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Knowing which one you are can be difficult.
Yes, but as the dominant functions for
the two types at hand, it's the best
way to decide since they both utilize
Fe.
Knowing which one you are can be difficult.
Ah it's the beautiful soraya making a brief appearance. Welcome back.I believe ApplePi mentioned the issue in specific relation to the subject at hand, from which, it was shortly transformed into a personal issue. If you will, note that nowhere did I imply it was an unintelligent comment about government, that this was a private forum, or that conversations shouldn't take turns. Many off topic comments can bring insight to the situation. I simply took issue with the fact that it seemed like a personal issue was being brought into a public conversation without being related relevantly to the topic at hand. In other words, took the focus off the op's issue and placed it on someone else, detracting from the conversation. But again, this is detracting from the issue.
That's actually dead on. Ni is incredibly frustratingly slow and requires an ENORMOUS amount of info. Ni is like an iceberg, 95% of it is below the water/consciousness. You hardly ever see it. You can't function purely on 5% consciousness which is why your other functions are always operating and poking you with questions, constantly ordering and sifting through Ni data. It's not that there's not much Ni there, it's that you don't see it. I don't see anywhere in there where Adymus implied that it is a judgment function. It seems to me like everything in that paragraph said that it is indeed a way of seeing.
I did not say there was. Why is there a binary either/or operating here in your reading of my post? Anyone can do whatever they want, and we can all develop skills with whatever functions we desire to develop. (Isn't this thread called INTPs with Fe? This thread would not even exist if INTPs were stuck being solely Ti+Ne.)No he's not. This is exactly what I said before. It's not like only INTPs collect lots of points of data and rationalize through the connections to see what they get. This behavior is not specific to a type or a particular set of functions. There's no monopoly on that behavior.
Years of experience does not mean very much in MBTI, considering whole system is flawed. So if I come over with the need to correct your understanding, your experience in MBTI is completely irrelevant, the correction needs to happen, and I am going to demonstrate that through out this post.Same here, dude. If you want to start laying claim to "experience" and how you seemingly have had more than me, well, I've been active on a number of MBTI forums for the last five years and have moderated one for close to four, and probably have somewhere with the range of 30-35K posts on MBTI forums, at least half about MBTI issues. I'm not saying what I am saying without having at least as much or likely more experience than the majority of people on these forums. I also have quite a number of INFJ friends, some of whom have wondered if they were INTPs, and happen to have very strong Ti tertiaries.
You're ahead of many others, I'll give you that.But I never really liked the "typing" threads, whether it's for particular members or celebrities. It's a lot like people cherry-picking certain details out of the haystack to support their predetermined view of someone... and it also ignores the fact that MBTI is a theoretical system that is being applied to the data rather than completely generated from the data, so people won't necessarily fit within the rules.
Then they are either not INJs, or you misunderstood what they meant, or they just don't understand what they are doing very well. If your friends are describing the process as "we see the data, and then we 'just know' the rest" then they probably don't have a very good grasp on what they are doing, because nothing in the mind just comes out of nowhere and there is always a reason why they took the direction that they took. You are buying too much into MBTI the idea that P's take in as much information as possible before making a decision (which is not true at all), and J's just make decisions without taking in very much information(which is not true at all.)That's not actually what a majority of INJ's have told me, albeit some of them being INTJs. I specifically have had some very intelligent INJs describe their view of Ne vs Ni, and correct me on the matter in the areas where they felt I was off. The most typical description I have received from INJs is that Ni is a "connect the dots" picture, where you look at the data in front of you and you automatically see the rest without having to connect the dots. It's a way of seeing, not of rationalizing... otherwise it would be a judgment function.
What you describe is an INJ without much Ni, and lots of Ti -- you're determining what data should be where using a Ti process.
I will consider the possibility that your total picture of things might change with the more data you get.. but now you are specifically describing a Ti+Ne process! That's exactly what ITPs do, in order to develop the big picture... collect lots of points of data and rationalize through the connections to see what we get.
