Ya, I am sorry for that. Give me time to get to know you and I am sure I can give the compliment back![]()
youre an annoying idiot and i dont like you
You're an annoying idiot and I don't like you.
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Disagreed. I would find life meaningless if I couldn't have my head in the clouds, in the realm of god.
Me too...
NT and ST though... as a very broad summary of my personal experience, I'd say NT thinks more about what things mean and ST thinks more about what they are. To the NT, what they mean is what they are, things only are what they mean, you know, they are given definition by their position in a bigger picture. To the ST, what things are is what they mean, and if they've any relevance to anything else than it has to be done and shown and proven empirically and physically. Sorta.
Take a math class, and look at how people show their work. If the work is incoherent and and scattered but always comes to the right answer than the person is an NT. If the work is formal and uses the same steps to solve each problem then that person is an ST. Other functions can play a part in this. But this experiment works atleast 90% of time.
Ahaha, I never thought about it that way. I remember when I was in school, I absolutely hated showing my work because it was pointless, especially in basic algebra and arithmetic. I also enjoyed working things out in my head and having to stop to put what was in my head on paper was just too much interruption for my NT-geared assault on the answer.
To Grayscale: That's an interesting take on it, but as an NT, I often find the bigger picture to be more important because you can have a shit-ton of legos and the motivation to build a tower, but if you don't know the basic principles of tower building, you're not likely to build a good tower. In my mind, it's easiest to take the essential basics and learn them first. If you need to do something later, you'll understand the basic theory and can work your way up using trial-and-error.
To Grayscale: That's an interesting take on it, but as an NT, I often find the bigger picture to be more important because you can have a shit-ton of legos and the motivation to build a tower, but if you don't know the basic principles of tower building, you're not likely to build a good tower. In my mind, it's easiest to take the essential basics and learn them first. If you need to do something later, you'll understand the basic theory and can work your way up using trial-and-error.
Exactly I hated showing work. That is why I made Cs and Bs in my math classes because the teachers did not condone my methods of learning. I would never show my work. It would not be until my latter years teachers really started to appreciate my ability to find answers without going through the routine steps. But if I ever had to learn how to do a math problem I rather have a ST teach me than an NT.