• OK, it's on.
  • Please note that many, many Email Addresses used for spam, are not accepted at registration. Select a respectable Free email.
  • Done now. Domine miserere nobis.

Piaget: Explanation of Bias Against Sensors

Hadoblado

think again losers
Local time
Today 4:50 PM
Joined
Mar 17, 2011
Messages
7,065
---
The degree to which we here on the forum are biased against sensors, and the legitimacy of such a bias, is often the subject of debate. I personally prefer intuitives, but don't believe that this is necessarily the product of an actual superiority inherent in intuitive thought.

I was just doing some broad reading for exams and noticed that Piaget's cognitive developmental stages also reflect this bias. The difference between the concrete and formal operational stages of cognition are represented in terms of maturity.

Information available here

Concrete Operations:
The concrete operational stage is the third of four stages from Piaget's theory of cognitive development. This stage, which follows the preoperational stage, occurs between the ages of 7 and 11 years[17] and is characterized by the appropriate use of logic. During this stage, a child's thought processes become more mature and "adult like." They start solving problems in a more logical fashion. Abstract, hypothetical thinking has not yet developed, and children can only solve problems that apply to concrete events or objects. Piaget determined that children are able to incorporate inductive reasoning. Inductive reasoning involves drawing inferences from observations in order to make a generalization. In contrast, children struggle with deductive reasoning, which involves using a generalized principle in order to try to predict the outcome of an event. Children in this stage commonly experience difficulties with figuring out logic in their heads. For example, a child will understand A>B and B>C, however when asked is A>C, said child might not be able to logically figure the question out in their heads.

Milestones of the concrete operational stage [edit]
- Ability to distinguish between their own thoughts and the thoughts of others. Children recognize that their thoughts and perceptions may be different from those around them.

- Increased classification skills: Children are able to classify objects by their number, mass, and weight.

- Ability to think logically about objects and events

- Ability to fluently perform mathematical problems in both addition and subtraction

Important processes [edit]
Conservation [edit]
The understanding that although an object’s appearance changes, it still stays the same in quantity. Redistributing an object does not affect its mass, number, or volume. For example, a child understands that when you pour a liquid into a different shaped glass, the amount of liquid stays the same.

Decentering [edit]
The child now takes into account multiple aspects of a problem to solve it. For example, the child will no longer perceive an exceptionally wide but short cup to contain less than a normally wide, taller cup.

Reversibility [edit]
The child now understands that numbers or objects can be changed and then returned to their original state. For example, during this stage, a child understands that his or her favorite ball that deflates is not gone and can be filled with air and put back into play again. Another example would be that the child realizes that a ball of clay, once flattened, can be made into a ball of clay again.

Serriation [edit]
The ability to sort objects in an order according to size, shape, or any other characteristic. For example, if given different-shaded objects they may make a color gradient.

Transitivity [edit]
Transitivity, which refers to the ability to recognize relationships among various things in a serial order. For example, when told to put away his books according to height, the child recognizes that he starts with placing the tallest one on one end of the bookshelf and the shortest one ends up at the other end.

Classification [edit]
The ability to name and identify sets of objects according to appearance, size or other characteristic, including the idea that one set of objects can include another.

Elimination of Egocentrism [edit]
The ability to view things from another's perspective (even if they think incorrectly). For instance, show a child a comic in which Jane puts a doll under a box, leaves the room, and then Melissa moves the doll to a drawer, and Jane comes back. A child in the concrete operations stage will say that Jane will still think it's under the box even though the child knows it is in the drawer. (See also False-belief task).

Children in this stage can, however, only solve problems that apply to actual (concrete) objects or events, and not abstract concepts or hypothetical tasks. Understanding and knowing how to use full common sense has not been completely adapted yet.

Logic [edit]
Piaget determined that children in the concrete operational stage were able to incorporate inductive logic. On the other hand, children at this age have difficulty using deductive logic, which involves using a general principle to predict the outcome of a specific event.

This includes mental reversibility. An example of this is being able to reverse the order of relationships between mental categories. For example, a child might be able to recognize that his or her dog is a Labrador, that a Labrador is a dog, and that a dog is an animal, and draw conclusions from the information available, as well as apply all these processes to hypothetical situations.[18] The abstract quality of the adolescent's thought at the formal operational level is evident in the adolescent's verbal problem solving ability.[18] The logical quality of the adolescent's thought is when children are more likely to solve problems in a trial-and-error fashion.[18] Adolescents begin to think more as a scientist thinks, devising plans to solve problems and systematically testinions.[18] They use hypothetical-deductive reasoning, which means that they develop hypotheses or best guesses, and systematically deduce, or conclude, which is the best path to follow in solving the problem.[18] During this stage the adolescent is able to understand such things as love, "shades of gray", logical proofs and values. During this stage the young person begins to entertain possibilities for the future and is fascinated with what they can be.[18] Adolescents are changing cognitively also by the way that they think about social matters.[18] Adolescent Egocentrism governs the way that adolescents think about social matters and is the heightened self-consciousness in them as they are which is reflected in their sense of personal uniqueness and invincibility.[18] Adolescent egocentrism can be dissected into two types of social thinking, imaginary audience that involves attention getting behavior, and personal fable which involves an adolescent's sense of personal uniqueness and invincibility.[18] These two types of social thinking begin to affect a child's egocentrism in the concrete stage however carry over to the Formal operational stage when they are then face with abstract thought, and fully logical thinking.

Formal Operations Stage:
The final stage is known as Formal operational stage (adolescence and into adulthood): Intelligence is demonstrated through the logical use of symbols related to abstract concepts. At this point, the person is capable of hypothetical and deductive reasoning. During this time, people develop the ability to think about abstract concepts.

Piaget believed that deductive logic becomes important during the formal operational stage. This type of thinking involves hypothetical situations and is often required in science and mathematics.

Abstract thought emerges during the formal operational stage. Children tend to think very concretely and specifically in earlier stages. Children begin to consider possible outcomes and consequences of actions.

Problem-solving is demonstrated when children use trial-and-error to solve problems. The ability to systematically solve a problem in a logical and methodical way emerges.

The stages and causation [edit]
Piaget sees children’s conception of causation as a march from "primitive" conceptions of cause to those of a more scientific, rigorous, and mechanical nature. These primitive concepts are characterized as supernatural, with a decidedly nonnatural or nonmechanical tone. Piaget has as his most basic assumption that babies are phenomenists. That is, their knowledge "consists of assimilating things to schemas" from their own action such that they appear, from the child’s point of view, "to have qualities which in fact stem from the organism." Consequently, these "subjective conceptions," so prevalent during Piaget’s first stage of development, are dashed upon discovering deeper empirical truths.

Piaget gives the example of a child believing the moon and stars follow him on a night walk; upon learning that such is the case for his friends, he must separate his self from the object, resulting in a theory that the moon is immobile, or moves independently of other agents.

The second stage, from around three to eight years of age, is characterized by a mix of this type of magical, animistic, or “nonnatural” conceptions of causation and mechanical or "naturalistic" causation. This conjunction of natural and nonnatural causal explanations supposedly stems from experience itself, though Piaget does not make much of an attempt to describe the nature of the differences in conception; in his interviews with children, he asked questions specifically about natural phenomena. Examples: "What makes clouds move?", "What makes the stars move?", "Why do rivers flow?", the nature of all the answers given, Piaget says, are such that these objects must perform their actions to "fulfill their obligations towards men." He calls this "moral explanation."[21]

While this is obviously not his intention, Piaget has made an ordinal claim about sensory vs intuitive thinking: intuition is simply a stage that some people don't reach.

