EcK
The Memes Justify the End
- Joined
- Nov 21, 2008
- Messages
- 7,705
- MBTI Type
- ENTP
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- 738
I was just answering the general idea - as in chatting.Yes which is why I specified 'probably' and 'most likely' about these historical figures based on what we know about them and the most accepted modern understanding of MBTI. I'm stating an opinion/observation and not an actual argument for MBTIs of historical figures![]()
Didn't mean for it to be misconstrued/miscommunicated as a rebuttal.
yes and no: we never hear about the failures. I'd imagine someone could just have their head in these asses and still manage to come up with something visionary by sheer statistical chance. I mean, look at the silicon valley, it's full of smart people who had the right idea at the wrong time, who had an okey idea and got investors to grow it into something huge etc. and of stupid ideas that appealed to the mass public and became multi-million / billion dollar companies.Genius characteristics (at least how they are accepted to be) tend to strongly correlate to innovation. I think a great deal of extroversion is required here too. Wouldn't you have to have the ability and drive explore the outside world in order to accurately understand it? Only by having a good understanding about the world around you can you have an ability to imagine how it could be. Real world + your ideas = innovation. No?
It reminds me of Descartes the reviled (by myself at least) - yes his math was awesome but hell - what a shitty philosopher. He only excelled in 'closed' environments, when applying his thought to human nature he contructed math-like but unrealistic models. Yet people admire him for his philosophy.
Why? Well it boggles my mind but probably a mix of people not being smart enough to see the holes in his reasoning and the 'halo' effect of his other works.
A bit like you see 'scientists' on TV talking about topics they know nothing/express simplistic thoughs about and yet trusted by the public. People are gullible I'm afraid.