Sapphire Harp
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- Nov 6, 2008
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A lot of the time, many of our threads are dealing with fears, insecurities, lack of self-confidence and the like... so I thought I would draw on a section of 'Please Understand Me II' by David Keirsey and see if we can't get another angle on this.
The attached Pdf file is three pages concerning the self-image of Rationals (-NT-s). The basic idea contends that a person's self image has three different facets. The manifestations are charted as:
* * * * *
I definitely recommend reading the attachment first, but do you agree with this analysis? Does this capture the essence of what gives INTPs their self-worth?
It's an approximate fit for me... the ingenuity, in particular, seems like an awkward match. The suggestion that NT self-respect derives from autonomy makes a lot of sense to me, personally... Long have I struggled to eliminate dependencies from my life, and I continue it now as I eliminate my student loans with concentrated effort...
But I think the self-confidence section is the most interesting to me. According to Keirsey, NT's self-confidence derives from their resolve...
Indeed, there's a notion from somewhere in eastern philosophy that all suffering comes from needing and attempting to maintain control over things... (and ourselves...?)
So, is this to say that the rise of self-confidence in an INTP is intimately tied with negotiating a compromise between those things in our lives which can be controlled and those things that cannot?
The attached Pdf file is three pages concerning the self-image of Rationals (-NT-s). The basic idea contends that a person's self image has three different facets. The manifestations are charted as:
* * * * *
I definitely recommend reading the attachment first, but do you agree with this analysis? Does this capture the essence of what gives INTPs their self-worth?
It's an approximate fit for me... the ingenuity, in particular, seems like an awkward match. The suggestion that NT self-respect derives from autonomy makes a lot of sense to me, personally... Long have I struggled to eliminate dependencies from my life, and I continue it now as I eliminate my student loans with concentrated effort...
But I think the self-confidence section is the most interesting to me. According to Keirsey, NT's self-confidence derives from their resolve...
Once Rationals resolve to do something they have, in a sense, made a contract with themselves, a contract they dare not go back on. Indeed, their worst fear is their determination might weaken, their resolve might falter, and that they will fail in their resolve.
Why is this? Why are NTs so fearful of their will power weakening? It is because they can never take will power for granted, however strong it has proved itself in the past. They know, perhaps better than others, that they are not in charge of their will, but that their will is in charge of them. Einstein was fond of quoting Schopenhauer's words: "Man can do what he wants, but he cannot will what he wills."
Rationals know, for instance, that they cannot will themselves to control involuntary functions, such as speech, sexual desire, digestion, warding off infection, and so on. After all, the involuntary is by definition not subject to the will, but must occur spontaneously.
It's fascinating that resolve and willpower are focused around remaining in control... and yet there are so many things fundamentally beyond our control... Particularly emotions - which is something which thwart and frustrate us INTPs so often... The source of our self-confidence is continuously challenged by our own nature? Why is this? Why are NTs so fearful of their will power weakening? It is because they can never take will power for granted, however strong it has proved itself in the past. They know, perhaps better than others, that they are not in charge of their will, but that their will is in charge of them. Einstein was fond of quoting Schopenhauer's words: "Man can do what he wants, but he cannot will what he wills."
Rationals know, for instance, that they cannot will themselves to control involuntary functions, such as speech, sexual desire, digestion, warding off infection, and so on. After all, the involuntary is by definition not subject to the will, but must occur spontaneously.
Indeed, there's a notion from somewhere in eastern philosophy that all suffering comes from needing and attempting to maintain control over things... (and ourselves...?)
So, is this to say that the rise of self-confidence in an INTP is intimately tied with negotiating a compromise between those things in our lives which can be controlled and those things that cannot?