Is Piaget correct in this assessment?

Am I putting words in his mouth?
 

Cyberpunk

Oh no, that extrovert!
Local time
Today 7:20 AM
Joined
Jun 6, 2013
Messages
35
---
Location
Sweden
Yeah, and this is one of the problems inherent in the N-S dichotomy. Intuitives can access the sensors apparent way of thinking but not the other way around.
 

Montresor

Banned
Local time
Today 12:20 AM
Joined
Feb 3, 2013
Messages
971
---
Location
circle
I am familiar with Piaget's developmental stages so I will skip the textbook reading and get to the point.

You are putting words in his mouth.

Abstract reasoning is more advanced than basic interpretations of concrete perceptions....we learn how to do it later in life. This does not imply N>S in any case.


I guess to add something to the conversation I would remind you that S and N occur together so the formal operational stage of development is seriously nothing even remotely similar to the preference of N over S perceptions.
 

Cyberpunk

Oh no, that extrovert!
Local time
Today 7:20 AM
Joined
Jun 6, 2013
Messages
35
---
Location
Sweden
I am familiar with Piaget's developmental stages so I will skip the textbook reading and get to the point.

You are putting words in his mouth.

Abstract reasoning is more advanced than basic interpretations of concrete perceptions. This does not imply N>S in any case.

But isn't complexity inherently preferable?

EDIT: Complexity here synonymous with "advanced".
 

Montresor

Banned
Local time
Today 12:20 AM
Joined
Feb 3, 2013
Messages
971
---
Location
circle
But isn't complexity inherently preferable?

EDIT: Complexity here synonymous with "advanced".


Think about what you are saying.

You are obviously not replying to my post. Your post makes no sense.

This thread is a joke.


The formal operational stage of development is a normal and expected period of development in pre-adolescent children worldwide.

I agree the definitions resemble the N and S definitions, but they're applied in a totally different context, with different inherent meaning.

Are you seriously about to assert that people who perceive via their senses first, and their intuition second, are in any way similar to a 7 year old child who can't tell which glass has more milk? Hello?

Your argument "but, isn't complexity inherently preferable?" what the fuck does that even mean? Did you think before posting?
 

Analyzer

Hide thy life
Local time
Yesterday 11:20 PM
Joined
Aug 23, 2012
Messages
1,241
---
Location
West
. Intuitives can access the sensors apparent way of thinking but not the other way around.

For the most part, I think this could be true. So that would mean sensors feel superior then N's, especially considering the greater number of them.
 

Architect

Professional INTP
Local time
Today 12:20 AM
Joined
Dec 25, 2010
Messages
6,691
---
In "Quiet, the Power of Introverts" Susan Cain makes the case that the difference between introversion and extraversion is that introverts have lower tolerance for stimulus than extraverts. She points to possible biochemical reasons for this, regardless of the cause I think it's a reasonable point.

Likewise I've mused about whether the difference between sensor and intuitive is that sensors have greater need for physical stimulation than intuitives, again with a possible biochemical basis. Certainly I see this with Sensors around me - they like Disneyland, action movies, junk food, camping and physical stimulation of all kinds. Whereas with me and the intuitives I know a little of that goes a long way. So ...

intuition is simply a stage that some people don't reach.

I think this is the wrong way to look at it, the two are just two sides of the same street.

The reason many intuitives such as myself who "look down" on sensors is because we're fed up with them. Being a minority, we understand them but they don't understand us, and meanwhile we have to hear how "creative" and what "idea people" they are.
 

Cyberpunk

Oh no, that extrovert!
Local time
Today 7:20 AM
Joined
Jun 6, 2013
Messages
35
---
Location
Sweden
Think about what you are saying.

You are obviously not replying to my post. Your post makes no sense.

This thread is a joke.


The formal operational stage of development is a normal and expected period of development in pre-adolescent children worldwide.

I agree the definitions resemble the N and S definitions, but they're applied in a totally different context, with different inherent meaning.

Are you seriously about to assert that people who perceive via their senses first, and their intuition second, are in any way similar to a 7 year old child who can't tell which glass has more milk? Hello?

Your argument "but, isn't complexity inherently preferable?" what the fuck does that even mean? Did you think before posting?

I didn't make a statement. I was asking you a question. You don't make any sense. And my question was about this in particular:

Abstract reasoning is more advanced than basic interpretations of concrete perceptions. This does not imply N>S in any case.

That is basically one, albeit perhaps a bit negative, definition of the N-S dichotomy. And since you didn't understand that I was asking you something and not proclaiming it, I'll try a different wording.

Doesn't the implied complexity of N compared to S result in N>S? Do I seriously have to communicate with you through internet slang to get my point across?
 

Architect

Professional INTP
Local time
Today 12:20 AM
Joined
Dec 25, 2010
Messages
6,691
---
Doesn't the implied complexity of N compared to S result in N>S? Do I seriously have to communicate with you through internet slang to get my point across?

Why is N more complex than S? Explain yourself.

Athletes and craftsman have enormous physical understanding and dexterity that I don't have.
 

Cyberpunk

Oh no, that extrovert!
Local time
Today 7:20 AM
Joined
Jun 6, 2013
Messages
35
---
Location
Sweden
Why is N more complex than S? Explain yourself.

Athletes and craftsman have enormous physical understanding and dexterity that I don't have.

No, I don't have to. I was talking about the statement "Abstract reasoning is more advanced than basic interpretations of concrete perceptions." and how that is more or less a definition of the perceived contrast between intuitives and sensors. Do I really have to explain myself this many times? I was asking him a question, based on that statement.

As for myself and my personal stance towards it, it's not important cause I have no where said that intuitives are, objectively, more complex than sensors. I said that in the context of his or her own wording.
 

Analyzer

Hide thy life
Local time
Yesterday 11:20 PM
Joined
Aug 23, 2012
Messages
1,241
---
Location
West
I wonder which personality has the most balanced and least balanced S and N.
 

Montresor

Banned
Local time
Today 12:20 AM
Joined
Feb 3, 2013
Messages
971
---
Location
circle
Abstract reasoning is more advanced than basic interpretations of concrete perceptions....we learn how to do it later in life. This does not imply N>S in any case.

But isn't complexity inherently preferable?

EDIT: Complexity here synonymous with "advanced".

That is basically one, albeit perhaps a bit negative, definition of the N-S dichotomy. And since you didn't understand that I was asking you something and not proclaiming it, I'll try a different wording.

Doesn't the implied complexity of N compared to S result in N>S? Do I seriously have to communicate with you through internet slang to get my point across?

OK so let me think this through again (at my typical slow pace) so we don't have to fight about it just because I can't understand what you're saying.

1. The standing assertion in the OP is that children in the formal operational stage of development are analogous to "N-types" while the concrete operational stage of development is analogous to "S-types".

