Pionart
Well-known member
- Joined
- Sep 17, 2014
- Messages
- 4,091
- MBTI Type
- NiFe
[MENTION=39881]Meowcat[/MENTION]
I suppose you'd only be seeing the part that is relevant to what you're doing at the time, but at least in theory the store would be there. With Ni, I apply a conceptual understanding to situations, so whereas with Ne they see the patterns that manifest directly with what they're perceiving, Ni is seeing things in terms of a pattern they're already aware of (but can also become aware of new patterns). So there would theoretically be a store of patterns, but it's generally accessed one pattern at a time. There are likely to be overarching patterns though, which would be a philosophy, just as Si has a philosophy of the world but it's based more on the facts of how the world is, rather than an other-worldly symbolism.
Yes, perhaps that's the case generally with Si. Being primarily an Ni user, it's something I'm not sure about, but it makes sense that an Si would know what they're looking for more than an Ni user would.
Well yes, with extroverted judgment there would be movement, but the Si would keep you focused on your goal, whereas Ne would jump more from one thing to the next.
That sounds like a really J thing to say. I would imagine a P would be much more comfortable exploring for exploration's sake, and in fact prefer goals that are done for the purpose of exploring.
I'm similar in a different way, in that I tend to want to engage with the external world in ways that further my "vision" of how things are. An example is drinking alcohol. I don't generally like the physical experience of drinking alcohol, but I like being in an altered state of consciousness, because it allows me to see the world in ways that thus far have been helping me get to where I want to go. Though, I also do like sugary drinks and certain kinds of food, and that seems to be physical pleasure for the sake of physical pleasure, so I do engage in that to a degree.
Another example would be going for walks - I tend to go for walks for the sake of stimulating my mind, because I find that the act of walking allows for long trains of thought to develop, which can lead me to new understanding. And internet browsing too, is done for the purpose of discovery, transformation, acting out a role/story etc.
I don't have an answer for this right now. Hopefully I'll probe my mind later and see if I can garner a response.
That's got to do with the internal store I mentioned earlier. It seems that you're taking notes of the details which you want to internalise about the object, so that when you see it again, you can bring those details to mind without needing to look at it as closely the next time.
I did a similar thing with maths, where I would look at the formula until I had internalised it, and by that point I could solve a lot of maths problems which worked on the same principle without needing to give it much thought, and generally I either didn't have to remember the formula, or I had understood the formula so well that remembering it came naturally.
This might be the Se aspect. All types have all 8 functions, and Se is generally a pleasurable function for SJs to use, it just doesn't come as naturally. Though it might be Si doing it on the other hand. I know that I can think an idea is really profound, and I think Ni is noting that rather than Ne, though I haven't given this question sufficient reflection.
Yeah it's quite surreal when it happens. It's like... staring at something, and kind of zoning out but also becoming really immersed in what's being looked at, and feeling a kind of fiery passion igniting inside which is having an as-yet unknown effect.
Sometimes those aesthetic experiences can really be life changing.
Funnily enough, I used to think I was an ISTJ, because I was trying to figure out which my dominant function was, and since I didn't understand the functions too concretely, I thought that: because the environment was clear to me, I was using Sensing, but I was viewing the environment in this really aesthetic kind of way, so I figured it was subjective, so I put that together and decided it was Si. Also I had read Jung speaking of Si as being aesthetic, so that confirmed it for me. Really, I was using Se combined with Ni, and Si was a totally different process, but it took me a long time to figure that out.
That internal store of sensory impressions is unconscious? Mine has to be because I do not see it consciously. I relate to being able to remember some things in detail (tho' then some other things I just completely forget that they ever happened) but I don't see an "internal store of sensory impressions".