The problem with MBTI, is that their "typical patterns" are pretty damn far off from the unlimited number or variations that actually exist. The only way to actually have any accuracy is to not definine configurations based on "typical patterns" at all.Yes, I'm well aware of that. Each type has a number of "typical patterns" that tend to describe them. There could also be more unique blends/cases that don't typically show up, but it doesn't mean that one cannot probably look at each type and note 3-5 "typical configurations" or patterns that occur within that functional framework.
No Jenny, I am not misreading you for the same reason why I am not misreading anyone who practices MBTI if I said this exact same thing to them. No matter what, as long as you are using this theory, you are defining everything based on the principles "These people act like X, and These people act like Y". You have no choice in the matter, that is just how the entire theory works. Maybe you are a little more loose with your boundries and line drawing, which is respectable, but you are still drawing lines.Please. This is YOUR overemphasis of detail that is attributing ideas to me that I do not actually hold. You are misreading me.
Go to my prior paragraph -- there DOES tend to be a "few basic configurations" within each MBTI type that are represented ... but you still have to look at the unique person. I'm an INTP with atypically high Ni. You are preaching to the choir and trying to read me as some sort of exacting SJ type here, which I'm not. I am not talking about using particular details as "clear-cut" identifiers of type, a procedure I find faulty. Sorry if I somehow misstated myself, I'm just kind of surprised by your read of me.
The problem is that you still only think it is just a few instinctive patterns, you have not opened up to the infinite amount of Unknown unknowns that you, Jung, Isabelle Meyers, Socionics guy, or Kiersey did not see coming.Thank you for the advice. However, I'm already well aware of the typical flaws in rationality and especially within MBTI typing, and I'm still saying that types usually express themselves within a few particular instinctive patterns. (Do you understand what I mean by this? It means it's not concrete data points that automatically expose a type, it's the relationships between the typical data points of a person -- the principles of their behavior, the broad patterns, and how they relate.)
As a practitioner of an infinitely superior system, I am going to tell you right now, MBTI is a waste to use as a system.These patterns still have to be examined and confirmed just to make sure the pattern is not being misread, but it's not a lot different than when the police cycle through those mugshots and certain faces can be categorized as having similar (even if not exact) relationships between the designated points of the face used for identification. If we would be unable to do this with MBTI, then it's almost a waste to even bother with the system; these systems basically describe patterns that we see which one we most align with.
I hope that explains my thinking/approach far better than my shorter post did earlier.
Okay Pi, do you remember an argument you and I had about a year ago?Fair enough.
I am not getting a point across. My concern is that an INTP may be mistaken for an INFJ under certain circumstances. Is this true? It is not uncommon to make the wrong classification of oneself and others. I am looking for clarification and rectification. What about this?
1. The Ni appearance is really Ti-Si
2. The Se appearance is really Ne-Fe
3. The Fe is Fe for that special area and is modestly depleting
4. The Ti is Ti for that special area and is energizing
I agree. Now we get to a point I've overlooked. I am talking about the ordinary person, like me. Experts may be able to accurately type, but not the ordinary person. We live in a large world and such erroneous judgments go on all the time. What I'm after is a try at technical language explaining the error. (Example of technical language is at the end.)Okay Pi, do you remember an argument you and I had about a year ago?
You were saying that if an INTP is showing ESFJ behavior, couldn't they be confused for an ESFJ?
My argument then was that an INTP is never truly showing ESFJ behavior, and if you think that is ESFJ behavior you are seeing in them then you have erroneously ascribed a certain behavior archetype to an entire type. I am going to tell you the same thing now as I did back then, because this is basically the exact same argument.
Yes, an INTP can be mistaken for an INFJ, but that is because you don't know what you are doing.
The only way you can mistake an INTP for an INFJ, is if you are basing your understanding off of misconceptions.
If I go along with that, can you answer this: Is the misjudging of an INTP as INFJ because "1. The Ni is not Ni at all, but really is Ti-Si"?The reason so many INFJs are are being mistaken for INTPs is not because they are acting like INTPs, it is because both INFJ and INTP behavior has been poorly defined and misunderstood.