2. My response is that the S/N dichotomy is (of course) simply a representation that a given individual has a preference for one style of perceptions over the other. Some have concrete perceptions, others abstract. I enhanced my argument by adding the fact that S and N occur together; they exist in pairs. They don't just occur individually. Se types further process their concrete perceptions through Ni, where they gather an intuitive grasp of their surroundings. Ne types gather abstract information first and then process it inwardly in a concrete fashion.
Then of course there are Si and Ni types but we call them J's and we're talking about P's (I think - at least it sounds like we are). Hmm, because NJ's actually use Se as well, which is the type of S that you're describing; but they're intuitives, not sensors.

3. Your response is that complexity is inherently preferable. Phrased as a question (like it makes a difference...) Now that we're clear on what you were replying to (above), I can give you a better answer! The answer is yes!! Yes it is! If complexity=advanced then it is inherently preferable!!! Congratulations.

What the fuck are you talking about? Do you think that when I say "they do not imply S and N" that I really mean "they do imply S and N"?


So we're clear now, the point I am trying to make is that Piaget's developmental stages do not predict anything and do not represent anything to do with personality or MBTI at all. It is basic human development. We develop concrete perceptions first, and abstract perceptions after. Later on in life, some people happen to develop a preference for abstract over concrete. We call them intuitives.


Intuitives can access the sensors apparent way of thinking but not the other way around.

oh, this is really what gets to the core of why I'm calling your posts idiotic, in case you were ever wondering. Now you could say I'm quoting you out of context, but you would be lying, and you have basically made the exact same claim in another thread, to which I will be replying very soon.
 

Analyzer

Hide thy life
Local time
Yesterday 11:20 PM
Joined
Aug 23, 2012
Messages
1,241
---
Location
West
I was thinking IXXP,EXXJ, as sensing/intuition is in their tertiary.

But on the other hand, EXXP and IXXJ could manifest the differences more as they are in the inferior(inferior bursts).
 

Cyberpunk

Oh no, that extrovert!
Local time
Today 7:20 AM
Joined
Jun 6, 2013
Messages
35
---
Location
Sweden
OK so let me think this through again (at my typical slow pace) so we don't have to fight about it just because I can't understand what you're saying.

1. The standing assertion in the OP is that children in the formal operational stage of development are analogous to "N-types" while the concrete operational stage of development is analogous to "S-types".

2. My response is that the S/N dichotomy is (of course) simply a representation that a given individual has a preference for one style of perceptions over the other. Some have concrete perceptions, others abstract. I enhanced my argument by adding the fact that S and N occur together; they exist in pairs. They don't just occur individually. Se types further process their concrete perceptions through Ni, where they gather an intuitive grasp of their surroundings. Ne types gather abstract information first and then process it inwardly in a concrete fashion.
Then of course there are Si and Ni types but we call them J's and we're talking about P's (I think - at least it sounds like we are). Hmm, because NJ's actually use Se as well, which is the type of S that you're describing; but they're intuitives, not sensors.

3. Your response is that complexity is inherently preferable. Phrased as a question (like it makes a difference...) Now that we're clear on what you were replying to (above), I can give you a better answer! The answer is yes!! Yes it is! If complexity=advanced then it is inherently preferable!!! Congratulations.

What the fuck are you talking about? Do you think that when I say "they do not imply S and N" that I really mean "they do imply S and N"?


So we're clear now, the point I am trying to make is that Piaget's developmental stages do not predict anything and do not represent anything to do with personality or MBTI at all. It is basic human development. We develop concrete perceptions first, and abstract perceptions after. Later on in life, some people happen to develop a preference for abstract over concrete. We call them intuitives.




oh, this is really what gets to the core of why I'm calling your posts idiotic, in case you were ever wondering. Now you could say I'm quoting you out of context, but you would be lying, and you have basically made the exact same claim in another thread, to which I will be replying very soon.

Let me make this clear. My post was out of context concerning the idea that Piaget is talking about N/S. I was talking about your post and your post alone, off-topic as it might've been, about how what you said is, no matter what you think, eerily close to the differences people talk about when comparing N and S types. I don't think this got through, and perhaps that's the reason why you're still going batshit.
 

r4ch3l

conc/ptu/||/
Local time
Yesterday 11:20 PM
Joined
Jun 6, 2013
Messages
493
---
Location
CA
People getting personally heated over debates makes me confused.

Cyberpunk, you're an ENFP yeah? I had this very conversation with an ENFP recently. I don't normally talk about MBTI with people but he brought it up and asked me if I knew my type. We only talked about it momentarily but he said that "S just means..." *he looks at me to gauge how I will react* "...you're dumb" and I smiled really big and and laughed and nodded my head yes. When I relay it now it sounds like such a dick thing to say but perhaps it felt nice to bond over being misunderstood by nearly everyone with another misunderstood person with a similar type of intelligence as myself.

Should also add that this ENFP has physical/sensory intelligence as well as mental and builds giant art installations, robots, etc.

Perhaps it is not that I actually believe S people to be "stupid" so much as "closed-minded".

It frustrates me because I feel that they circlejerk over feeling the "right" reaction or emotion and that anything outside their little social flowchart of correctness gets ostracized, humiliated, told it is stupid, etc.
 

Hadoblado

think again losers
Local time
Today 4:50 PM
Joined
Mar 17, 2011
Messages
7,065
---
You are putting words in his mouth.

Abstract reasoning is more advanced than basic interpretations of concrete perceptions....we learn how to do it later in life. This does not imply N>S in any case.

I guess to add something to the conversation I would remind you that S and N occur together so the formal operational stage of development is seriously nothing even remotely similar to the preference of N over S perceptions.

I threw down some words to get a conversation happening. I thought the similarities interesting and wanted to explore them with people on the internet. I should have made that clear. You are somewhat addressing the specific questions I ask in the OP, but seem disgusted that the questions have been raised.

How about: some people don’t ever enter the formal operation stage of development. These people can’t possibly demonstrate their preference for abstract reasoning they don’t have, so they must be typed as sensors. Since the intuitive population don’t have this subpopulation weighing down their developmental average, Intuitives are likely on average more highly cognitively developed than sensors?

This thread is a joke.

Now that’s just hurtful sensor talk.
The formal operational stage of development is a normal and expected period of development in pre-adolescent children worldwide.
I agree the definitions resemble the N and S definitions, but they're applied in a totally different context, with different inherent meaning.
Are you seriously about to assert that people who perceive via their senses first, and their intuition second, are in any way similar to a 7 year old child who can't tell which glass has more milk? Hello?

Firstly, not all people reach formal operational thought. So yes it is expected, but not a given. The definitions do seem a lot like S and N definitions. Is the context really that different. All I’ve done is add a cognitive development axis to the model to see where it leads. Piaget’s observations match Jung’s, why not explore the overlap?

Also, the milk thing is a strawman. Conservation is a hallmark of entering the concrete operational stage, and is thus nothing to do with the difference between concrete and formal operations.

Your argument "but, isn't complexity inherently preferable?" what the fuck does that even mean? Did you think before posting?

There are two type of people in the world. Those who can extrapolate from incomplete data…

To be fair, he could have been more clear. I don’t think it’s grounds for that level of aggression, but w/e.

I guess I understand your frustration, you are addressing what I asked. I'm more interested in an open ended discussion than proving anything specifically. :borg:
 

Hadoblado

think again losers
Local time
Today 4:50 PM
Joined
Mar 17, 2011
Messages
7,065
---
In "Quiet, the Power of Introverts" Susan Cain makes the case that the difference between introversion and extraversion is that introverts have lower tolerance for stimulus than extraverts. She points to possible biochemical reasons for this, regardless of the cause I think it's a reasonable point.

