So yeah. I've decided to do ISFP later, they just seem too complex and alien for me to make an accurate profile right now. I've been thinking about this a lot, I feel like I'm letting you people down by not doing it. But I'll save it for later. SPs are just very... weird for me to wrap my head around.
So yeah. I've decided to do ISFP later, they just seem too complex and alien for me to make an accurate profile right now.
~DESCRIPTION OF Fi FOR REFERENCE~
Fi is about value typically. This value is usually self centered, and it's about making the user feel good. These values can branch to other people, for example making it so if X person feels good then the Fi user will feel good as well as a result. Fi users are also granted the ability to know how someone is feeling (one way or another). With this ability the person may be able to see through other's intentions, or anything that you could have based on knowing the other's emotional state.
My theory about how all of this works is that Fi is a database of emotion within the person. You can take from this, add to it, look at it as a reference etc. This may be where "values" come to be, within this database. The person's emotional experiences and the emotions they have felt go in this database, and they are stored as a memory sort of. While in there the person will remember how they felt when a certain thing happened, and they may want to influence their emotional state by experiencing this again. Or on the other hand, something may make them feel bad, and they may want to avoid these feelings of negativity. This is where "something just doesn't feel right" comes in. This also may be where things may feel a certain to someone, and they make this judgment immediately when they come in contact with something. As Udog said later in the thread this could be called "resonance" with something. If this resonance is a bad one then the person will try to make it good in some way, and if it's good then it will be kept good.
I may add to this later, and I will take your input to heart.![]()
Hey thanks! This was very clear and well-described! I wonder, though, based on other descriptions that I've read, is there also an element of emotional understanding, as well? For instance, if the Fi user feels a certain way or resonates a certain way about something, do they typically explore that feeling and come to an understanding about what underlying need/motivation it is that makes them feel that way? Or at least, do INFPs do this?
For instance (and I'm just really talking out of my ass here), suppose an INFP saw someone on the street take the initiative to help a blind guy to the bus, and they felt good internally about it (or that person). Might they then consciously explore why it is they feel this way? Trace it back to some fundamental emotional need, or combination of needs? I'm curious to know if INFPs do this, or if they just rather experience the emotion and react to it un-reflexively?
A lot of this sounds like Fi + Si. Personally, I think Fi has more of a direct, instinctive response to things. This can be conditioned by past experiences (Si) but I don't think it is necessarily. I could be wrong, though. Maybe some of the INTJs, etc, can throw more light on this, as they have Fi and very little Si.BlackCat said:My theory about how all of this works is that Fi is a database of emotion within the person. You can take from this, add to it, look at it as a reference etc. This may be where "values" come to be, within this database. The person's emotional experiences and the emotions they have felt go in this database, and they are stored as a memory sort of. While in there the person will remember how they felt when a certain thing happened, and they may want to influence their emotional state by experiencing this again. Or on the other hand, something may make them feel bad, and they may want to avoid these feelings of negativity. This is where "something just doesn't feel right" comes in. This also may be where things may feel a certain to someone, and they make this judgment immediately when they come in contact with something. As Udog said later in the thread this could be called "resonance" with something. If this resonance is a bad one then the person will try to make it good in some way, and if it's good then it will be kept good.
Tried getting some more understanding of what confuses me about the SPs the most in this thread. No luck so far for understanding though, this is all that's holding the ISFP profile back.
Hey thanks! This was very clear and well-described! I wonder, though, based on other descriptions that I've read, is there also an element of emotional understanding, as well? For instance, if the Fi user feels a certain way or resonates a certain way about something, do they typically explore that feeling and come to an understanding about what underlying need/motivation it is that makes them feel that way? Or at least, do INFPs do this?
For instance (and I'm just really talking out of my ass here), suppose an INFP saw someone on the street take the initiative to help a blind guy to the bus, and they felt good internally about it (or that person). Might they then consciously explore why it is they feel this way? Trace it back to some fundamental emotional need, or combination of needs? I'm curious to know if INFPs do this, or if they just rather experience the emotion and react to it un-reflexively?
My Pness has always been extremely large.