ThatsWhatHeSaid
Well-known member
- Joined
- May 11, 2007
- Messages
- 7,263
- MBTI Type
- INTP
- Enneagram
- 5w4
Hmmm.. this almost makes me think that it is possible for a person to be XXXX in personality type.
I don't see why not.
Hmmm.. this almost makes me think that it is possible for a person to be XXXX in personality type.
I don't see why not.
lol at Nocap.lol cc...
K... we have numbers for everything right?
We have a picture for every single possible number. The picture doesn't mean the number, we just have a psychic link between the picture " 2 " and the quantity * *.
Type is the same thing. We're just describing what's already there. Just a mental reference. The only people who think type is ridiculous are those who don't understand it.
All variables are accounted for.
I want hugs not numbers !
Things exist as they are in their purest form, as is, somethings we try to identify and label, sometimes we are waaaaaaaaaayyyyyy off the mark.
lol at Nocap.
Things exist as they are in their purest form, as is, somethings we try to identify and label, sometimes we are waaaaaaaaaayyyyyy off the mark.
![]()
If it's just a label, how can it be off the mark? If I decide to call a shoe a "shoe," how can I be wrong?
Labels are secondary pieces of information, they are only important for communication, i.e. so when you happen to call something a shoe, the accuracy of that label relies on whether or not, wait, shit...If it's just a label, how can it be off the mark? If I decide to call a shoe a "shoe," how can I be wrong?
Um, something is getting lost here, because you are *not* picking up what I am putting down.GrgrrggggGRgrGRrgGr...
You're smarter than this. Get off it for a moment. Step back: Try and figure out what type is.
It's not something. It's made up. Entirely. It's a dictionary. Seriously... type is just a dictionary. Instead of saying idealistic, we say Fi type.
That's extremely oversimplified and you shouldn't base your understanding of typology on that: I'm just trying to illustrate a concept.
Um, something is getting lost here, because you are *not* picking up what I am putting down.
The dictionary falls incredibly short in attempting to identify and define *all* that actually is and exists.
C'mon, Nocap, surely you understand this fact.
WORDI think he's agreeing with you. MBTI doesn't have to define all that exists, it just has to create a large enough net to scoop everyone in. In separates the world into opposites across 4 factors, so yeah, it should catch everyone as long as it makes room for people to land somewhere in the middle. Of course, there are many more ways to describe people, but it's not SUPPOSED to define people across all dimensions. It's useful up to those 4 dimensions, that's about it.
Throughout school I could never find my niche, so I resorted to turning inward and valuing my alone time, as it was the only time where I could fully invest myself in my interests, as I had no one else to share them with.
But when I was much younger, I was not so inward-focused. I would go up and talk to all sorts of strangers (great at taking my parents advice, huh?), and I'd always have like 80 different projects going on based off all my interests...I'd be painting a picture, making up some English notebook for my cousin and dancing around the house being way-too-hyper in front of my mom all in the same day.
I'm wondering if that turning inward throughout high school was not true introversion but rather a detour of sorts? Because now that I'm in college, I find that rather than keeping to myself, I prefer to talk to those around me and make connections with people. I initiate conversations 70% of the time. I still am very socially anxious, and certain situations do drain me - discussions with extremely opinionated people, and discussions about extremely day-to-day topics - but I get depressed faster after too many days with little social contact than I used to. Plus my Fe score is pretty high...not higher than Ne or Ti of course, but it's up there.
Um, something is getting lost here, because you are *not* picking up what I am putting down.
The dictionary falls incredibly short in attempting to identify and define *all* that actually is and exists.
C'mon, Nocap, surely you understand this fact.
I think he's agreeing with you. MBTI doesn't have to define all that exists, it just has to create a large enough net to scoop everyone in. In separates the world into opposites across 4 factors, so yeah, it should catch everyone as long as it makes room for people to land somewhere in the middle. Of course, there are many more ways to describe people, but it's not SUPPOSED to define people across all dimensions. It's useful up to those 4 dimensions, that's about it.
No, the dictionary *defines the universe* as being the entirety of all and everything that exists.Ugh...
Actually the dictionary defines, quite concisely, everything that exists. All in one word too. The word 'universe'. It's not very precise, but it encapsulates all of existence in its sweep.
I put more "faith" in the dictionary than I do in typology if those are even analogous things.The rest is all assumed. Just like in typology. It's not explicitly stated, but it's there. Just like in typology.