Peter Deadpan
phallus impudicus
- Joined
- Dec 14, 2016
- Messages
- 8,864
Being critical of it is where the fun begins.
I hope so. I often think about abandoning it altogether though. Just keeps sucking me back in.
Being critical of it is where the fun begins.
Also a fair point. I've been very logically critical of typology lately.
Here's what I've been able to gather about sensor bias:
1. The way that sensing is described in the MBTI tends to be much less flattering than intuition.
2. Because of this, 90% of people who take the test, when presented with a question asking them to choose between an intuitive and sensing response, will go with the intuitive response.
3. (I suspect that) because of this, the only people who are actually going to score as a sensor on the test will be the most extreme possible versions of their respective sensor type and probably not all that fun for a lot of people to deal with. Thus, the negative sensor stereotype is re-enforced.
Now, a few questions:
-Are there any tests that correct the sensor bias?
-Is there a good estimate of how many intuitives are actually mistyped sensors?
-Could you actually flip this around and design a test that has an anti-intuitive bias rather than an anti-sensor bias? What would the people who actually manage to score as intuitive on that test look like in contrast to the ISTJ accountant, ESFP cheerleader, etc?
I'm still trying to come to a definition for Se for myself that doesn't feel so flat. It's the one function I feel, people just got lazy and finished up explaining the functions so they just quickly scribbled down some words then headed out to Starbucks.
I know there's something more to it, there just HAS to be. All the other functions I was bale to extract more from the typical definitions, and was able to see them in a way that truly made sense for me as to their reason for being. Se is totally just an afterthought and that seriously bugs me.
I'm sometimes imaginative and sometimes in the real world, both are important for a meaningful life imo.
I can agree with several points brought up in this thread.
I do think that there's actually nothing negative about many of the sensor descriptors in tests. Ie 'practical', 'sensible', and so on are at the very least neutral, and many sensors will in fact identify with them and my mom, for example, might scoff at the opposite, 'imaginative'. And for me, at least, I know I've always been 'sensible' and I do identify with that; though there was a time when I may have felt sheepish about it. (see below)
However, sensors in an intuitive dominant environment, which could include organizations or institutions which may have a leaning towards intuitives, or even sensors with a lot of intuitive friends, may be so immersed in intuitive world that they may attach value to intuitive traits, thus may begin aspiring to/valuing those things, and then test as such. These sensors might experience a feeling of 'lacking' if in those environments, just as intuitives may feel 'lacking' when immersed with tons of sensors. I think this can happen too.
And then, I think ultimately it's a spectrum, so there are extreme intuitives, extreme sensors, and a whole lot in between.
What an extremely sensible point of view.
I'm an N-type myself, and I completely agree with you. I think your response perfectly summarizes the issue and illustrates what is actually taking place.
This thread is really quite the irony. Speaking from my own experience, being an N-type immersed into S-biased world culture, it's absolutely awful and I feel like crap all the time. For example, I do not want to "let loose and enjoy myself" the way sensors always tell me to do because their lifestyle is not appealing or fun to me and I do not enjoy participating in it.
I literally cannot engage in anything in my life without having to confine my perception to the realm of information that only sensation types would appreciate most of the time. Even in college, and at work, there is always a sensor-bias. The institutions all skew and present the information in such a way as to cater to sensation types. In every market, every single data-set showing any kind of consumer sentimentality and interest is skewed toward sensation types. The entire planet is dominated by the values and interests of sensation types, It's depressing enough to induce an existential crisis if you're an intuitive type and still a kid trying to understand why you don't fit in.
Throw on top of that all the psychologists who don't have any background in MBTI, so they use a model like MMPI to try and diagnose an illness when you go in to them saying what I'm saying. So suddenly being intuitive is literally a disease?
Sorry, maybe this thread can cure my intuitiveness and turn me into a good little sensor boy, so then finally I'll learn to appreciate sensation types and check my intuitive privilege.
Intuition is not a disease, and what even makes you think that it is? Besides, the world isn't 100% made for anyone.
I don't even know why you replied to me. Where did I say it was a disease? Also, I never said the world was 100% for anyone.
As I said in my post, most psychologists use the MMPI to try and diagnose you for an illness.
There are a lot of psychologists who interpret it as ADHD.
Also a lot of psychologists even interpret high scoring introversion as symptoms of autism.
What, you think general practitioners use the MBTI?
So, you did think of it as a disease.So suddenly being intuitive is literally a disease?
[MENTION=25892]Smilephantomhive[/MENTION]
I didn't imply any of that. You clearly misinterpreted what I said to mean something else, and then I even replied to you clarifying it and you're still trying to argue with me.
And now you're accusing me of trying to justify my failures and a lot of other bullshit that just got really personal and totally inappropriate.
You are way out of line and attacking me for no reason.
Okay maybe I shouldn't have quoted you since I was thinking if other people, and maybe I projected their qualities onto you.
I'm sorry for that
But I do think that what I wrote needed to be said, but yeah I shouldn't have directed that at you.
Intuition told them that because it cant actually see whats in front if it that well. It just uses a sixth sense of intuition it doesnt understand. :Laugh:Intuition is not a disease, and what even makes you think that it is? Besides, the world isn't 100% made for anyone. Learn to make it through the world your own way. I'm not into the "let lose yolo" lifestyle myself, but I find my own ways to have fun.