Weliddryn
Far too curious...
- Local time
- Today 10:50 AM
- Joined
- Jan 17, 2009
- Messages
- 562
Just a few obvious things I was thinking about at one point or another.
Sensors focus on taking as much experiences/ sensations as possible, thus acquiring more than an intuitor. An intuitor focuses on the second part of the human knowledge processing functioning- after less data is acquired they exert their energies to compartmentalizing them and building structures of connections and understandings.
The sensor may be considered ignorant due to their lack of participation in contemplating the connections [even if this is not solely derived from reasoning, ie an intuitor may do research for the sole purpose of clarifying/finding a missing piece of the connections being formed in their mind] they ought not be considered ignorant in terms of experience.
The intuitor /is/ ignorant in terms of experience, however.
Is this the difference between naivette and ignorance?
Have you any further contemplations on these two functions and their usage, etc?
Sensors focus on taking as much experiences/ sensations as possible, thus acquiring more than an intuitor. An intuitor focuses on the second part of the human knowledge processing functioning- after less data is acquired they exert their energies to compartmentalizing them and building structures of connections and understandings.
The sensor may be considered ignorant due to their lack of participation in contemplating the connections [even if this is not solely derived from reasoning, ie an intuitor may do research for the sole purpose of clarifying/finding a missing piece of the connections being formed in their mind] they ought not be considered ignorant in terms of experience.
The intuitor /is/ ignorant in terms of experience, however.
Is this the difference between naivette and ignorance?
Have you any further contemplations on these two functions and their usage, etc?