Likewise I've mused about whether the difference between sensor and intuitive is that sensors have greater need for physical stimulation than intuitives, again with a possible biochemical basis. Certainly I see this with Sensors around me - they like Disneyland, action movies, junk food, camping and physical stimulation of all kinds. Whereas with me and the intuitives I know a little of that goes a long way. So ...

That is an interesting perspective. Certainly something to mull over.

I think this is the wrong way to look at it, the two are just two sides of the same street.

The reason many intuitives such as myself who "look down" on sensors is because we're fed up with them. Being a minority, we understand them but they don't understand us, and meanwhile we have to hear how "creative" and what "idea people" they are.

I don't think there is a wrong way to look at it, only many wrong ways of categorising it. This thread is supposed to be exploratory, not an adversarial clash of opinions. Abstract reasoning goes up with cognitive development, as it does from right to left on the N/S dichotomy. I just want to discover to what degree they are related if at all.

Being intuitive in a world built for sensors (cliche I know) is hard sometimes, but I think you have likely reached a point where you are appreciated for these qualities. You should trying being a chronic procrastinator in a world build for the industrious, while living with an INTJ housemate ;)
 

walfin

Democrazy
Local time
Today 3:20 PM
Joined
Mar 3, 2008
Messages
2,436
---
Location
/dev/null
I don't think most of us have the presence of mind and alertness of most sensors.

But yeah, I think the problem is that we can see how sensor qualities are valuable at least some of the time, and we do value them, but sensors often do not value any of the qualities we have (or at least, they do not show that they do).
 

Duxwing

I've Overcome Existential Despair
Local time
Today 2:20 AM
Joined
Sep 9, 2012
Messages
3,783
---
I don't think most of us have the presence of mind and alertness of most sensors.

But yeah, I think the problem is that we can see how sensor qualities are valuable at least some of the time, and we do value them, but sensors often do not value any of the qualities we have (or at least, they do not show that they do).

Sensors show great appreciation for iNtuitve acts: technology, for example, is beloved by many Sensors, along with wit.

-Duxwing
 

Minimalist

"The wise man knows that he knows nothing" or some
Local time
Yesterday 11:20 PM
Joined
May 24, 2013
Messages
34
---
Location
The 3rd dimension
Actually, while we appear to be biased against sensors, natural selection or some other force seems to be biased against intuitives. I have come across statistics which claim that intuitives make up somewhere between one fourth to one third of the population of the United States (not sure about other countries as not all of them use Myers-Briggs). I also recall the fact that intuitive occur more frequently than sensors in left handers and that there has been an odd war in countries throughout the world against left handers for some time though it has recently been letting up. I would surmise that sensors make good drones. If the world was filled with intuitives who tend to have an expanded perception of time and connections between information, then there would be few left who would not ask questions.
 

Paladin-X

ISTP
Local time
Today 12:20 AM
Joined
Jan 16, 2013
Messages
101
---
Yeah, and this is one of the problems inherent in the N-S dichotomy. Intuitives can access the sensors apparent way of thinking but not the other way around.

I disagree. When I ask for a concrete example, the response I get every time is "I don't understand what you mean by concrete example". :P
 

Paladin-X

ISTP
Local time
Today 12:20 AM
Joined
Jan 16, 2013
Messages
101
---
As for S vs N and abstract reasoning, I would argue that perception is irrational and could not be viewed as abstract reasoning.

I am also pretty sure that those who suffer from developmental disorders and/or mental retardation are more likely to be the only people that do not make it on to the formal operational stage.
 

walfin

Democrazy
Local time
Today 3:20 PM
Joined
Mar 3, 2008
Messages
2,436
---
Location
/dev/null
Sensors show great appreciation for iNtuitve acts: technology, for example, is beloved by many Sensors, along with wit.

-Duxwing

Your phone is cool, but not the nerd who wired it.
 

Duxwing

I've Overcome Existential Despair
Local time
Today 2:20 AM
Joined
Sep 9, 2012
Messages
3,783
---
Your phone is cool, but not the nerd who wired it.

Perhaps, but you forgot wit. iNtuitive comedians make funny jokes and are liked by Sensors.

-Duxwing
 

scorpiomover

The little professor
Local time
Today 7:20 AM
Joined
May 3, 2011
Messages
3,384
---

scorpiomover

The little professor
Local time
Today 7:20 AM
Joined
May 3, 2011
Messages
3,384
---
isn't complexity inherently preferable?

EDIT: Complexity here synonymous with "advanced".
Yes and no. Primarily, we want things that can handle things the most efficiently. So we need to prioritise the most common situations. These are not "complex" or "advanced" in the Western paradigm. If also possible, we'd also like things to be able to ALSO HANDLE complexity, and the more levels of complexity it can handle the better. If complexity could be graded from levels 1 to 10, then the best, is a system that can handle 0-10. The next best, is 0-9. The next best, is 0-8. The absolute minimum, is 0. If something can handle levels 1-10, but not 0, then it can't handle the most common, and often the most lethal of situations, which means you'd be dead in a day, if it weren't for living in sterilised urban environments designed to resolve 99.9% of potentially lethal threats for you.

But, the more complex the system, the harder it is to use. So when it comes to programming it and reading the results, we want them to be as simple as possible, so that as many as possible can read it, and so it takes the least time and effort to program and read.

All of that, means that the most preferred system, is a system that understands the conversational level of an idiot, responds back like an idiot, but can do every task, from the simplest of tasks, to the most complex of tasks, all the while never actually talking complex, only following a few simple instructions, and returning a few simple results. That way, it takes seconds to pass it instructions, can do everything, and takes seconds to get the results, and everyone can use it flawlessly.
 

scorpiomover

The little professor
Local time
Today 7:20 AM
Joined
May 3, 2011
Messages
3,384
---
However, complex systems will take several years to build and test each system.

If you want to go into quick mass-production of millions of units, then you need the components to be as simple as possible. Then you ideally want the system to be composed of components that all function only at level 0, the simplest level. We will call this an Operating system, or for short, an Operator.

But then those systems can only do the simplest of tasks.

To get such a system to perform more complex tasks, you want to be able to give those incredibly simple systems a list of instructions for each complex task you want it to perform, so that all it has to do, is to follow each simple instruction, in a step-by-step manner, to achieve the complex end result.

To do that, you have to select a complex task to program. Then you take your simple instructions regarding what you want done, and develop it into a highly complex calculation process, that can successfully achieve the task. Then you have to convert that into an extremely simple list of instructions.

Then, whenever you want to do that task, you are ready to load your instruction list into your simple mass-produced systems, and then you can just load it, and press "Go".

So then you need a separate system, to perform the conversion process.

That secondary system, which we can call a Developing system, or for short, a Developer. This Developer will have to be able to show us that it understands the complexity of the task, and that it makes sure that all the details of the task are correctly executed in the correct order, to achieve the results effectively. Ideally, it will also be as efficient as we can make it. The ability to show the full working out of complexity involved, from initial requirements to the full complexity of the task, to the final list of simple instructions, we can call Rational Reasoning.

