special buzzwords in their seminars and workshops, when the language already exists to adequately describe what they are doing. Many trainers in NLP and its offshoots have gone to the extent of giving a different name to their brand of NLP, and often trademarking their brand-name.

This is probably due in large part to the failed attempt of Richard Bandler in the 1980s and early 1990s to acquire legal rights to the NLP moniker through the courts. The buzzwords and brand-names reinforce the reputation of NLP as a non-academic discipline. They also make it very difficult to keep current with all the new techniques/buzzwords and make it beneficial to use a glossary and pay for more classes. The majority of established NLP techniques are accessible through published books and on the Internet.

Is NLP a science?

The majority of methods taught as part of NLP have not been scientifically verified and it can even be classified as a pseudoscience.

In many traditional senses of the philosophy of science (see for example writings by Carl Hempel), this could be an apt claim: many of NLP's propositions are functionally untestable in the empirical predictions they seem to make, and those that are testable have often not been tested or have been tested with mixed results (see for example peer-review studies on the effectiveness of NLP modality matching techniques in psychotherapy). Correlational studies supporting NLP's ideas are limited or open to alternate interpretations and laboratory causal studies are almost nonexistent in the literature.

In assessing the crticism of NLP as "unscientific," it could be said that numerous popular psychotherapeutic traditions also lack some scientific certainty. Psychodynamically oriented schools of therapy are criticized today for similar reasons, and Humanistically oriented schools of therapy often are as well. As the field's techniques stand today, scientificially evaluating the effectiveness of various talk-based therapies often tends to be a very problematic undertaking. The one clear distinction between NLP and mainstream psychotherapy, is that the latter makes use of an eclectic range of empirical science.

By its nature, Science is skeptical of unproven and unprovable claims, and anecdotal evidence that cannot be cross verified with reliable measurement - is not sufficient to establish a scientific fact. Thus, until controlled research is carried out, the claims of NLP practitioners that "in my experience it works" will not persuade scientists or the discerning public, for precisely the same reason that most people do not often believe in astrology.

The method of proof in NLP places little emphasis on prediction beyond what occurs during a single session, so it lacks fundamental characteristics of science in the large, such as carefully controlling experiments, and subjecting them to peer review in refereed journals.

Unlike formal scientific research, NLP does not have truth as a primary goal. As such, it has often been marketed as a "technology" in much the same way a toilet attendant can be called a "sanitary engineer". This is because NLP is distinct from technology in that it does not have the background of scientifically established empirical or theoretical principles.

The future of NLP

In sum, NLP can broadly be described as a type of psychotherapy which has been marketed to the general public using a broad brush approach to solutions, and adopts conveniently broad and simple terms, popular psychology, and pseudoscience to promote its efficacy. As such it has been widely extended to market an extremely diverse range of products from psychotherapy to psychic seduction techniques, as it is likely to be used for the sale of other such products in the future. The ever changing and uncertain nature of NLP’s concepts and theory have led to distrust by conventional fields, but allow it to operate on a powerfully commercial scale without the need for objective proof of its efficacy, and the “flavour of the month” trends and fads occurring within the NLP concern suggest that NLP will go through further alterations and applications in future.

Literature

See also

External links

See also: Neuro-linguistic programming, 1970s, 1980s, 1990s, Alfred Korzybski, Allergy, Anchoring, Anecdotal evidence, Aphorism, Astrology