Portal:Neuro-linguistic programming

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

edit  

The NLP Portal

Neuro-linguistic programming (NLP) is a personal development system developed in the early 1970s by Richard Bandler and linguist John Grinder, in association with Gregory Bateson. It uses a toolbox of strategies, axioms and beliefs about human perception and subjective experience.

Bandler and Grinder credited three successful therapists--Fritz Perls, Virginia Satir and Milton Erickson--as NLP's major inspirations. They 'modeled' the therapists and developed special “patterns” for general communication, rapport-building and self-improvement. NLP author Robert Dilts calls the system "the study of the structure of subjective experience."[1]

References

  1. ^ Dilts, Robert (1980). Neuro-Linguistic Programming: Volume I (The Study of the Structure of Subjective Experience). Meta Publications, 1. ISBN 0916990079. 
edit  

Selected article

Portal:Neuro-linguistic programming/Selected article/5

edit  

Selected picture

Portal:Neuro-linguistic programming/Selected picture/1

edit  

Quotes

Portal:Neuro-linguistic programming/Quotes

edit  

Related portals

edit  

Selected practitioner

Portal:Neuro-linguistic programming/Selected practitioner/8

edit  

Did you know...

Portal:Neuro-linguistic programming/Did you know

edit  

Neuro-linguistic programming lists

edit  

Categories

edit  

Neuro-linguistic programming topics

edit  

WikiProjects

edit  

Notable practitioners

edit  

Things you can do

Portal:Neuro-linguistic programming/Things you can do

edit  

Web resources

edit  

Associated Wikimedia

Purge server cache