So the Developer system doesn't need to actually DO anything. But it must be able to communicate complexity, and show clarity of reasoning, and that it covers all the details, to produce a list of instructions, that will accomplish that task.

However, if we already could do that, we would already know the list of instructions, and wouldn't need it. So the Developer system must be able to develop lists of instructions for complex tasks that we don't already understand how to convert into a list of simple instructions. It must thus have an extra ability to somehow figure out how to do things, far beyond what we can trivially figure out for ourselves with very little time and effort, and ideally, much quicker than we would expect from ourselves. We can call this magical ability to come up with lists of simple instructions to perform complex tasks in mere seconds, seemingly with no work observed whatsoever, Intuition.
 

Chad

Prolific Member
Local time
Today 2:20 AM
Joined
Feb 15, 2013
Messages
1,079
---
Location
Westbrook, Maine
Actually, while we appear to be biased against sensors, natural selection or some other force seems to be biased against intuitives. I have come across statistics which claim that intuitives make up somewhere between one fourth to one third of the population of the United States (not sure about other countries as not all of them use Myers-Briggs). I also recall the fact that intuitive occur more frequently than sensors in left handers and that there has been an odd war in countries throughout the world against left handers for some time though it has recently been letting up. I would surmise that sensors make good drones. If the world was filled with intuitives who tend to have an expanded perception of time and connections between information, then there would be few left who would not ask questions.

Funny fact.

I am Right handed and an Intuitive.

My wife is Left handed and a Sensor.

However, she is far more intuitive then I am sensor.
 

Hadoblado

think again losers
Local time
Today 4:50 PM
Joined
Mar 17, 2011
Messages
7,065
---
Piaget believed development was a universal process, says it all.

That's an incredibly quick dismissal. Yes development is universal in humans, but mobility between the stages is not. People develop at different speeds. Also, Neo-Piagetians have added four more stages of post-formal operations, which the vast majority of people do not reach. Development being universal does not mean that all people reach all stages, only that all people develop.
 

Words

Only 1 1-F.
Local time
Today 9:20 AM
Joined
Jan 2, 2010
Messages
3,222
---
Location
Order
I think you're unto something and I can slightly concur with this.

Intuitives can access the sensors apparent way of thinking but not the other way around.

In A.I., the issue is often pushing that boundary towards abstract thinking. There is a hierarchy of thinking here and that hierarchy is defined by Piaget's developmental stages as well as the cognitive functions. In that hierarchy, Ni and Ne lands on top. I think that humans as a whole are going through these developmental stages. That there is a trend towards more iNtuition and less Sensing. As we let computers do more things for us, we are left to think about the general and abstrac things. Ah, this hierarchy of thinking is also the hierarchy of knowledge. ...brilliant.
 

scorpiomover

The little professor
Local time
Today 7:20 AM
Joined
May 3, 2011
Messages
3,384
---
That's an incredibly quick dismissal.
Spent a few hours reading up on Piaget's theory, before posting.

Yes development is universal in humans, but mobility between the stages is not. People develop at different speeds. Also, Neo-Piagetians have added four more stages of post-formal operations, which the vast majority of people do not reach. Development being universal does not mean that all people reach all stages, only that all people develop.
"universal" means that it applies to everyone. From what I've been reading about Piaget in the last few hours, so as to follow your point, Piaget's system was based on a belief that all children pass through the same 4 stages of cognitive development, each of which develop certain cognitive skills, but at different speeds and different ages, and potentially, some may never develop completely through all 4 stages, and may stop at a stage and never move on.

That belief mirrors the French sociological belief that all societies pass through 3 stages of societal development, in the same specific order, only at different times, with different lengths, known as Auguste Comte's Law of the Three Stages, Comte being the founder of French sociology. His ideas influenced the entirety of Europe extremely heavily, but especially the views of the French, and in particular, French scientists like Piaget.

The problem with Piaget's theory, is that it presumes that everyone travels the same road of cognitive development, and achieves the same cognitive landmarks. Were this to be true, all the INTPs here, first developed good motor skills, equal to any ISTP of age 2, then basic observational an reasoning skills that Western children of 7 years typically show, then the more complex observational understanding of Western 11-year-olds, then the abstract reasoning typically associated with Western teenagers.

You can go slower or faster in Piaget's system. But you cannot skip a step. Which means, that at whatever age you developed abstract reasoning and started to do maths well, you had the motor, social, and observational skills of a typical teenager.

I was doing high-level maths by age 11. But my motor skills and my social skills didn't kick in till my mid-20s. My observational skills didn't kick in till my late 30s.

Here is an evaluation of the strengths and weaknesses of Piaget's theory:
Strengths

  • The influence of Piaget’s ideas in developmental psychology has been enormous. He changed how people viewed the child’s world and their methods of studying children. He was an inspiration to many who came after and took up his ideas. Piaget's ideas have generated a huge amount of research which has increased our understanding of cognitive development.

  • His ideas have been of practical use in understanding and communicating with children, particularly in the field of education (re: Discovery Learning).

Weaknesses

  • Are the stages real? Vygotsky and Bruner would rather not talk about stages at all, preferring to see development as continuous. Others have queried the age ranges of the stages. Some studies have shown that progress to the formal operational stage is not guaranteed. For example, Keating (1979) reported that 40-60% of college students fail at formal operation tasks, and Dasen (1994) states that only one-third of adults ever reach the formal operational stage.

  • Because Piaget concentrated on the universal stages of cognitive development and biological maturation, he failed to consider the effect that the social setting and culture may have on cognitive development (re: Vygotsky).

  • Piaget’s methods (observation and clinical interviews) are more open to biased interpretation than other methods. Because Piaget conducted the observations alone data collect are based on his own subjective interpretation of events. It would have been more reliable if Piaget conducted the observations with another researcher can compared results afterwards to check if they are similar.

  • As several studies have shown Piaget underestimated the abilities of children because his tests were sometimes confusing or difficult to understand (e.g. Martin Hughes, 1975).

  • The concept of schema is incompatible with the theories of Bruner and Vygotsky. Behaviorism would also refute Piaget’s schema theory because it cannot be directly observed as it is an internal process. Therefore, they would claim it cannot be objectively measured.

  • Piaget carried out his studies with a handful of participants (i.e. small sample size) – and in the early studies he generally used his own children (from Switzerland). This sample is biased, and accordingly the results of these studies cannot be generalized to children from different cultures.
 

