G
garbage
Guest
But if we don't debunk this, then what else will there be to debunk?
clearly we can just debunk anything that's said by one of those good-for-nothing SJs
But if we don't debunk this, then what else will there be to debunk?
My brother is an ISTJ.
He is a sports journalist and can draw on a vast store of minute details about hockey history to help him write his much-admired articles which are read by tens of thousands of people. He is also a very fine writer and has written across a variety of genres with success. I'm a good writer too, but I'll never have the kind of detail/fact recall to do what he can do - not in a million years.
He is also less of a rule-follower than I am, in many ways. Yes, he is keenly and almost emotionally attached to certain traditions and rules, but he chooses his own way. He doesn't care about rules and traditions where he doesn't see their value (though he would certainly never make a fanfare out of breaking or not following those that he doesn't agree with.) To a casual observer I probably look more "typical" and "conformist" than he does, which I'm pretty sure is down to my strong Fe.
By the way, Perch, the way you're going I anticipate you're going to do something to get permabanned relatively soon, so enjoy your short time here :hi:
If you do not understand the differences (in the advantages of one over the other) between the Ni-Si functions than I suppose you should leave the ignorant assumptions within your grand temple of valuables.I don't think there's even one. The inclusion of SJs in the MBTI roster seems little more than a PC attempt to make things like close mindedness, blind faith in rules and procedures, and so on into "personality traits" instead of things to dislike and be dismissive of.
I don't think there's even one. The inclusion of SJs in the MBTI roster seems little more than a PC attempt to make things like close mindedness, blind faith in rules and procedures, and so on into "personality traits" instead of things to dislike and be dismissive of.
"What can an SJ do that an NJ can't?"
*looks up at title* .... Have a soul?
What can an NJ do that an SJ can't?
I don't think there's even one. The inclusion of NJs in the MBTI roster seems little more than a PC attempt to make things like high-minded arrogance, intellectual intolerance, derision of experiential knowledge, and so on into "personality traits" instead of things to dislike and be dismissive of.
- Excellent memory of past details. Me? I pick up the general lessons from the past and forget the rest of the details. I prefer to focus more on the future; I suppose I haven't the attention span to ruminate on the past.
- Detail-oriented. I just worry about fulfilling the general purpose, and I tend to inadvertently gloss over the minor little details. They annoy me. They slow me down. I haven't the patience. So delegated away they are.
- Being content. The SJs I know tend to work hard for their allotted 8 hours (or what have you) and be satisfied with the results that they get from it. Contrary to stereotype, they clearly make time for work and non-work. Most NJs I know (including myself) have a goal or state that they want to achieve. And until it is, it's like the whole point of life (temporarily) is to do so. And even that goal is just one small segment of an even bigger, all-encompassing goal.
to give a practical answer:
- routine (which is far more practical than it seems at first glance)
- memory (NJs friggin suck at remembering things)
- able to act much more quickly. NJs need to form a paridigm or at least get a good grasp of what they're doing before doing it. SJs can just be like "the directions say do this. okay, done" - more observant of details. Ns usually suck with details