NLP (Neuro-Linguistic Programming)
NLP (Neuro-Linguistic Programming) is one of the best-known applied systems of Western psychology, originating in California in the 1970s.
Not a theory from scratch. Richard Bandler and John Grinder did not build a theory from scratch — they studied the work of three outstanding psychotherapists: Fritz Perls, Virginia Satir, and Milton Erickson — and sought to extract from their mastery reproducible patterns.
No ontology, but a toolkit. The result was a method that possesses no ontology of its own but offers a rich toolkit.
Map and Territory
The central metaphor. Every person perceives the world through their own model of reality, assembled from beliefs, internal imagery, inner dialogue, and bodily sensations.
The map is never equal to the territory. It is precisely the limitations of the map that give rise to fears, blocks, and unwanted patterns.
NLP's task. Not to change reality but to expand the map and increase the number of available choices.
Key Instruments
- Anchors — links between a trigger and a state
- Submodalities — parameters of internal imagery: brightness, size, distance
- Reframing — shifting the angle of perception of a situation
- Timeline work
The Pragmatics of the Method
Here and now. The method operates in the present moment and is oriented toward a concrete result. Years of investigating childhood are not required — it is sufficient to alter the structure of experience here and now.
Appeal and risk. This makes NLP an attractive instrument for coaches, negotiators, educators, and therapists, but it also creates the temptation to promise too much too quickly.
Scientific Status
Academic criticism. Academic psychology regards NLP critically: the majority of claims about representational systems have not undergone controlled studies.
Some techniques work. Certain techniques — analogous to systematic desensitisation — have parallels in evidence-based practice, but this does not render the whole system scientifically verified.
Place in Errarium
The pragmatic, agnostic pole. In the Errarium atlas, NLP (#63) represents the pragmatic, agnostic pole of psychological methods: no cosmology, no karma, no symbolic systems — only the structure of experience and the mechanism of its transformation.
Ontological opposites. This makes NLP ontologically opposite to astrology (#1) and Human Design (#13).
Methodological allies. Compatible with coaching, Transactional Analysis (#9), and — in working with beliefs and attention — partially with MNR (#61).
Method Info
#63NLP (Neuro-Linguistic Programming)
Data D3+D4
Causality C1+C4
Time T0+T1
Result F1, F4, F5
