Mr. Sherlock Holmes
Consulting Detective
- Joined
- Aug 10, 2010
- Messages
- 1,450
- MBTI Type
- JiNe
- Enneagram
- 5W4
Oh, also, I've ust started learning about Enneagram and I think Holmes is a 5w6, and Watson probably a 6w5.
Have you seen the new Sherlock series ? I've only seen " A Study In Pink" so I don't want to type them but am still curious to see if the typical Holmes/Watson types are still the same.
What are your thoughts on DI Lestrade ?
I personally think infp's are prone to existensialism. Then again I think infp's are really prone to all good frameworks of thoughts presented in books. A book gives em enough time to build an internal emotional connection to a thing and given this sufficient time then enables their Ne perception to identify with it. Therefore I'ld like to leave infp out of the equation.
With intp and istp its difficult to say. I think that Fe should normally have the demand on someone to feel accepted in some way in society for some things someone does. I doubt an intp could live in total solitude all his life and if he would I think he would at least write a book, cause at some point he'ld like to share his thoughts.
I dunno, all only wild assumptions, to answer your question: intp yay, istp probably embody existenzialism but I dont know if you could make them read a book![]()
Yes, maybe stuff for another thread.
You're right with the claim of Ti seeing things as pointless cause it's just predetermined physics. I tend to forget about that train of thought, because I never accepted it for myself. As the concept of determinism firstly arose back then in school, it were really all people, I'ld type ixtp nowadays, who liked it. To me it somehow, despite its convincing logic, never hold any value. At first I just categorically ignored it, cause determinism sounded like a religion, like believing in a thing I could never proof and this time it just had a factual basis and later I was glad for quantum physics, who put the laws of cause and effect in question.
So we'll find out in the end, if quantum physics was the last uprising of mankind for their freedom of will or if we have to say in the end: you can imagine a lot, it doesnt change the facts. In that regards I like the discussion between the tolan and Cpt.Carter from Stargate:
The Tolan: "Are you intrested in physics ?"
Cpt. Carter: "Yes, you too ? What is your field ?"
The Tolan: "Quantum Physics would be probably what you call it."
Cpt. Carter: "That's nice, what field of it is your speciality, chromodynamics, electromagnetics ?"
The Tolan: "Actually I was a student of ancient physics or so to say 'where science was wrong'."
Cpt.Carter: "Owww"
![]()
This is an interesting thread, for an interesting character. I just started reading "A Study in Scarlet" so I don't have as much information on the character and may be "twisting facts to theories" but it seems to me, from Watson's point of view at least, that Sherlock is a T, probably an NT. What seems like a broad range of interests are really just one, solving crime. Almost every field he pursues (there are exceptions, like the violin thing) is related to solving crime, and I don't think he does it primarily for the ethical gratification. He also seems too "practical" to be a P, but I'm no expert. I'd say INTJ or maybe ENTP. As another user put it, it's hard accounting for the coke.