I've a question for all of you ENFPs, here. How would you distinguish this Ne-Fi behavior from Ni-Fe behavior? How are the predictions and observations different?
Exactly!! How does all of this differ from Ni or even Si predictions. I don't get it. I mean wouldn't Ni doms have to gather something from the external world? No matter if you're introverted or not you're still living in an outside world
Used to have about 8 or 9 open at once, but now it's down to 2, because I use Chrome (which uses less bandwidth if I have less tabs open), and my computer is a piece of shit and I want it to last till I can afford a new one.Question for ENFPs : How many tabs do you usually have open in your browser at the same time?
Question for ENFPs : How many tabs do you usually have open in your browser at the same time?
I use my Ne mostly with people, picking up people's behavioral patterns, figuring out social behavior and patterns that people have in group situations. I also use Ne in combination with Fi to sense the general atmosphere in groups and with people.
Personally i tend to gather information in the general and store it somewhere in my mind, over time it gathers and when a pattern emerges i can have those EUREKA moments.
Proposed definition #1
Extraverted Intuition (Ne) is the attitude that what is manifest (apparent, observable) is a reflection of a greater reality. The dinosaur bone hints at the dinosaur, the cloud hints at the coming thunderstorm, the thunderstorm is a reflection of the rotation of the Earth within its atmosphere. Whatever you find, there is something more to find: a broader context, a whole, which will change your understanding of the part.
Proposed definition #2
Extraverted Intuition (Ne) is the attitude that the unknown is filled with wonderful things. To make use of them, you must be flexible in your goals. If you try to set things up so that only something known to be good can happen, you close your eyes to the zillions of opportunities that you can't know or define in terms of what you know now. As more of the unknown becomes clear, the more it changes your understanding of the (currently) known.
To live, then, you need to continuously welcome the unknown, by always being ready to adjust in unanticipatable ways. What seems like a mistake is not a mistake when viewed in a larger pattern--and it's your job to find that larger pattern.