Z Buck McFate
Pepperidge Farm remembers.
- Joined
- Aug 25, 2009
- Messages
- 6,068
- Enneagram
- 5w4
- Instinctual Variant
- sx/sp
Sometimes I wonder what will happen if we ask people who know us well and have them answer the questions for us based on their impression of who we are. If you take an average from say 5-6 people... would that be a better reflection of who we are?
I'm willing to bet those results would be almost as scattered, if not more so, because (it seems to me) INFJs do tend to pick up on how best to communicate/interact with others according to the other individual's style of communication and interaction. I'm very different outwardly in a group of, say, ENTJs than I am in a group of ESFPs- and different than that in a group of INFPs- though my internal values stay the same. I pick up on how others interact with the world and use that to communicate with them.
I'm not sure I understand how having an accurate idea of what others think of us would impact the results of a cognitive functions test anyway, since it's about answering questions about our world view and the means by which we are inclined to process information. Whether or not our insight is accurate or completely projected delusion seems to be beside the point. I mean, I get that having faulty insight about ourselves could lead to faulty answers about ourselves- but wouldn't that result in simply having a faulty idea of how accurate our personal world view is, rather than making us think our world view itself is different? [In other words: if a plumber takes a 'what profession are you in?' test, s/he will likely get 'plumber' results- because of familiarity with the tasks and lingo related to the actual job- regardless of how inept s/he is within that profession.] I'm not 100% on this^, it's just what's occurring to me as I read this last page.