G
Ginkgo
Guest
Thread title.
Not that simple, cant really say yes or no to that.
You mean you don't have an answer to this?!?...this is bad.
Nah, i got the answer for everything its just that the answer requires more writing that im willing to do.
The person with a capacity to absorb more information will absorb more information
Type would be inconsequential, I believe
Extraversion = object
Introversion = fields (relationship between object)
This does not imply that extraversion absorbs more information than introversion.
simulatedworld said:Jung observed two types of general cognition: Perception (taking in information) and Judgment (making decisions/evaluating it.)
He said that there are two styles of Perception: Sensing (which deals with immediate, concrete, tangible sensory impressions) and iNtuition (which deals with abstract patterns and relationships between things or ideas, and other non-tangible information.)
There are also two styles of Judgment: Thinking (which deals with impersonal logic and structure) and Feeling (which deals with personal/interpersonal ethics and morality.)
Furthermore, each of these four processes can be directed inwardly (introverted), which means it's conceptualized subjectively in terms of the self, or externally (extroverted), which means it's conceptualized objectively in terms of not-self.
Introverted attitudes view the outer world in terms of the self's subjective ideal, so they attempt to make the outer world more like the inner self. Their focus is deeper but less expansive--they can see all the implications of one idea at a time.
Extroverted attitudes view the inner world in terms of the non-self's objective ideal, so they attempt to make the inner self more like the outer world. Their focus is broader but more shallow--they can see a wide range of different information at once, but in less detail.
thats just a stereotypeIntroverts think, act, think. Extraverts act, think, act.