Zarathustra
Let Go Of Your Team
- Joined
- Oct 31, 2009
- Messages
- 8,110
I did not "miss" that part, I just decided not to focus in it.
Excuse me for expecting you to more robustly deal with the topic.
Regardless, the reason why I wrote what I did still stands, as it had to do with your "conclusion".
What made you assume that I missed that part?
Because your conclusion was off-base.
I decided to focus on something else because it seemed more interesting and more relevant to me and because I have doubts whether these points are true. Not because I didn't listen or shut myself off to the possibility that they might be true.
Ok, that's fine, it was your conclusion that was the problem.
Perhaps it's because you drew a conclusion, and, as a P, you're just not good at that kinda thing.
As a good P I take in all the information I can, even if I decide to focus on something else instead.
Simplistic stereotype.
Maybe situations like this creates that assumption that INTPs don't listen.
Going off on their own thought-path, and not actually dealing with what their interlocutor said?
Yes, that is probably one of the reasons INTPs are not generally considered good listeners.
But if you insist:
I would have much preferred you actually got my point.
But if we must go over these once more so that INTPs can accurately see their warts in the mirror, so be it.
1) I think I did covered that one (zon ing in on what needs to be done, more focused on relevence/efficiency)
The point is that in certain situations it is objectively wrong/stupid to commit this error (i.e., at work, or any situation in which time/resource constraints are a real and major issue). Yes, Te imperatives are being given precedence in these situations, but it's for objective reasons (i.e., the project needs to get done by tomorrow morning, the company needs to be profitable and pay its creditors, the giant boulder is heading right for us!, there's a murderer who's gunna kill us if we can't agree that this fucking light switch turns the goddam, fucking light on!, we're trying to get somewhere on time, or a million other perfectly reasonable situations.)
And no, there is no acceptable nitpicking allowed here. If you're fucking up these situations due to needless nitpicking, you are a problem, a nuisance, not worthy of breathing the air that should be going to someone else who knows how to cooperate in a productive manner when need be.
2) It looks like misinterpreting to the INTJ who is so focused on hios one solution, but for us it is merely bringing in the wider context which to us is just as relevent
Once again, I get that that's how it seems to you, and that in some cases what you want to bring up may be worthwhile, but, in many other cases, you are actually objectively wrong and doing nothing but being an annoying nitpicker, because, aside from reasons of efficiency, which were covered in #1 above, perhaps your issues/questions really aren't valuable, either because: a) you don't really know what you're talking about, but, due to your ignorance, these questions seem relevant to you; or b) your interlocutor actually has already considered these issues, and has plenty of accurate and tacit reasons that cover the issues that you're raising (and by raising them, you're just impeding everyone from moving on (yes, efficiency snuck in there, but it was warranted); or c) a placeholder for now, because perhaps there are reasons other than your ignorance of the matter or your questions already having been dealt with that could cause your nitpicking to be pointless. This was the purpose of uumlau's light switch example, and the absurd position of the INTP in it.
Note (and how ironic that I have to preempt you about this on this specific example, because this is what this example is all about): no, I am not saying that your concerns are never not warranted. I am saying that there are times when they are not warranted and you do them anyway.
3) I have not observed that behavior in myself or other INTPs IRL or here, not more than in other types, and as I said, a good P takes in information like a sponge
Ok, well, it was obvious and prevalent enough that Dario Nardi was able to see it using his EEG, and I and others have said that we've seen it plenty, so that's fine that that's your opinion, but I'm saying, objectively, you're wrong.
*cue you either nitpicking or doing #4, even though you deny you do it*
4) I never observed that Fe shaming method. What does happen is that sometimes an NTJ is so abrasive and overconfident...
(or, seen differently, the NTJ is saying an objective truth in a Te manner that rubs your subjective Ti the wrong way, and, as such, you don't want to accept what he's saying as objectively true, so you reject it as merely being his Fi, and thus start using what's been dubbed as Fe "shaming methods"...) (and, once again, because you make this necessary due to #2: no, I'm not saying all TJs are always right, and that this is thus always the case.)
...that inferior Fe shales its head and assumes that this must be Fi at play, or Ni + Fi which seems to translate as "I am right, I just know it, just trust me on this one and screw the rest of you" - we can not imagine how somebody could be so overconfident because improvisation and remaining doubts are parts of the Ti-Ne version of intellectual integrity. At least that's how I perceive it and how I have heard other NTPs describe it.
Oh, so you mean, exactly what uumlau described?
Except that you tried to emphasize that your Fe judgment is correct because it happens when a TJ, declaring objective truths in a Te manner, is abrasive and overconfident?
Interesting how it works out that way...
What makes you think that I do not see the INTPs weaknesses just because I did not immediately adress all of these points directly?
My issue with what you said was that you made a very wishy-washy, flabbily relativistic conclusion that basically said -- well, actually, you specifically said this -- "the weakness is in the eye of the beholder".
My point was that, no, the weakness is not simply in the eye of the beholder, it's actually an objective weakness.
And then each of the four points I made pointed to why these were objective, not simply subjective, criticisms.
- Not realizing what the situation itself calls for (for which I used your examples of work an engineering).
- Misinterpreting what an INTJ is saying, by bringing in unrelated information that had nothing to do with what they were intending to say, and thus botching the communication (uumlau's lightbulb example, or what is generally just known as "INTP nitpicking").
- For being bad listeners (so much so that it has been empirically verified by Dario Nardi in his lab).
- For attempting to use Fe shaming methods when Te rubs them the wrong way.
Those are not simply subjective "oh, it's in the eye of the beholder" criticisms.
I'm not saying that similar such criticisms can arise for which subjectivity can enter into the picture, or that subjectivity never plays any role in any of these things (the fact that I even have to mention this, of course, has to do with your guys problem with #2), nor am I saying no other type has problems, and even problems similar to these (they do -- note: once again needing to preempt your #2). But these are problems that others, here, mostly INTJs, are specifically saying about INTPs, that are not simply subjective, but objective, and you might as well try to consider them as such (which, once again, needing to shut down your #2 problem before it starts: I'm not saying you haven't necessarily done this at all).
We have loads of weaknesses like any other type. But with your premature assumptions you just illustrated that much of what you accuse NTPs of applies to you guys as well if not more![]()
Actually, this is you just doing #2 again.
You just can't help from #2ing all over the place, can you?
(and yes, I realize that you qualified your conclusion with "you might say", my point is that, no, with those four criticisms, you would be wrong if you were to say that. they are objective criticisms. not subjective. and, as such, they're not subject to wishy-washy, flabbily relativistic bullshit, either.)