Moocow
Semantic Nitpicker
Quoting this because he made good points and got ignored.Personally, I find Pod'Lair frustrating. They have a very exciting hypothesis, namely that the cognitive functions that we use show up in facial expressions, and the recognition of which is a taught skill. I find that quite compelling, that it would allow me to gain insight into the people around me. It will take a carefully designed experiment to prove, and probably not one, but several to do so satisfactorily. And even then, it cannot be taken beyond what it is; a model, and an empirical one at that (as opposed to theoretical models, which explain what's going on and why, Pod'Lair only seems to give the what's going on, which functions are being used and thus the type. There is only experience to back up why it works, not a sound theory. To be fair, the sound theory is practically impossible, given that we're dealing with the mind, which we can't understand it its totality). It will have its strengths and weaknesses, and deserves merit for the scope of what it tries to explain.
But there we come to the hitch; explaining it. While the hypothesis is interesting, the language is off-putting. Xyy means nothing to me. It has no meaning that I can connect to anything else. To read this thread properly, I need to have a key next to me, explaining what all the symbols mean (they do sound cool, but that is their only merit), which makes understanding the system so much harder. Why do you have this (largely unnecessary from my standpoint) barrier to entry? For instance, look at the MBTI system. The names of the functions correspond to what they do, more or less. Certainly there are specialised definitions, as Feeling doesn't quite mean what it means in daily usage (and there are a number of threads around that clarify and explain these distinctions), but there is a connection there, too. We are able to have an intuitive understanding of what's going on when we say that feeling is a dominant function. But when you say that you're Nyy'xai? Cool story bro. You've lost my interest by speaking gibberish.
Sop here I am, a prospective customer, willing to buy into your theory. Right now, you aren't selling it to me. You're making it hard, and there's also the prospect of a learned skill in there that I'll have to practice at if I'm going to be any good, which is another turn-off (though, admittedly not one you can do anything about, but be aware of it). I suspect that there is a great danger of someone learning all you have to teach, and setting themselves up quite nicely by selling all your secrets in plain english, using standard function names (ie MBTI, socionics types, no need to reinvent the wheel here, I can't see any major changes that you've made to them), and setting up a clear, easy to navigate website, and you bet that you could write a self-help book on this stuff (whether you could learn this stuff properly from a simple book is another question, but I think that scruples have been abandoned already in this hypothetical example); there is money to be made in selling this. Not to mention the impact that taking this to academia would have, I wouldn't be at all surprised if nobody has thought to look into this particular idea, there's lots to research and only so many doing the work. With a well designed experiment or two, you'd have hard proof and qualifications to speak about this stuff. Then let the book deals flow. But right now? You really aren't selling it to me. You look like you want to sell it to me, and spread your movement, but you have these incomprehensible barriers to entry.
As a side note, after a bit more time skimming around your site, I've worked out that you're applying a slightly different approach to the whole typology thing, coming at it from a slightly different angle. Something which concerns me slightly, is that you have nothing good to say about the other models that have gone before you. This is odd, given the similarities that Pod'Lair shares with MBTI and the rest. You read more as an evolution, rather than a revolution, or giving you the most credit, a re-thinking (by which I mean, you seem to have looked at it from the perspective of 'what can we see expressed that we can link to a cognitive process' rather than the more conventional approach that seemed to be 'how can we split people into personality groups'). The fact that you have found eight functions is a huge validation of the previous models; you've come up with something similar, even if the functions themselves are not quite identical as you define them. The fact that you have nothing good to say about the other theories, what they got right, where they fell down, what they sort-of-but-not-quite explained, implies to me that you haven't really considered their merits at all, all the while you're going about stealing them.
So that's my two cents worth, please forgive me for posting at 3am.
So far I'm still just seeing rhetorical replies from Adymus that, just like the website, very clearly lack self awareness; absolutely no distinction of ego from the proposition of a concept. In fact, all facets of pod'lair would be more interesting and intriguing if they were simply proposed isolated from the personal feelings and opinions of its more manic members.
It shows a lot more confidence to calmly present the essentials of your case and accept if others don't understand or agree than to hide them behind mountains of condescension, insult, and unjustified pride. Also, justification is not the same as repeating what you think of yourself ad nauseum. I get it, you've learned to jerk off and you just really enjoy it.
http://personalitycafe.com/myers-br...-podlairs-stupid-models-join-comsens-now.html
lol, we need more NTJs on this forum.
Monkey King (from PerC) said:Anyway, had it been presented in a concise manner, I'm sure the similarities would have been more apparent. AND picked on by the great debaters of PerC.