Are all NTs good at math?
Rid me of the stereotype.
At Ts = ?, where Ts is time of snap shot.
When I was in 5th grade I was a month or more behind on my math homework.
In high school I failed Algebra the first time I took it, was well on my way to failing geometry then managed to pass the NYS regents exam at the last possible chance to pull my fat out of the fire, then went on to fail trigonometry the following year.
All that was before I took the ASVAB test as part of enlisting in the Navy.
The ASVAB managed to `out' me as having math aptitude good enough to qualify for Nuclear power and advanced electronics.
While in the Navy I did some self study with a few math books and a scientific calculator to get over the trauma of math in high school.
When I got out of the navy and enrolled at a local community college I had to take a math placement test. I tested out of 2 out 3 of the math courses for the major I had selected, and got a pretty easy A in the course I did take.
I went on to take calculus, discrete math, and use math professionally while doing computer programming.
So ... yes I've been/seemed both bad and good `at math' depending on which math and at which instant in time.
Another question: What are Calculus and Trigonometry for?
For a while.
The courses and rites-of-passage end eventually. ;-)
Calculus and Trigonometry are for non-NFs and people who
quantify.
As NFs seem only concerned with `polarity' -- EG `positive and `negative', as applied to emotions, feelings, attitudes, and/or the AFFECTS on others -- and
quality it would seem that any field of study dealing with abstractions other than Feeling/emotion or quantification of intensity, magnitude, or value might be pretty much lost on them. :hi:
So, from your vantage point, they are tools for use by those you use as tools to perform tasks facilitated by logical and/or mathematical thinking.
The folks who design most of your technological toys and tools had to use mathematical
relationships to get things to work right for YOU.
Historically speaking, trigonometry was something folks started doing when they wanted to measure trigons -- think a polyGON with 3 sides -- which represented things of interest in Sensate world, like lengths of property lines when trying to restore property lines after a spring flood.
A Calculus is a stone.
If you put stones in a sack they can have a one-to-one correspondence between things of value, like sheep or wives.
If you put holes in the stones you can bead them together to form an abacus, so you don't get your fingers slapped by some SJ pedant for counting on your fingers.
Okay ... calculus is handy for reasoning about `things' which change over the course of time.
Had the Mother and daughter team which created the MBTI known about `the calculus' they may have accounted for
instantaneous preferences rather than free-floating, average, or nominal preferences.
I prefer to write no more at this instant.