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Glossary›Kinesiology

Glossary

Kinesiology

The scientific study of human movement, encompassing biomechanics, anatomy, and physiology, as well as holistic approaches like applied kinesiology and muscle testing.

What is Kinesiology?

Kinesiology is the academic and scientific study of human body movement, integrating principles from anatomy, biomechanics, physiology, neuroscience, and psychology. The term encompasses two distinct domains: academic kinesiology, which examines movement through empirical research and is foundational to physical therapy, sports science, and rehabilitation; and applied kinesiology, a holistic diagnostic system developed in the 1960s that uses manual muscle testing to assess structural, chemical, and emotional imbalances in the body. Within conscious and spiritual communities, kinesiology typically refers to this latter practice and its descendants—specialized kinesiology, energetic kinesiology, and behavioral kinesiology—which treat the body as an integrated energy system capable of revealing unconscious information through neuromuscular response.

Origins & Lineage

Academic kinesiology emerged as a formal discipline in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, when physical education programs in European and American universities began systematically studying human motion. The Royal Central Institute of Gymnastics in Stockholm (founded 1813) and the Normal School of Gymnastics at Harvard (1879) laid early groundwork, though the term “kinesiology” itself derives from Greek roots meaning “movement study.”

Applied kinesiology represents a separate lineage entirely. It was developed in 1964 by Detroit chiropractor George Goodheart, who observed that muscle weakness often correlated with organ dysfunction and could be improved through chiropractic adjustment, nutritional intervention, or meridian stimulation. Goodheart synthesized concepts from chiropractic, Traditional Chinese Medicine acupuncture meridians, osteopathy, and nutritional science into a diagnostic framework. He taught his methods exclusively to licensed healthcare practitioners through the International College of Applied Kinesiology (ICAK), founded in 1976.

From Goodheart’s work emerged multiple derivative systems. John Thie, a colleague of Goodheart, democratized muscle testing for lay practitioners through Touch for Health (1973), which became one of the most widely practiced energy healing modalities worldwide. Psychiatrist John Diamond developed behavioral kinesiology in the 1970s, connecting muscle response to emotional states and positive/negative stimuli. In the 1980s and 1990s, numerous specialized kinesiology branches emerged: Brain Gym (educational kinesiology), Three in One Concepts (emotional stress release), Health Kinesiology, and Integrated Healing, among others.

How It’s Practiced

In applied kinesiology and its derivatives, practitioners use manual muscle testing as the primary diagnostic tool. The practitioner applies gentle pressure to a specific muscle—often the anterior deltoid of the extended arm—while the client resists. A “strong” response (muscle maintains position) theoretically indicates balance or a “yes” from the body’s innate intelligence; a “weak” response (muscle gives way) suggests imbalance, stress, or “no.” This binary feedback system is used to identify food sensitivities, nutritional deficiencies, emotional blockages, limiting beliefs, structural misalignments, and energetic disturbances.

A typical session begins with establishing baseline muscle strength and may include surrogate testing (testing one person while they touch another, used for infants or animals) or self-testing techniques. Practitioners may test muscles while the client holds supplements, think specific thoughts, recall memories, or have specific acupressure points touched. Corrections vary widely depending on the kinesiology branch: spinal adjustments, nutritional supplementation, emotional stress release techniques, eye movements, cross-lateral exercises, affirmations, chakra balancing, meridian tracing, or flower essence recommendations.

Sessions typically last 60-90 minutes and may address physical complaints, emotional patterns, learning difficulties, or spiritual development questions. Many practitioners work from a paradigm that the body stores subconscious information inaccessible to the conscious mind, and that muscle testing provides a direct communication channel to this wisdom.

Kinesiology Today

Conscious seekers encounter kinesiology through holistic health clinics, wellness centers, spiritual retreats, and integrated medicine practices. Touch for Health workshops are taught globally, training non-professionals in basic muscle testing and meridian balancing. Educational kinesiology (Brain Gym) has been adopted by some alternative schools and homeschooling communities, despite controversy over its scientific claims. Specialized kinesiologists often maintain private practices, combining muscle testing with other modalities like sound healing, essential oils, or shamanic practices.

The practice has evolved into increasingly subtle applications: testing for past-life trauma, ancestral patterns, soul contracts, optimal crystals, or energetic compatibility with places and people. Some practitioners use kinesiology as a form of divination, asking yes/no questions about future decisions or spiritual guidance. Online courses and certification programs proliferate, ranging from weekend intensives to multi-year professional training.

Meanwhile, academic kinesiology remains distinct, housed in university departments studying exercise physiology, motor learning, sports psychology, and biomechanics, with no connection to muscle testing practices.

Common Misconceptions

Kinesiology is not a monolithic practice—applied kinesiology practiced by licensed healthcare providers differs substantially from specialized kinesiology systems available to lay practitioners. Muscle testing has not been validated through peer-reviewed research as a reliable diagnostic tool; studies consistently show results no better than chance when properly blinded. The mechanism by which muscle testing purportedly works—whether ideomotor effect, energetic resonance, or access to subconscious knowledge—remains speculative.

Kinesiology does not replace medical diagnosis or treatment for serious conditions. While some practitioners claim to identify pathogens, tumors, or nutrient deficiencies through muscle testing, these claims lack scientific support. The practice is also not universally recognized within chiropractic or naturopathic medicine; many evidence-based practitioners reject it as pseudoscience.

Applied kinesiology is not the same as kinesiology departments at universities, which study human movement through conventional scientific methods. The shared name creates confusion; academic kinesiologists typically distance themselves from muscle testing practices.

How to Begin

For those curious about kinesiology from a holistic perspective, “Touch for Health” by John Thie offers the most accessible entry point, with clear instructions for basic muscle testing and meridian balancing. Weekend workshops are widely available and require no prerequisites. Those interested in educational applications might explore “Brain Gym: Simple Activities for Whole Brain Learning” by Paul and Gail Dennison, though approaching claims critically.

Seeking a qualified practitioner through the International College of Applied Kinesiology (for chiropractors, medical doctors, or osteopaths) or the International Kinesiology College ensures higher standards than unregulated practitioners. Ask about training lineage, certification, and scope of practice. Approach kinesiology as a complementary self-exploration tool rather than primary healthcare, particularly for serious conditions requiring medical attention.

For academic kinesiology (movement science), university programs in exercise science, physical therapy, or sports medicine provide evidence-based education in biomechanics, motor control, and human performance.

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