Hadoblado

think again losers
Local time
Today 4:50 PM
Joined
Mar 17, 2011
Messages
7,065
---
Good stuff!
"universal" means that it applies to everyone. From what I've been reading about Piaget in the last few hours, so as to follow your point, Piaget's system was based on a belief that all children pass through the same 4 stages of cognitive development, each of which develop certain cognitive skills, but at different speeds and different ages, and potentially, some may never develop completely through all 4 stages, and may stop at a stage and never move on.
Your clarification of ‘universal’ implies that we still somehow disagree, I accept all of the above.
That belief mirrors the French sociological belief that all societies pass through 3 stages of societal development, in the same specific order, only at different times, with different lengths, known as Auguste Comte's Law of the Three Stages, Comte being the founder of French sociology. His ideas influenced the entirety of Europe extremely heavily, but especially the views of the French, and in particular, French scientists like Piaget.
It’s interesting that you seem to look into the origin of ideas so often. There’s nothing wrong with it, it’s just a very alien habit to me. I basically isolate ideas entirely from historical context, I can see certainly see benefits of your way, it just never appeals to me. //derail
It seems we still agree on everything so far.
The problem with Piaget's theory, is that it presumes that everyone travels the same road of cognitive development, and achieves the same cognitive landmarks. Were this to be true, all the INTPs here, first developed good motor skills, equal to any ISTP of age 2, then basic observational an reasoning skills that Western children of 7 years typically show, then the more complex observational understanding of Western 11-year-olds, then the abstract reasoning typically associated with Western teenagers.
This is a really good point. I see it slightly different, but we are largely in agreement. The model does give ordinal value to the cognitive landmarks, which I don’t think is entirely correct, but it is largely descriptive of reality. It’s not deductive in conclusion, but psychology would be a very poor descriptive tool if it limited itself to only deductive reasoning. Piaget’s theory describes a pattern of development that is largely true for the entire human population, but there are certainly outliers.
For example, I’m pretty sure I reached formal operations before having completely developed my concrete operations. I’ve gone through life retroactively correcting poor inferences pertaining to concrete reality. I’ve always been off with the faeries, and thus am sometimes caught doing something fucking awkward that would be easy for the average 12yo. I’m a moderate outlier, but the rule in general still holds true.
You can go slower or faster in Piaget's system. But you cannot skip a step. Which means, that at whatever age you developed abstract reasoning and started to do maths well, you had the motor, social, and observational skills of a typical teenager.
I’m not entirely certain that the theory posits that you must reach equal skill before moving on (though I’m certainly open to that possibility). I have only read that the stages are ordinal in nature. This means that I could develop some semblance of reversibility and conservation, but not develop these to average competence before moving on to more complex operations. This isn’t skipping a step, but it is getting to later stages without achieving our (arbitrary) measure of social, motor, or observational skills.
I was doing high-level maths by age 11. But my motor skills and my social skills didn't kick in till my mid-20s. My observational skills didn't kick in till my late 30s.
You’re an outlier in this respect.
Strengths

• The influence of Piaget’s ideas in developmental psychology has been enormous. He changed how people viewed the child’s world and their methods of studying children. He was an inspiration to many who came after and took up his ideas. Piaget's ideas have generated a huge amount of research which has increased our understanding of cognitive development.
• His ideas have been of practical use in understanding and communicating with children, particularly in the field of education (re: Discovery Learning).

Weaknesses

• Are the stages real? Vygotsky and Bruner would rather not talk about stages at all, preferring to see development as continuous. Others have queried the age ranges of the stages. Some studies have shown that progress to the formal operational stage is not guaranteed. For example, Keating (1979) reported that 40-60% of college students fail at formal operation tasks, and Dasen (1994) states that only one-third of adults ever reach the formal operational stage.
• Because Piaget concentrated on the universal stages of cognitive development and biological maturation, he failed to consider the effect that the social setting and culture may have on cognitive development (re: Vygotsky).
• Piaget’s methods (observation and clinical interviews) are more open to biased interpretation than other methods. Because Piaget conducted the observations alone data collect are based on his own subjective interpretation of events. It would have been more reliable if Piaget conducted the observations with another researcher can compared results afterwards to check if they are similar.
• As several studies have shown Piaget underestimated the abilities of children because his tests were sometimes confusing or difficult to understand (e.g. Martin Hughes, 1975).
• The concept of schema is incompatible with the theories of Bruner and Vygotsky. Behaviorism would also refute Piaget’s schema theory because it cannot be directly observed as it is an internal process. Therefore, they would claim it cannot be objectively measured.
• Piaget carried out his studies with a handful of participants (i.e. small sample size) – and in the early studies he generally used his own children (from Switzerland). This sample is biased, and accordingly the results of these studies cannot be generalized to children from different cultures.
These are both good and accepted limitations/criticisms. I guess I don’t worry too much about them because I’m not too married to the idea that Piaget was entirely correct. Piaget, just like Freud and Jung, had good ideas, but didn’t get everything correct in his first go. This means we shouldn’t accept everything he says as gospel, but I generally think that sort of faith in anything is sorta bad.
The important thing is that his idea describes reality to a fair degree, and that the patterns he noticed are similar to those that Jung noticed. That’s pretty much the extent of any positive claim I’m making. There is a correlation that I want to explore, particularly in light of the blatant prejudice that one sees floating about on type sites (a third corellatory, though probably irrelevant given the shared cause).
 

scorpiomover

The little professor
Local time
Today 7:20 AM
Joined
May 3, 2011
Messages
3,384
---
Good stuff!

Your clarification of ‘universal’ implies that we still somehow disagree, I accept all of the above.

It’s interesting that you seem to look into the origin of ideas so often. There’s nothing wrong with it, it’s just a very alien habit to me. I basically isolate ideas entirely from historical context, I can see certainly see benefits of your way, it just never appeals to me. //derail
I never used to. But people would know more about it than me, and then they'd put up persuasive arguments this way and that, and my life fluttered like a butterfly in a hurricane. I learned that if I knew the origin of ideas, then I could have a better overview of what happened with an idea, what the major factors were, what the details were, etc. It put things into perspective so that I could use them without screwing up my life. It also meant that if someone tried to blindside me with an argument based on an earlier understanding of the idea, I'd have some knowledge of it, and then they couldn't easily shake me. My life calmed down.

It seems we still agree on everything so far.

This is a really good point. I see it slightly different, but we are largely in agreement. The model does give ordinal value to the cognitive landmarks, which I don’t think is entirely correct, but it is largely descriptive of reality. It’s not deductive in conclusion, but psychology would be a very poor descriptive tool if it limited itself to only deductive reasoning.
I like non-deductive reasoning. But I know that any reasoning is only going to work reliably, if I am careful to stay within its reliable operating parameters. If I extend it beyond that, it won't break. But the thing I would be using it for, probably will, and probably, no-one would even notice, because they think we're using it right.

Piaget’s theory describes a pattern of development that is largely true for the entire human population,
Not so sure anymore. Seems like there are a LOT of people who got screwed by being pigeon-holed by the education system.

but there are certainly outliers.

For example, I’m pretty sure I reached formal operations before having completely developed my concrete operations. I’ve gone through life retroactively correcting poor inferences pertaining to concrete reality. I’ve always been off with the faeries, and thus am sometimes caught doing something fucking awkward that would be easy for the average 12yo. I’m a moderate outlier, but the rule in general still holds true.

I’m not entirely certain that the theory posits that you must reach equal skill before moving on (though I’m certainly open to that possibility). I have only read that the stages are ordinal in nature. This means that I could develop some semblance of reversibility and conservation, but not develop these to average competence before moving on to more complex operations. This isn’t skipping a step, but it is getting to later stages without achieving our (arbitrary) measure of social, motor, or observational skills.

You’re an outlier in this respect.

These are both good and accepted limitations/criticisms. I guess I don’t worry too much about them because I’m not too married to the idea that Piaget was entirely correct. Piaget, just like Freud and Jung, had good ideas, but didn’t get everything correct in his first go. This means we shouldn’t accept everything he says as gospel, but I generally think that sort of faith in anything is sorta bad.
The important thing is that his idea describes reality to a fair degree, and that the patterns he noticed are similar to those that Jung noticed. That’s pretty much the extent of any positive claim I’m making. There is a correlation that I want to explore, particularly in light of the blatant prejudice that one sees floating about on type sites (a third corellatory, though probably irrelevant given the shared cause).
I think that we both agree, that all humans can develop multiple skill sets, and to different amounts (including nothing). and can also learn them in different orders, and maybe, sometimes even in parallel, as well as sequentially.

