[Neurons] 2019 Neurons #28 USING HISTORY TO ESTABLISH CREDIBILITY
Michael Hall
meta at acsol.net
Mon Jun 17 05:19:10 EDT 2019
From: L. Michael Hall
2019 Neurons #28
June 17, 2019
More About the History of NLP
USING HISTORY
TO ESTABLISH CREDIBILITY
Recently in a public forum when I presented a bit of the history of NLP, a
young man asked, "So, why did you write the book NLP Secrets: Untold
Stories? Was it just as a historical record?" Now before he could finish
his question, I was already shaking my head back and forth to signal "no,"
that's not the reason. And so before I said a word, he continued. "No? So
why? What did you hope to accomplish?"
"Credibility," was my one word answer. I wanted to establish credibility
for NLP - for the NLP Communication model and for the development of NLP
over the decades. As a child of the Human Potential Movement and as a child
of the Cognitive Psychology Movement, NLP appeared at a time when moving
beyond psychology's focus on pathology to generative development. Arising
at a time when computers were beginning to model "intelligence," information
processing, and computing capacities and when a strength-based or
resource-based approach was part of the spirit of the times- it arose as a
significantly new approach. I wanted to demonstrate how it was (and is) a
valid approach.
Sure, some of the characters involved in the history of that development
were not paragons of virtue- by any stretch of he imagination. But NLP did
not grow up as about anyone- not the founders nor even the first exemplars
(Perls, Satir, and Erickson). It grew up as about an idea. The idea was
that there is structure to experience and when you discover it, the
structure gives you access to the power and magic of that experience.
That's why I wrote the book- in part to set the history straight, to address
many of the myths that have grown up around NLP, and to position the role of
those who mis-use the model.
That people can and do mis-use a model, or a technology, an idea is part of
the history of any and every movement. So it has been with NLP. There
have been people who took the powerful communication tools and used them
manipulatively. There were others who solely focused on how to use it to
make money. Yet mis-use itself is not an argument against something.
Mis-use simply warns us that there is a proper and ethical use of that
thing.
The credibility of NLP goes back to the scholars that were quoted and relied
upon to build the foundations of Neuro-Linguistic Programming. I'm talking
about scholars like Gregory Bateson, Alfred Korzybski, Abraham Maslow along
with Carl Rogers, George Miller with his associates Karl Pribrim and Eugene
Gallanter, and Noam Chomsky. The credibility goes to these individuals and
to the disciplines that they represent- General Semantics, Cognitive
Psychology, Transformational Grammar. And there's more- Gestalt Psychology
and Gestalt Therapy, Family Systems, and Ericksonian Medical Hypnosis.
Now true enough, credibility lagged for awhile after the beginning. In
those "Wild Days of NLP" (as Terry McClendon titled his book), the focus was
entirely on a discovery stage and then a practical "what can we do with this
stuff?" stage. Further, given some of the iconoclastic individuals who were
involved at the beginning- they downplayed (and even argued against)
traditional quantitative and statistical research methodology. That created
a vacuum of research at the beginning. And it would be a few years before
new qualitative research methodologies would become available for
researchers.
It wasn't until mid-1990s that a new generation of NLP trainers, thinkers,
researchers arose. That led to many people finally conducting research on
various aspects of the NLP model, as well as a NLP Research Conference, a
Research Journal, and many chapters and books looking at NLP in terms of
evidence-based methodologies. Yet many people in NLP are not aware of this
and most people outside of the various NLP communities do not know this.
I wrote about the wild and wonderful and strange people in the history of
NLP to tell the story about how it all came about and who was involved. By
expressing the myths and telling the untold stories, it not only reveals
"family secrets," it lifts NLP up above the fallible human beings who were
involved. It moves things up to the model and the processes by which we an
make our individual and collective lives much, much better. And when that
happens, the world can change for the better. Ah yes, that's why I wrote
it- because NLP has the power to change the world, one person and one group
at a time - I wrote to enable NLP to change the world.
L. Michael Hall, Ph.D.
Executive Director, Neuro-Semantics
P.O. Box 8
Clifton CO. 81520 USA
www.neurosemantics.com look for the special offer
Author of the stunning new history of NLP--- NLP Secrets.
Investigative Journalism which has exposed what has been kept secrets for
decades.
http://www.neurosemantics.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/02/NLP-Secrets-2_sml2.
png
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <https://pairlist8.pair.net/pipermail/neurons/attachments/20190617/fab10d2c/attachment-0001.html>
-------------- next part --------------
A non-text attachment was scrubbed...
Name: image001.png
Type: image/png
Size: 137551 bytes
Desc: not available
URL: <https://pairlist8.pair.net/pipermail/neurons/attachments/20190617/fab10d2c/attachment-0001.png>
More information about the Neurons
mailing list