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Totally ignoring the fact that Bandler and Grinder had themselves observed the same thing and, by March 1978 at the latest, had changed the emphasis on PRSs in exactly the way indicated as more effective by Hammer's findings (see, for example, Frogs into Princes, Bandler and Grinder, 1978/1979. pages 34 and 36).
Richard Bandler and John Grinder titles edited by Steve and Connirae Andreas which are well known in the NLP field include: Frogs Into Princes (Bandler & Grinder, 1979) Trance-Formations (Grinder & Bandler, 1981) Reframing (Bandler and Grinder, 1982) Using Your Brain for a Change (Bandler, 1985) Titles authored by Steve and Connirae Andreas include
In the mid-1970s, her work was extensively studied by the co-founders of neuro-linguistic programming (NLP), Richard Bandler and John Grinder, who used it as one of the three fundamental models of NLP. [14] Bandler and Grinder also collaborated with Satir to author Changing With Families for Science and Behavior Books, which bore the subtitle ...
The definition of "non-core" is probably in simple terms, do most of the classic text books by Grinder, Bandler, Dilts, DeLozier, Andreas, Seymour, O'Connor, etc prior to around 1985-ish refer to it as a part of NLP? Do reputable non-hype trainers in general NLP refer to it as integral to NLP?
Representational systems (VAKOG) = 4-tuple (Grinder & Bandler ,1975) = primary access (Freud) I do not think PRS is used widely anymore in NLP, certainly not by Grinder or Bandler. I did however, find this Marketing journal article (2003) which uses tests PRS in television advertising. I don't know if it is useful.
In NLP (Neuro-liguistic Programming), a transderivational search (Bandler and Grinder, 1976) is essentially the process of searching back through one's stored memories and mental representations to find the personal reference experiences from which a current understanding or mental map has been derived. [1]
It was created by Richard Bandler and John Grinder in California, USA in the 1970s. NLP is often identified by a set of core techniques that came from Bandler and Grinder's initial attempt to replicate what "exemplary" psychotherapists did. <citation needed>.
This is extremely inappropriate and NLP being pseudoscientific. Bandler and grinder seem to have introduced terms and ideas of their own that are not part of the accepted body of linguistics. Nominalization is a grammatical transformation but according to Bandler and Grinder, nominalizations constitute linguistic distortions.
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related to: bandler and grinder nlp