However, from what I've read, Paiget's ideas did influence educators, or good and bad, even to this day, and probably in public schools like the ones that many posters here attended.

The good stuff, was that people used to think you were either totally stupid or totally smart, and if you didn't show advanced reasoning, they wrote you off as a moron, who had to be told what to do all the time like a dumb animal. Piaget thus showed by his use of stages, that you could still be competent at some tasks, even if you couldn't get your head round advanced multi-dimensional Hahn-Banach spaces.

The bad stuff, was that Piaget thought this was a biological process, one that all humans had to go through stage by stage, and thus was absolutely impossible to be even slightly capable of a later stage if you didn't show the same competency of an earlier stage. This influenced educators in several ways. I know of 2 ways that I and others experienced:

1) If your teachers happened to notice that you were doing a later stage, like they saw you doing advanced maths, they assumed that you had already passed through and achieved competency in the earlier stages. You were immediately pushed up classes, and you were not given a chance to be taught about the skills in the earlier stages. This particularly happened to gifted students, who were excellent at music, or maths, or languages, but still had a normal level of capability for their age in social skills, or sports, or things like that.

If they stayed with their peers, they would get so bored with the subjects they were gifted in, they lost interest, got distracted, didn't do their homework, and flunked out, and the world lost another genius who could have changed the world for the better.

If they moved up, they weren't given the chance to develop their social skills, sports and co-ordination, and all that. They were half a person. They could publish theories, and perform concerts. But they couldn't really communicate to others. So they were the most appalling teachers and communicators. They knew how to save millions of lives, and people respected their intelligence enough, that they would be willing to listen. But they were so lacking in social skills, that no-one would listen, because they couldn't communicate, especially in non-verbal communication, which is 90% of communication. So again, more massive waste of human development.

Plus, either way, they were a dropout or a freak. Their lives were extremely unpleasant.

2) If your teachers happened to notice that you were struggling with a stage, they'd assume that you wouldn't be able to progress further. It didn't matter why. Often, it was because you had a major family problem during those years, like a bitter divorce. It was so emotionally turbulent that you could not hope to concentrate. After a year, you'd be fine. But now, for you to continue, you'd have to start the year behind everyone else, and according to Piaget, that meant you had a learning difficulty with those skills, because otherwise, you would have learned those skills at the right age. So that meant you could not possibly progress further, not until it could be firmly established that you showed competency in that field. But because of the presumption of the learning difficulty, teachers would treat you like you were disabled. Even on that stage, they'd keep giving you only the most simple of tasks. So in their eyes, you never showed competency in those skill sets, because you'd never proved you had. You'd spend the rest of your school days being treated like a retard. You'd leave school with no qualifications, and lacking even in proper education of reading and writing. Employers assumed that because you struggled to read and write, and had no qualifications, that you were retarded, and you weren't worth employing, except for the most menial of jobs.

If you could break the cycle, you'd have to find people, who you could convince could do well, if you were given a chance. Then you had to study in secret with them, until you had developed enough skill to sit exams with children. Then you and your friends would have to try to convince the board to let you sit those exams. After all that, you had the qualifications of a 16-year-old. But at least you could get a regular job.

Or, you took jobs cash-in-hand with people by word of mouth, and you just blagged your way through life, never being a part of the system, and never gaining from it either.

Again, more waste of great minds.

When I have to do something, and I'm being held back because I didn't learn something that I should have been taught in school, it's infuriating.

It's also really infuriating when people complain about the world, and blame it on religion, or that we're not paying scientists enough, and I look at this, I know that even if we had what they wanted, we'd still be just as screwed, and it pisses me off, because others will agree with them, and put money on the wrong things, that will probably just make the problems worse.
 

scorpiomover

The little professor
Local time
Today 7:20 AM
Joined
May 3, 2011
Messages
3,384
---
Also, this does kind of explain why Piaget's theory supports the bias against Sensors, because the very ways that intuitives regard Sensors, is how they are treated in school, from age 5 to age 18. All they know is that everyone who is supposed to know how smart they are, told them they are stupid and inferior, because they didn't do well in the Formal Operations Stage, and because it is assumed that everyone who did do well in the Formal Operations Stage, can basically do whatever they might contribute to the world and to the workplace with the skills in the Concrete Operations Stage. Imagine how you would feel, if you were told every day of your life, that you were stupid and superfluous.

At this point, you'll say "But I'm an INTP. I take Fe criticism badly." But Sensors go by evidence, and all of the evidence they have, is that they are stupid. They have far more reason to think they are stupid than you.

Now comes in Albert Bandura. He pointed out that people who believe they are incapable of something, show that they don't put in the effort required, give up easily, find it very hard to make even small efforts, and actually think unreasonably about the topic, as if their brains literally went offline when it comes to that subject. All of that now happens to those Sensors, on everything that might be something that a stupid person can't do.

Stupid people can drive. Stupid people can play sports. But stupid people can't add up properly, can't reason properly, can't reason about spirituality properly, can't reason about complex ideas like morality, can't think of how others feel, are prone to spontaneous outbursts of violence, are liable to get drunk every night, to take illicit drugs, to drive when drunk, to smoke and drink while pregnant.

These are some of the stereotypes of stupid people. Many of them are not true about stupid people at all. But the world believes they are true. So long as the empirical experience of Sensors is that everyone tells them they are stupid, then this is what they expect of themselves, and little else. So, they do all they can expect of themselves, which is to live up to the stereotype.

Now, what's the other side? Suppose we carry out a thought experiment. We take some Sensor kids. We pay their teachers to tell them they are all smart, and we put smart kids who like to study, in the same class with them. We don't use the Piaget system. We just teach them all. What happens? The Sensor kids see the other kids study. They don't see any other kids. Emprical evidence shows that kids study. So they study too. They do well in school. That's all they know. They have kids. Their kids study, and are smart. They have kids, who study and are smart.

We tell them that all humans drink moderately, eat healthily, exercise regularly, speak politely, think before speaking, are considerate of others. All the things that we'd love to see in them.

They don't know different. So that's how they try to behave. And it works.

99% of the problems that people blame on Sensors, is simply because of how they are treated as children. We decided what to tell them. They followed it. We could have 6.5 billion rational tolerant healthy productive geniuses. All that we hate about Sensors, we have created for ourselves.
 

Jennywocky

Creepy Clown Chick
Local time
Today 2:20 AM
Joined
Sep 25, 2008
Messages
10,739
---
Location
Charn
I think this is the wrong way to look at it, the two are just two sides of the same street.

Yes, typically what I get from sensors is that they CAN see abstracted connections to at least some degree, but they don't trust them, or they don't know how to prioritize and link them together in a way that seems coherent and trustworthy to themselves. it's too much risk or just a waste of time to pursue those lines of connection, when other lines with more substance/verifiability/historical success are available.

Meanwhile, the N's seem to trust the S lines less as well, as those lines seem to not take everything in account or are not efficient at what they are trying to achieve, etc.
 

