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Gold Member
I'm reading Trauma & Memory: Brain and Body in Search for the Living Past by Peter A. Levine, PhD.
(Quotes below are from this book.)
He is the developer of Somatic Experiencing.
I find it difficult to accept his reasoning because when he states something, he uses that statement to launch onto a new concept without explaining the process.
Also, he scarily lacks credible scientific backing for his research.
For Example
In Chapter Four, page 49 he explains that:
There are 3 massive statements here, and not one reference, quote or study cited.
Chapter 5 is an even bigger joke.
I just can't take this guy seriously.
Do you find him credible?
(Quotes below are from this book.)
He is the developer of Somatic Experiencing.
I find it difficult to accept his reasoning because when he states something, he uses that statement to launch onto a new concept without explaining the process.
Also, he scarily lacks credible scientific backing for his research.
For Example
In Chapter Four, page 49 he explains that:
Once we understand the process of renegotiation and engage its transformative power, biology works to move the experience along. It follows naturally that when the client's bodily responses are elaborated and become conscious in the safety of the present moment, the thwarted procedural memories come to an intrinsic corrective experience and there is resolution.
There are 3 massive statements here, and not one reference, quote or study cited.
- "Biology works to move the experience along." This is extremely vague. What biology? The human body as a whole, the body systems, the cellular matrix, endocrine function etc... What? Please explain.
- "It follows naturally that..." No. This doesn't work in science. We expect proof.
- "There is resolution." Again, no statistical referencing.
Chapter 5 is an even bigger joke.
I just can't take this guy seriously.
Do you find him credible?