Never happen. I don't plan on becoming a tinman anytime soon.
Never happen. I don't plan on becoming a tinman anytime soon.
Possibly him. But I am far happier, so me?
Don't corner me with logic. It will not work. I am very stubborn and will not acquiese.
To bring things back to your OP , and to in part deal with your searching.
Which of these answers your OP, and why.
Rather than love, than money, than fame, give me truth.
Henry David Thoreau
If you limit your choices only to what seems possible or reasonable, you disconnect yourself from what you truly want, and all that is left is a compromise.
Robert Fritz
And which is the free thinker to you?
Hm. Some of those responses to the questions are quite indicative of ISFP, but since I don't really know enough about you, I will not object to your recent self-typing. However, be weary, some people receive very sporadic results on such tests (I, however, maintain very consistent results).
I disagree becuase the one thing I am certain of is I have a preference for Intuition and Judging. However, whether my preference is for Ni or Ne, I do not know.
xNxJ = Ni
xNxP = Ne
All NJ's have Ni as dominant or auxiliary, all NP's have Ne as dominant or auxiliary. So if you've decided those two letters are correct (which I'm not sure of), you have to use Ni because of the way it's set up.
Given that fact that I have never lived in the present day and I am always thinking of the future, consequences, concepts and intangible things it's fair to conclude that I have a preference for Intuition.
Also I have strong judging tendencies which I comfortable with. I do not know if they are natural tendencies but I couldn't imagine living any other way.
I disagree becuase the one thing I am certain of is I have a preference for Intuition and Judging. However, whether my preference is for Ni or Ne, I do not know.
I believe it is the Idealists not the Rationals, which are the freest thinkers.
If you are so sure that you favor Ni, then how did you mistake yourself for an ESFP?
Also, what are these "strong judging tendencies" of which you speak?
Daily routine, long lists of tasks that I actually complete, a need for closure, very punctual, efficient, etc.
Although, to be fair I do procrastinate on occassion ...
Hm. But you didn't answer my first question.
Oh, to answer your question, because I was confused. See, the main problem I have discerning my type is I can relate to all the types in some aspect or another.
Making points is antithetical to your point. You realize this do you not? Quite a paradox you've got going.That is someone's definition of a free thinker. An although accurate is not absolute. In a roudabout way you just proved my point.
And instead of considering that words have set definitions for a reason, you stuck to your emotional guns believing that 'it's possible' for an idealist to think more freely than a rational.Instead of sidestepping logic for a second and conjuring up a creative answer what did you do? You quoted some lame dictinary definiton of free thinker that you probably pulled from an asine Google search.
Making points is antithetical to your point. You realize this do you not? Quite a paradox you've got going.
And instead of considering that words have set definitions for a reason, you stuck to your emotional guns believing that 'it's possible' for an idealist to think more freely than a rational.
Idealists are just as bound as rationals. Just because we criticize doesn't mean we think it's not a possibility -- sometimes we think the other person hasn't thought it through.
Consider this two types.
Step 1
ENTP - thinks of an idea, but quickly decides it's not going to work, so decides against furthering it.
At the same time;
ENFP - thinks of an idea but quickly decides that it's going to hurt someone's feelings and decides against furthering it. They both come up with a possibility, they just have different reasons for 'eliminating them' as possible.
Step 2
ENTP - thinks of a new way to get the original idea to work (it's still a possibility)
ENFP - doesn't bother to come up with a way to make the original idea work, because the end is morally wrong.
Now who's freest?
Making points is antithetical to your point. You realize this do you not? Quite a paradox you've got going.
And instead of considering that words have set definitions for a reason, you stuck to your emotional guns believing that 'it's possible' for an idealist to think more freely than a rational.
Idealists are just as bound as rationals. Just because we criticize doesn't mean we think it's not a possibility -- sometimes we think the other person hasn't thought it through.
Consider this two types.
Step 1
ENTP - thinks of an idea, but quickly decides it's not going to work, so decides against furthering it.
At the same time;
ENFP - thinks of an idea but quickly decides that it's going to hurt someone's feelings and decides against furthering it. They both come up with a possibility, they just have different reasons for 'eliminating them' as possible.
Step 2
ENTP - thinks of a new way to get the original idea to work (it's still a possibility)
ENFP - doesn't bother to come up with a way to make the original idea work, because the end is morally wrong.
Now who's freest?