There is never a time when any type is not acting like their own type, it is literally not possible to act like anything other than what you are. If you think they are acting like a different type, then it is because you are holding a very limited paradigm of how each type is supposed to act.
So can Pod'Lair, it is a full and separate theory with full lexicon of terms and principles.MBTI can claim communicability depending on the social medium.
If there is no refutation of the details I have posted, I will assume what I have said is correct until I hear otherwise. Am I to assume you understood what I said?So can Pod'Lair, it is a full and separate theory with full lexicon of terms and principles.
Unfortunately I can only use so many with you people without having to go on tangents explaining what everything means, and why they mean that.
My whole point has always been that as soon as you try to define any of the cognitive configurations based on behavior alone, you go wrong. Because first of all, when you take development, culture, gender, lifestyle, and other factors into consideration, you will undoubtedly get contradictions if you try to just make a single set criteria. This is the flaw of Mbti/socionic/JCF/etc, they draw behavioral lines around each cognitive configuration, so the possibility of them behaving outside of these set lines and still being the same configuration are suppressed.I most definitely remember that "argument" about ESFJ.
Question 1: Am I correct you believe each of the 16 personality types is distinct and separate? If so, where are they defined? Your post on Cognitive Functions Cognitive Functions only describes their characteristics which can be appear in other types. Does only Pod'lair well define them or does it? Pod'lair I take it excels in sensory interpretation. Is there a writeup in words for those who don't have access to Pod'lair?
They do not have conscious access to any of them. Technically everyone has all eight, but you will never be able to access an unconscious function in the same way that a person with conscious use of that function could. So the short answer would just be a simple no.Question 2: Does an INTP (Ti,Ne,Si,Fe) have none of these? Te,Ni,Se,Fi?
In your language, do you call the "shadow functions of an INTP Si and Fe?
Why do you think everyone is going to think exactly the same way? Who knows why they are making errors. Chances are, it is not going to be an INTP being confused for an INFJ, it will probably be the other way around. That is really because a lot of things, for one, MBTI gives people this idea that being a feeler means you make all decisions off of pure emotion and nothing else. Another is that if you enjoy the sciences and the discovery of knowledge you must be a T, and if you like airy fairy touchy feely stuff you must be an F.I agree. Now we get to a point I've overlooked. I am talking about the ordinary person, like me. Experts may be able to accurately type, but not the ordinary person. We live in a large world and such erroneous judgments go on all the time. What I'm after is a try at technical language explaining the error. (Example of technical language is at the end.)
If I go along with that, can you answer this: Is the misjudging of an INTP as INFJ because "1. The Ni is not Ni at all, but really is Ti-Si"?
So your point is that its advantage is that it is more popular...If there is no refutation of the details I have posted, I will assume what I have said is correct until I hear otherwise. Am I to assume you understood what I said?
Pod'Lair does not communicate to the general public until it is better known. Good luck to it. Any improvements on something so important as how to characterize people is important.
I don''t agree with this either. I consider type theory to belong in the latter group. But I don't think this is indicative of being F. I consider it more indicative how I view the airy fairy touchy feely stuff. And I also presume you can't avoid relativity in all of this. So that even just on different forums the types will be redefined. INTP on intpc is something else then on TC and something else again on here. The problem seems to be attempted objectivity on subjectivity.Another is that if you enjoy the sciences and the discovery of knowledge you must be a T, and if you like airy fairy touchy feely stuff you must be an F.
I agree it is hard to hold all the extraneous variables constant. Those variables such as gender and culture can blur distinctions. Nevertheless we try. It's like an alien observing our planet. He wants to define "dog" and sees a Pekingese and a Great Dane. He can't believe both are dogs. DNA would clinch the test.My whole point has always been that as soon as you try to define any of the cognitive configurations based on behavior alone, you go wrong. Because first of all, when you take development, culture, gender, lifestyle, and other factors into consideration, you will undoubtedly get contradictions if you try to just make a single set criteria. This is the flaw of Mbti/socionic/JCF/etc, they draw behavioral lines around each cognitive configuration, so the possibility of them behaving outside of these set lines and still being the same configuration are suppressed.
