here, a large global footprint posture [WNFM - World Naturopathic Federation material c2023] and a regional echo of that global posture [CT NDs' practices language c2026]:
001. the 2023 WNFM dataset is here;
002. the 2026 CT ND dataset is here;
003. the relationship between Connecticut's CNPA and the World Naturopathic Federation. To quote Perplexity's overview:
Note: I had stated in the second upload to the State of Connecticut's PHC "Connecticut’s CNPA is an AANP affiliate and the AANP is listed first on the founding members list of the WNF" [here]. As to whether the WNF is merely a global sock-puppet for North American naturopathy, Perplexity had this to say: "The WNF as a global standardizing and advocacy body built around the North American professional model of naturopathy, which other regions have joined and largely accepted. It is not simply a shell fronting for one country, but its conceptual center of gravity and its leadership history mean that 'global consensus' in its documents is very likely to reflect what is already normative in North American naturopathic institutions and associations (AANP, CAND, the accredited colleges [AANMC]), then validated via surveys and memberships." So there is a little bit of the aspect of a nesting doll that nests itself.
"Putting it together:
- WNF: global federation; sets international narrative and standards for naturopathy; the AANP is its U.S. member.
- AANP: national U.S. association; member of WNF; coordinates national advocacy and provides the template of 'naturopathic principles' that WNF then globalizes.
- CNPA (CT): state‑level association; effectively a 'chapter' in the same ecosystem, feeding into AANP at the national level and, indirectly via AANP, into WNF’s global representation.
So the Connecticut organizations and marketing materials you’re seeing sit at the local end of a hierarchy whose national node is the AANP and whose international capstone is the WNF, all sharing the same underlying definitions and philosophical documents."
004. via Perplexity, a compare and contrast through the task "Can you compare and contrast the theories, science claims, supernaturalism, diagnostics, therapeutics, depictions of standard medicine, depictions of naturopath / ND expertise and possible medievalisms of the two attached PDFs?":
"Both PDFs strongly promote naturopathic medicine, but they differ in scope and how explicitly they systematize and 'theologize' it [interesting word choice!]; the WNFM document functions as a quasi-textbook and profession-building manifesto, while the Connecticut ND material is more of a marketing‑plus‑practice ecosystem for individual and small‑group NDs in a specific jurisdiction.
- WNFM presents a formal, globally unified theoretical scaffold: vitalism, vis medicatrix naturae, Therapeutic Order, Emunctory Theory, Unity of Disease, Toxaemia, Humoral Theory, Naturopathic Cures, Value of Fever, Integrative “Triad of Health” (mind–body–spirit), and “Theory of Complex Systems.” These are explicitly framed as “naturopathic theories” that structure reasoning and interventions.
- The CT file reproduces and endorses the same ideas, but in more practitioner‑friendly language: “vital force,” “body’s wisdom,” “healing power of nature,” “health is simple, disease is complex,” “you are only as healthy as what you eat, absorb, metabolize, and excrete,” and a multi‑step “Naturopathic Cures” schema (detoxification, revitalization, stabilization, regeneration).
- WNFM is self‑consciously constitutive: it claims these theories are shared across 100+ countries and are what makes naturopathy a distinct global profession, including explicit historical lineages from Empedocles, Hippocrates, Galen, Hildegard, Hufeland, Kneipp, Lindlahr, Tilden, Priessnitz, etc. The CT file uses much of the same history indirectly via copied text and borrowed explanations but deploys them to legitimize local ND practice and training programs (Bridgeport, Bastyr).
