G
Ginkgo
Guest
Damnit.
I just realized that I was wrong.
I just realized that I was wrong.
I like the fact that you used an artistic analogy. Some time ago, I had a PM with a pal and I used a symphony orchestra as my analogy. I suggested that ALL the FA's were playing simultaneously with the volume of the instruments rising and falling from our consciousness, but still playing all the while. Just because we hear the violins and horns peaking, doesn't mean the piano isn't playing in the background.
Like yourself, I don't much care for having a rigid picture of how we operate. To me, the brain flows with ease. It doesn't stop at toll booths to yell, "Hey baby, punch my card so I can head to the next stop!"
Damnit.
I just realized that I was wrong.
We're not arguing as to the names of the concept, we're arguing on words to describe them. What are function attitudes, or processes?Changing the nomenclature in every book ever written on the topic will clarify nothing. We already have all of the following being used by different authors, to represent the same thing:
Function Attitudes
Jungian Processes
Jungian Functions
Cognitive processes
Mental processes
Take your pick.
And I still do not knock the term "processes" like you claimed; though I do shun "activities the system engages in as it functions in day-to-day life...They are best described using verbs that indicate actions." That's my one disagreement with her.Do you recall this exchange?
Look familiar?
Definition of a process by Linda V. Berens:
Source: Dynamics of personality type: understanding and applying Jung's cognitive processes.
http://books.google.com/books?id=ca...&resnum=1&ved=0CDYQ6AEwAA#v=onepage&q&f=false
You approve of every author? That's funny; you sure don't approve of Lenore and Beebe.What are you talking about, Eric? I own every book ever written on the processes and I approve of the way the authors have described them. I always have. It is you and Sim who thought you'd be cute and say, "Oh, no! Let's rename them all something else." Frankly, you and Sim remind me of Victor.
You and Sim:
Perspective!
Perspective!
Victor:
MBTI trance!
MBTI trance!
I've known Beebe's work for years.
Just know some of us are not Beebe fans, and let's move on.
I do not enjoy going over the same material, ad nauseam.
Again, you do not know what you are talking about. The problem is not Beebe's work; it's certain interpretations of it or ways of expressing it that need to be ironed out. He has acknowledged that the functions can step outside their archetypal carriers and operate independently of them, so I did not need to reject Beebe to realize that an INTP can engage the products of Fi (a better way of putting that).So rather than entertain the possibility Beebe's work is crap, or the possibility that an INTP can use Fi without being "demonic," your only solution was to play a name-changing game. All I can tell you is this:
Read my sig line.
I don't remember her using the term directly, but the use of it seen here was greatly influenced by her. From what I understand, it was Sim who coined the term.Wasn't it Lenore who came up with the "perspectives" terminology?
http://www.personalitypathways.com/thomson/type3-1.html#questionTo put this somewhat differently, the functions represent four different ways that our unconscious emotional subsystems are brought into relationship with our higher mental operations, moving them into the stream of consciousness. As such, the functions aren't cognitive processes. Rather, they make our emotional energies available to the operations of the executive brain.
We're not arguingas to the names of the concept, we're arguing on words to describe them.
And I still do not knock the term "processes" like you claimed; though I do shun "activities the system engages in as it functions in day-to-day life...They are best described using verbs that indicate actions." That's my one disagreement with her.
But even she describes them in terms of "Philosoph[ies] of Life" in that book on the top of the page for each process, and those seem to be her best descriptions of them.
The Philosophy of Life that engages...
Se: There is always more to be experienced, and opportunities don't last.
Si: There is always a comparison to be made, and if it is familiar, it is to be trusted
Ne: There are always other perspectives and new meanings to discover
Ni: There is always a future to realize and a significance to be revealed
Te: Everything can be logical, structured and organized
Ti: Everything can be explained and understood in terms of how it works
Fe: Everything can be considered in terms of how it affects others
Fi: Everything can be in harmony or congruence
You approve of every author? That's funny; you sure don't approve of Lenore and Beebe.
Jaguar said:I own every book ever written on the processes and I approve of the way the authors have described them.
You still need to show how calling the functions perspectives is the same thing as calling the whole MBTI a trance! "Trance" is meant as a pejorative to knock the whole thing.
Your criticizing of certain people's expressions of the theory is closer to what Victor does than anything else.
The name change was an alternative to the confusing "using skills/behavior/activities" lingo that begs the question of where it really fits in a given type in the first place.
The operative word is processes, Eric. Processes. Don't play games. We both know Lenore's Beam-Me-Up-Scotty book is not about the processes, per se. It is about Personality TYPE, and all her incessant babbling about Captain Kirk. If someone wishes to buy a book to learn the processes, that sure isn't one to buy.
Skimmed the thread, realised everyone was using just one process to approach the issue, decided to call the majority of participants retarded.
Despite the fact a mod once locked you out of a thread for calling people "retarded," here you are entering a conversation and the first thing you do is call the participants, "retarded."
It's impossible to take you seriously.
Grow up, Kalach. You've been behaving like this for far too long.
Do they dominate by being the one most often jumping to the front of the order in a serial swapping of function dominance or do they do it by so imprinting their imperatives and perspectives on the functioning of the "other" functions that those functions don't have a distinct identity....
Okay, Dad.
Hug?
This is why I question whether Jag is an ENTJ or ENFJ.
I consider him an ENxJ, which would imply two dominant functions, and add a new wrinkle to your obsession, Kalach...
That is an interesting question...
Why could it not be both...? (Oh, bonjour a nouveau, monsieur Ni...)
If you would actually type someone based upon whether or not a person says, "Grow up," rather than factoring in age, I can't take you seriously, either. If you really want to be told to "Grow up," then maybe I should invite my ESTJ pal who is in his 50's, to join.
What does everyone think about this statement?
"Only one function can be in control of consciousness at any single point in time"
For example, I can't be reflecting (introverting) a function at the same time as I'm talkative (extraverting). So, I can't be using my dominant function at the same time as I'm using my auxiliary.
I can't picture how any single function can work seperatly from any other- none can stand on their own- they need the support of others in a way- they're just building blocks, they're not the be all, end all.![]()
Despite the fact a mod once locked you out of a thread for calling people "retarded," here you are entering a conversation and the first thing you do is call the participants, "retarded." It's impossible to take you seriously. Grow up, Kalach. You've been behaving like this for far too long.
This is why I question whether Jag is an ENTJ or ENFJ.
I consider him an ENxJ, which would imply two dominant functions, and add a new wrinkle to your obsession, Kalach...
Actually, I would consider the above quote to reflect Te + Fi.
Not that I'm trying to type anybody.