I suppose you'd only be seeing the part that is relevant to what you're doing at the time, but at least in theory the store would be there. With Ni, I apply a conceptual understanding to situations, so whereas with Ne they see the patterns that manifest directly with what they're perceiving, Ni is seeing things in terms of a pattern they're already aware of (but can also become aware of new patterns). So there would theoretically be a store of patterns, but it's generally accessed one pattern at a time. There are likely to be overarching patterns though, which would be a philosophy, just as Si has a philosophy of the world but it's based more on the facts of how the world is, rather than an other-worldly symbolism.
I mean, I really am more specific than "a sense of looking for something and it can be hard to say what it is exactly". For me it is easy to say what it is exactly.
Yes, perhaps that's the case generally with Si. Being primarily an Ni user, it's something I'm not sure about, but it makes sense that an Si would know what they're looking for more than an Ni user would.
I don't stay in one place
I like to move more than that
Well yes, with extroverted judgment there would be movement, but the Si would keep you focused on your goal, whereas Ne would jump more from one thing to the next.
exploring all day without some goal and achievement (yes competition too), that seems really aimless to me. I mean I'd feel like there is no...no higher purpose?
That sounds like a really J thing to say. I would imagine a P would be much more comfortable exploring for exploration's sake, and in fact prefer goals that are done for the purpose of exploring.
I'm similar in a different way, in that I tend to want to engage with the external world in ways that further my "vision" of how things are. An example is drinking alcohol. I don't generally like the physical experience of drinking alcohol, but I like being in an altered state of consciousness, because it allows me to see the world in ways that thus far have been helping me get to where I want to go. Though, I also do like sugary drinks and certain kinds of food, and that seems to be physical pleasure for the sake of physical pleasure, so I do engage in that to a degree.
Another example would be going for walks - I tend to go for walks for the sake of stimulating my mind, because I find that the act of walking allows for long trains of thought to develop, which can lead me to new understanding. And internet browsing too, is done for the purpose of discovery, transformation, acting out a role/story etc.
What is it like when Se is wielded in an intentional controlled manner?
I don't have an answer for this right now. Hopefully I'll probe my mind later and see if I can garner a response.
Um, if I look at something's details for a specific reason it's usually for some (immediate/concrete) goal like, actual example, here's this new type of tin/can I never saw before and no I don't know how it works, so... so I'll look at its details closely, poke it a bit (I somehow learn faster when I do that)
That's got to do with the internal store I mentioned earlier. It seems that you're taking notes of the details which you want to internalise about the object, so that when you see it again, you can bring those details to mind without needing to look at it as closely the next time.
I did a similar thing with maths, where I would look at the formula until I had internalised it, and by that point I could solve a lot of maths problems which worked on the same principle without needing to give it much thought, and generally I either didn't have to remember the formula, or I had understood the formula so well that remembering it came naturally.
Or I just enjoy looking at it for a short time bc it's cool.
This might be the Se aspect. All types have all 8 functions, and Se is generally a pleasurable function for SJs to use, it just doesn't come as naturally. Though it might be Si doing it on the other hand. I know that I can think an idea is really profound, and I think Ni is noting that rather than Ne, though I haven't given this question sufficient reflection.
PS: I realised you said earlier "sees an artistic item, and feels a sense of personal transformation regarding the item". For the INFJ example. I forgot to say that I don't do that either and I don't even understand this but it sounds cool.
Yeah it's quite surreal when it happens. It's like... staring at something, and kind of zoning out but also becoming really immersed in what's being looked at, and feeling a kind of fiery passion igniting inside which is having an as-yet unknown effect.
Sometimes those aesthetic experiences can really be life changing.
Funnily enough, I used to think I was an ISTJ, because I was trying to figure out which my dominant function was, and since I didn't understand the functions too concretely, I thought that: because the environment was clear to me, I was using Sensing, but I was viewing the environment in this really aesthetic kind of way, so I figured it was subjective, so I put that together and decided it was Si. Also I had read Jung speaking of Si as being aesthetic, so that confirmed it for me. Really, I was using Se combined with Ni, and Si was a totally different process, but it took me a long time to figure that out.