The Great One
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- Joined
- Apr 27, 2012
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- MBTI Type
- ENTP
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- 6w7
Ti users, explain to me how you use Introverted thinking.
And here you can talk about it, even with the author.That was cool!
A video suggestion came up afterward which explains Ti Vs. Te.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=kRtX65Cnc9w
That was cool!
A video suggestion came up afterward which explains Ti Vs. Te.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=kRtX65Cnc9w
Ti users, explain to me how you use Introverted thinking.
I approve of this post
There's a sort of internal sense of when something is inconsistent or when there is a logical contradiction, also an internal sense of when something is congruent or incongruent with a system (or previous experiences). I go into my head, detach, and try to look at things objectively.
Hey Doc,
Either my memory is going or I missed out on your original posting of that video here. Probably the former. One thing that always comes up lacking in these kinds of analyses is the emotional aspect of the INTP thought-process. This might include the ISTP's, where the ISTP is into concrete systems and the INTP is into intellectual systems. But to me there is a certain beauty to systems, most particularly the mathematical. The idea of "Analysis" misses half, and perhaps the most important, part of it. Comprehension of systems is more immediate than analysis, and it is accompanied by an immediate experience of truth that can sometimes be overwhelmingly emotional. Analysis is emphasized over synthesis, but this is understandable as synthesis is harder to describe. I agree that analysis is an objective process, and truth has objective content; moreover, I agree that objectivity is absolutely desirable. However, the manner of arriving at objective truth is not analytical, it is synthetic; it is more than the sum of its parts. The truth behind this mysterious process of obtaining truth is partially emotional. I wouldn't say that emotion drives this process so much as accompanies and even rewards it. And despite the idea that objectivity is the goal, there is a certain subjectivity that goes into the process. This is the point of indefinable mystery that is not what some would call Ni but is instead the basis for all that is Ti.
What aspect of that demonstrated introverted thinking? How he was getting philosophical with everything or because he took the vehicle apart, broke it into pieces, and put it back together again?
Everybody thinks!
I think I like your new avatar and I think you should keep it and I think I think more than most people think because I think Ti people think a lot more than most other people think.
The vid seems more ISTP, which is still Ti-dom.
Which makes sense. I think that Ne<Ti and Se<Ti users, use the function in very different ways. For instance, my old ESTP boss used to be able to solve problems in the moment and just take action. He would always say that i over-complicated things, and that I put too much thought into things. He thought that I need to do less analyzing and take more action. This is why I didn't think I was a Ti user in the first place. However, I could solve problems and think of better ways to do things, it's just that it didn't happen in the moment like him. Mine was more like mini-visions that would just come to me when I was alone and do one was around. Out of no where, I would be thinking of something, and then another idea would spawn from it, and I would get this "Eureka" moment. Yeah, it's like I couldn't choose when these things would happen, they would just hit me out of nowhere. It was very similar to Gregory House actually.
So what I described previously was Ne not Ti.