everywomanshero
Master Don Juan
- Joined
- May 2, 2005
- Messages
- 1,816
- Reaction score
- 36
I haven't done an exhaustive search, but here are some frauds I've uncovered. Many of them seem very believable, others smell like BS from a distance.
1. Men are from MArs...(dozens of sources on the net and elsewhere regarding this, google). Anything to do with John Grey. I remember this guy being on a morning talk show (liza or something like that), and even the host was like... that would be totally weird if my husband did that. lol. I later learned he graduated from a non-accredited instution that has had to relocate and change names. In the academic community, he is considered a joke. Tannen is the recommend replacement for people who otherwise would purchase Grey's book.
2. NLP. (http://www.quackwatch.org/, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neuro-linguistic_programming#Criticism, etc). This stuff is pretty much crap. In controlled studies, NLP has fared poorly. Although, those with a vested interest in keeping NLP alive have made excuses for it's poor performance, by scientific standards the book seems closed on much of NLP. A great deal of NLP claims just simply isn't factual, again, it's only dangerous in that it makes people feel like they are getting somewhere when in reality they would (likely) be far better off using something that the evidence shows is effective. If subjective bias and placebo effects are all one needs, hey, it just might do the trick.
3. Subliminal Messages: I posted on this earlier today. Not "dangerous" as some claim, just Ineffective. Again, it does tend to make (many) people feel like they have made progress, but on measured tests/abilities/functions there has been no progress.
1. Men are from MArs...(dozens of sources on the net and elsewhere regarding this, google). Anything to do with John Grey. I remember this guy being on a morning talk show (liza or something like that), and even the host was like... that would be totally weird if my husband did that. lol. I later learned he graduated from a non-accredited instution that has had to relocate and change names. In the academic community, he is considered a joke. Tannen is the recommend replacement for people who otherwise would purchase Grey's book.
2. NLP. (http://www.quackwatch.org/, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neuro-linguistic_programming#Criticism, etc). This stuff is pretty much crap. In controlled studies, NLP has fared poorly. Although, those with a vested interest in keeping NLP alive have made excuses for it's poor performance, by scientific standards the book seems closed on much of NLP. A great deal of NLP claims just simply isn't factual, again, it's only dangerous in that it makes people feel like they are getting somewhere when in reality they would (likely) be far better off using something that the evidence shows is effective. If subjective bias and placebo effects are all one needs, hey, it just might do the trick.
3. Subliminal Messages: I posted on this earlier today. Not "dangerous" as some claim, just Ineffective. Again, it does tend to make (many) people feel like they have made progress, but on measured tests/abilities/functions there has been no progress.