So you can technically make descriptions, but they will have to be super vague and nonspecific, referring only to how their cognitive function hierarchy works in that order, if you actually want any of them to be accurate and applicable to all of the possible models. It cannot just be "If you like doing X you must be Y"
True accuracy can only be attained from detaching from your assumptions/prejudice of how they are supposed to act and live their lives.
Hold on. There are two questions here. One is about Te,Ni,Se,Fi. I agree those are unconscious. But Si and Fe are not. They can be quite conscious for an INTP.They do not have conscious access to any of them. Technically everyone has all eight, but you will never be able to access an unconscious function in the same way that a person with conscious use of that function could. So the short answer would just be a simple no.
I'm not interested in all those other errors. I'm interest in only one. I have a reason for this. The reason is to get at language even if imprecise. Let me be as specific as I can and if that's not good enough, I will try to fix it. Here is the scenario:Why do you think everyone is going to think exactly the same way? Who knows why they are making errors. Chances are, it is not going to be an INTP being confused for an INFJ, it will probably be the other way around. That is really because a lot of things, for one, MBTI gives people this idea that being a feeler means you make all decisions off of pure emotion and nothing else. Another is that if you enjoy the sciences and the discovery of knowledge you must be a T, and if you like airy fairy touchy feely stuff you must be an F.
So if an INTP is being confused for an INFJ... who the fuck knows why. It depends what who is being confused, and what erroneous assumptions are causing them to make this error. There is no solid universal answer to that question.
Didn't say, "more popular." I said, "better known."So your point is that its advantage is that it is more popular...
*Eyes fall out from rolling so hard*
The top four functions are conscious functions, I have said this many times in threads that you have read.Hold on. There are two questions here. One is about Te,Ni,Se,Fi. I agree those are unconscious. But Si and Fe are not. They can be quite conscious for an INTP.
I'm not interested in all those other errors. I'm interest in only one.
although there's a possibility we're just using different language but have the same concept in mind.
you don't have to go through all the conscious calculations to come up with a judgment.
But I think I do have an issue with the insinuation that it would operate like Ti or another judging function.
Ni is still a Pi function as well -- but the thing that allows Ni to shift gears is because it doesn't anchor itself to one singular view... it's capable of detecting patterns of truth based on the relationships among data offered it rather than being stuck on the actual data itself. Ni seems far more quick to embrace another POV (or at least accept it as valid) if the pattern of the data is truthful and results in the expected picture, and usually perspectives get chosen based on their usefulness in a given situation (expressed through Te/Fe toolsets) rather than on one being clung to.
I'm here to solve your problems soraya. Come on over and I will let you have full use of the internet. Bring your snowshoes.Hey Pi: Unfortunately (haha or maybe fortunately for you) my work situation severely limits my access to the internet. I wish I could contribute more here but it's pretty dependent on when I'm allowed to have internet and when I'm not.
Because Both Pod'Lair are MBTI are attempting to accurately capture the same natural phenomenon. When I say phenomenon, I want you to detach from the definitions and assumptions of the 16 MBTI types, and just think of them as 16 distinct patterns that are naturally occurring in human beings.Adymus, I respect everything that
you're saying there's just one thing
I'm curious about, if you're talking
about pod'lair theories and what is
being discussed at hand is MBTI,
how is what you're saying relevant?
We all could Pi... Even the INFJs here could.Adymus. I wonder if we both could use some Fe development. I for one could.
I suppose Ti and Fe don't go on simultaneously. That's fine. If a type favors Ti, suppose for the sake of argument 5% is given to Fe. Then if one really develops their Ti, one will automatically allow for more Fe.
Example: One is upset because they haven't studied something. "Upset" is not a very good control of emotions. It's embarrassing to talk to others about or if talked about it's not a matter of pride. Undeveloped Fe.
Then they go ahead and study. This changes everything. They have a measured mastery. There may be some anxiety about the topic, but since one has learned more they can use their new confidence to talk to others or take a test. A better Fe.
Intp suppresses Fe. So I don't see how an intp can develop Fe without a lot of effort.