onemoretime
Dreaming the life
- Joined
- Jun 29, 2009
- Messages
- 4,455
- MBTI Type
- 3h50
Lol... again, I am answering the actual words that you uttered -- I've precisely answered your question.
Look at it again.
...Are you really always willing to change them?
Yes. I am always really willing to change them.
I have the intent to change if I realize I'm wrong.
I will not refuse to change my mind out of stubbornness
or revenge
or a vendetta
or embarrassment
or whatever other hell of a reason you can offer me.
This is unlike some people. I know many who will fight, and deny, and refuse, and circumvent, and whatever else. They are NOT willing and often even know they are not willing. Because they don't want to change their mind.
But, just as I said above, willingness has nothing to do with it.
If I realize I'm wrong, I'm changing.
If I think you're wrong, I might sometimes even WANT to change my answer, because sometimes I just want to get along, or might feel like being viewed favorably or what not... but I can't. Instead I have to endure your annoyance with me for not agreeing with you. (Note: "You" meant in the general sense.)
I've tried to do otherwise and it doesn't work, I feel like crap.
So, dear friend, your question here -- "If giving you a reason to change your beliefs is nigh impossible, are you really always willing to change them?" -- is really non-sensicial to me. Logically, I can be 100% willing to change while at the same time you remain unable to show me that I'm wrong. *shrug*
... Sorry for the Long Version, but the Short Version did not appease you.![]()
No.NTJs see words as inherently meaningful. NTPs see words as abstract representations of something inherently meaningful.
I guess another way to put the point is this: if Ti's definitions are, in a given instance, wrong, and Ne fails to detect a change that would allow Ti's definitions to change, then how do you go about fixing your situation? How would you ever come to accept that you were wrong?simulatedworld said:How do you know it's "supposed to be closer to universal"? I would argue that your desire to look at things this way is just part of the Ni+Te perspective, and not an inherent property of certain theoretical realms.
And yet, logic is universal?To Ne+Ti, given enough time for trial and error, everything can be explained according to precise sets of situational variables.
I guess another way to put the point is this: if Ti's definitions are, in a given instance, wrong, and Ne fails to detect a change that would allow Ti's definitions to change, then how do you go about fixing your situation? How would you ever come to accept that you were wrong?
Universal theories were just supposed to be an example of an instance in which situational variables won't come in to play - if there is something absolute and unchanging, then, with respect to that, nothing will trigger Ne into making any revisions.
I'm not talking about situations, I'm talking about theories. Or, about aspects of a situation that aren't variable, because of some underlying universal regularity. The vibration of strings may change, but that objects are composed of vibrating strings does not, for totally ignorant and endorsement-neutral example.
I'm not arguing that there necessarily are any such things, it's just that if there are, I don't see how NTPs could possibly ever refine a theory about them, according to your description of the NTP reliance on being able to clue in to situational change. Since, by their very nature, such aspects would be unchanging, Ne would never notice a change that would enable a revision of definitions.
But if they never entertain the possibility that they are wrong without some situational change to indicate this possibility, then if they are wrong, they will never revise their mistaken definitions where they pertain to the universal.
Yes? No? And do you see this as a problem?
So...something as simple as an NTJ suggesting that you look at it in some specific other way could, theoretically, be enough of a situational change to trigger a revision, should the result be shown to be more consistent with some other internalised set of principles?
Of course, this is not something that seems to happen when instances of refusal-to-revise annoy me, but then, I don't know what internal principles other people are operating on.
You may well be right about NTJs misunderstanding the place of the model in the NTP's world, but I don't think you've got the right reason. It's not because Te just assumes that people must be efficient and that therefore X amount of time means the model is universal. It's rather that when NTJ challenges the model on universal grounds, they don't receive 'it's not universal, I'm only addressing this one specific situation' as an answer. Just as NTJ misunderstood the intended application of NTP's proposal, so NTP misunderstands NTJ's criticism. NTJ's criticism was misplaced, but so is NTP's answer to that criticism.I find that when NTJs criticize our models, they often misunderstand the extent to which we place faith in them. They figure we must believe that these models apply universally or we wouldn't spend so much time on them--I tend to interpret this as Te concluding that spending time on models that don't apply universally is an inefficient use of time assuming that, therefore, NTPs must believe their models to be universal.
This, of course, is a mistake. We're more interested in figuring out exactly what would happen under one precise set of theoretical conditions than we are in determining what the most useful, universal, empirically verifiable approach is.
You may well be right about NTJs misunderstanding the place of the model in the NTP's world, but I don't think you've got the right reason. It's not because Te just assumes that people must be efficient and that therefore X amount of time means the model is universal. It's rather that when NTJ challenges the model on universal grounds, they don't receive 'it's not universal, I'm only addressing this one specific situation' as an answer. Just as NTJ misunderstood the intended application of NTP's proposal, so NTP misunderstands NTJ's criticism. NTJ's criticism was misplaced, but so is NTP's answer to that criticism.
Which is, of course, exactly the kind of miscommunication you were talking about in the first place. So I would have to say, in response to the OP, that I think it's a decent description of a miscommunication that does occur, but, I still don't know that it's always NTPs I've experienced it with.
Yes, I seriously hate it when INTPs say something like "define xy". It seems they really REALLY like "defining" things for no apparent reason. Define temperature. Define IQ. Define time. Wtf? It's a debate, not a "let's define obvious things in the most eloquent way"-contest.
No.
I think trying to make type based distinctions at this level of specificity is doomed to failure.
I don't think words ever have meaning at all.
As far as I can see, two NTJs have agreed with you in this thread, and one (me) has disagreed. I don't think that's a big enough sample to qualify me as an 'outlier' just yet.Given that other xNTJs have agreed with me, consider yourself an outlier.
As an observer, and Te user, I'd certainly think this conversation would benefit from specific examples. INTJ Lenore may have some in her book, but I fergit...As far as I can see, two NTJs have agreed with you in this thread, and one (me) has disagreed. I don't think that's a big enough sample to qualify me as an 'outlier' just yet.
I may be missing something, but I still think that whether or not someone thinks words have inherent meaning goes well beyond type.
When I want someone to define a term I'm looking for their definition. Everybody uses different definitions for words. I can hardly communicate with someone if we are using the same term to refer to different things. Establishing points where we agree allows for building in our communications. I only ask for definitions if there seems to be some miscommunication occurring. Temperature probably would not have such a miscommunication but IQ would almost certainly have one, time is somewhere in between.
From my experience these miscommunications happen a lot more often with when an INT is involved as opposed to an ENT. It may be true that ENTJ's see things similarly to INTJ's, and ENTP's see things similarly to INTP's. However there is an important difference. Both ENTP's and ENTJ's actually try to use the word in a way that it would appear in a dictionary. INTP's and INTJ's can both make up totally off the wall definitions for their words.