この特徴付けにおける「高次の」により、NLPの焦点であるパターンは物理的世界のパターンではないことを、より具体的に読者に指摘することを意図しています。これらの物理的世界のパターンは、物理学とそれに関連する分野の領域です。NLPの焦点であるパターンは、それらが一時的経験となる前に既に神経学的変換を受けた表象−本書でファーストアクセス(FA)と呼ぶもの−です。私たちが提案していることを正しく理解するためには、認識論の世界への小旅行が必要です。私たちは、どのような深さであってもそれを動機づけることなく自分の立場を述べます。興味のある読者は、「日常生活の認識論(作業タイトル)」(グリンダーとボスティック、2002年)で私たちが行っている全ての議論を調べたいと思うかもしれません。
(「風の中のささやき」p.10-11)
We propose that NLP, both in its core activity, modeling, and its applications can be usefully understood to be a higher order operational epistemology. By this statement, we mean several things: first that the operations defined both by modeling and by the application of many of the coded patterns of excellence that result from this modeling are operations that are designed to challenge the very processes by which we form portions of ourmental maps that we normally accept which we form portions of our mental mapsthat we normally accept without question. These challenges are designed to force a critical revision of significant portions of our mental maps, calling for a fresh perspective about the relationship between the conclusion wetypically draw from our experiences and the evidence that we use to justify such generalizations. In effect, such challenges, sensitize us to the mapping operations ranging from our receptors to the higher level codes by which we consciously attempt to make intelligent decisions about ourselves, one another and the world about us. This is the sense of the term operational in our proposed characterization of NLP.
By higher order in this characterization, we more specifically intend to pointout to the reader that the patterns that are the focus of NLP are not thepatterns of the physical world; those patterns of the physical world are the domain of physics and associated disciplines. The patterns that are the focus of NLP are the representations that have already been subjected to neurological transforms prior to our first experience of them – what in this book we will call First Access (FA). To appreciate what we are proposing requires a briefexcursion into the world of epistemology. We will state ourposition without attempting to motivate it in any great depth. The interested reader may wish to examine the full argument we make in RedTail Math: the epistemology of everyday life (working title), Grinder and Bostic, 2002.
('Whispering in the Wind' p.10-11)
NLP共同創始者ジョン・グリンダー博士認定校
ニューコードNLPスクール
記事更新日:2022/07/23