Hadoblado

think again losers
Local time
Today 4:50 PM
Joined
Mar 17, 2011
Messages
7,065
---
I disagree about the way you think sensors are treated. Most people don't have a concept of an S/N dichotomy. That said, your posts are loooooong and I gotta hit the hey. I can't process that much information and retain any possibility of getting sleep tonight. I'll try and get back to you some time tomorrow ;)
 

Sorlaize

Burning brightly
Local time
Today 7:20 AM
Joined
Oct 29, 2012
Messages
157
---
Perhaps, but you forgot wit. iNtuitive comedians make funny jokes and are liked by Sensors.

-Duxwing
Within certain social settings. On an individual level in this society, in the industrialized world you must have arbitrary skillset, the only thing validated/valued (by most people). School in particular divides us from a young age rather than instilling the best wisdom about interpersonal relationships, and empathy, that our civilization actually owns. This is not surprising when put up against the modern behaviours of governments towards foreign interests (dehumanization of the enemy; mass media's use in general; violence, and Violence As Culture).

Everything is interconnected. The myths taught by society are just as good indicators of fundamental drivers of our behaviour as scientific studies.

We could have 6.5 billion rational tolerant healthy productive geniuses.
Good post, and although I wouldn't use so few words, yes, I think environment is a fundamental driver of all human activity and so we should have invested plenty money in that (etc) but as in a previous post of mine the dumbing-down of society has been intentional.

For those who haven't seen it,

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=36HquPzdxf4
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gbiq2-ukfhM&list=SPB3F2CF45EEB95C80
 

Architect

Professional INTP
Local time
Today 12:20 AM
Joined
Dec 25, 2010
Messages
6,691
---
Yes, typically what I get from sensors is that they CAN see abstracted connections to at least some degree, but they don't trust them, or they don't know how to prioritize and link them together in a way that seems coherent and trustworthy to themselves.

Yes. Almost universally it seems ISTP's actively distrust abstractions. They're hostile to, for example, software models and abstractions. All they are interested in "how the machine works" (Se) and have no truck with abstracted ideation (Ne).

ESTX types seem unable to get their minds around it. Mention an abstraction and they look off in the distance and just melt into a puddle of goo.

Meanwhile, the N's seem to trust the S lines less as well, as those lines seem to not take everything in account or are not efficient at what they are trying to achieve, etc.

Yes N's often distrust experiential sensor heavy events. My son and I hate amusement rides for example.
 

Jennywocky

Creepy Clown Chick
Local time
Today 2:20 AM
Joined
Sep 25, 2008
Messages
10,739
---
Location
Charn
Yes N's often distrust experiential sensor heavy events. My son and I hate amusement rides for example.

I like some of them now (including roller coasters), but I hated them until I was a young teenager. And basically it has to be an experience that I understand or at least can trust that has been vetted.... I'm not really one to throw myself into something that could be physically risky if I have no understanding of how to handle it. (so the "comprehension" seems to come first, then the enjoyment of the experience.)
 

Architect

Professional INTP
Local time
Today 12:20 AM
Joined
Dec 25, 2010
Messages
6,691
---
I like some of them now (including roller coasters), but I hated them until I was a young teenager. And basically it has to be an experience that I understand or at least can trust that has been vetted.... I'm not really one to throw myself into something that could be physically risky if I have no understanding of how to handle it. (so the "comprehension" seems to come first, then the enjoyment of the experience.)

I've gone the opposite direction I think. I used to be kind of OK with thrill stuff and strong experiential, then when the testosterone kicked in I was a bit of a thrill seeker like most young man. Now all that's tapered off - been there/done that. I really get wedged up when my S relatives try to get me to go along on some experience as it seems disingenuous - I'm not being myself.

Again I was raised with wolves (strong personality extraverted sensors) so have had to "find myself" later in life.
 

Valentas

Well-Known Member
Local time
Today 7:20 AM
Joined
Jun 20, 2012
Messages
506
---
Sensors are not bad or of less of intelligent people. They are just annoying sometimes. Just as we probably are annoying to them.
 

Montresor

Banned
Local time
Today 12:20 AM
Joined
Feb 3, 2013
Messages
971
---
Location
circle
Sensors are not bad or of less of intelligent people. They are just annoying sometimes. Just as we probably are annoying to them.


I think it's just a communication barrier that has been established through a process of identifying with one kind of reasoning or another, as seen in others.

I say reasoning because it is established first by our perceptions, which is what we're discussing here (S/N), and part of that is what scorpiomover posted above, observational learning.

Basically his arguments take the premise that the S/N dichotomy is real and present (thus identifiable) from the get-go, something I'm having trouble agreeing with but it's acknowledged as a possibility........


Edit: though it may be seen as real and present, it's not presented as any sort of proscriptive programming as it is real-world learning
 

Hadoblado

think again losers
Local time
Today 4:50 PM
Joined
Mar 17, 2011
Messages
7,065
---
TA posted on my wall about this thread. I tried responding but his wall is being difficult. I decided to post it here (I assume he won't mind).

I believe it was you that brought up Piaget a couple of times, sorry if it wasn't.

But I tend to see major similarities as well between his reasoning of thought on developmental psychology and those differences on the S/N dichotomy. How he claims certain people never moved on to the "abstract" stages etc.


Children at the concrete operational stage can solve a variety of physical problems. But it isn’t until they move on to the formal operational stage, which is the stage of development that begins around the age of 11 and lasts through adulthood, that they can solve nonphysical problems with similar ease.

What is the essential feature of the formal operational stage?

Childhood ends when formal operations begin, and people who move on to this stage (and Piaget believed that some people never did) are able to reason systematically about abstract concepts...The ability to generate, consider, reason about, or otherwise operate on abstract objects...

sorry, message to long:

& Theory of Mind + Egocentrism


Yeah it was me. Don't take my word for it, as it's been awhile since I covered this stuff.

My understanding is that formal operations begins when you address the form of the argument rather than the premise (argument in this case being any conclusion followed by premises). When you chat to a child (or adult) in concrete operations, they will reject your premises before they even hear the conclusion. You say "if all tigers have spots, then..." and they will cut you off demanding that you not be so silly.

Egocentrism is mitigated by formal operations because you can start to consider yourself as just another proposition, and truly begin to delve into the realm of objective/subjective reality.

Theory of mind is similar in that you generalise the principles of your own mind to other people, and that requires formal operations to some degree.

Piaget is right to think many people never truly reach formal operations. It came up in my psychology unit once. In a group of ten people, not a single one could take the abstract premise and lead to its conclusion without rejecting the premise out of hand. This was a wake-up call for me since this was a second year unit. It also could have been that it was articulated poorly, but I do not believe that to be the case.
 

TimeAsylums

Prolific Member
Local time
Today 12:20 AM
Joined
May 9, 2013
Messages
3,127
---
Sorry about my wall, that's being worked on. lol

Yes, I agree with what you have said.

also:

a random tangent:

I tend to keep up with what is being taught in grade school education (elementary, middle, high) just because I want to see what is being taught to subsequent generations, an interesting thing that has been seen is the IB's (International Baccalaureate program) Theory of Knowledge class, they seem to be trying to teach people the theory of mind ...lol.

...they're trying to make N's :phear:
 
Top Bottom