Atomic Fiend
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- Nov 16, 2007
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I've almost became, more then friends, with two seperate ISTJs.
Almost.
Almost.
My dad's ISFP, I know the drill. Point is, ISFPs tend to be good at things I care about, and have personalities which don't make me want to commit suicide. Though we may disagree on things from time to time.
Maybe that makes sense within a single person, and might lend some stability to the traditional four function preference order, but I don't see it being exclusively true in person to person.I was chatting over on another MBTI forum and someone mentioned that ISFP, not ESFJ, was the true antithesis to INTP.
I realized at least in terms of pure function use, this is correct.
ESFJ = Fe + Si + Ne + Ti
INTP = Ti + Ne + Si + Fe
ISFP = Fi + Se + Ni + Te
And it sort of fits with what I've said in the past (and in terms of total shadow function theory), where Fi (and NOT Fe) to me is the worst enemy of Ti because it operates in the exact same sphere as Ti is trying to, but with a completely different set of priorities.
So for the Ti person, the Fe neighbor might be annoying but they live in the house next door and like to apply their rules to the gardens outside, and so you can accommodate the way they do things, maybe even apply them to your own garden (even if your house inside is run by Ti), because they are applying different rules but in a different sphere than you are.
ISFPs, meanwhile, were usually okay in terms of working style and we had fun together... but on the few occasions I've had to bump heads with them, it was almost impossible to get any sort of compromise. Basically, the Fi values (fueled by Se) are conflicting direction with my Ti values (fueled by Ne). Because we are both I, we'd simply avoid having conflicts and avoid the controversial topic, so as to have a happy comfortable fun time together. But now that I've had a few instances where the ISFP was mad at me for violating their values, we had a lot of distance -- they weren't interested in or able to promote a rational argument to change my mind, and I could not just accommodate their values that I thought were wrong, and so now we had an issue.
Does anyone else have thoughts on this?
Maybe that makes sense within a single person, and might lend some stability to the traditional four function preference order, but I don't see it being exclusively true in person to person.
ISFP and INTP are both, ultimately introverts. Really they two are in different spheres. The ESFJ expects everyone to adhere to, and enforces their social customs in whatever way they think it ought to be done. This will surely impose on the INTP who shares a work/living space leading to frustration from interrupted thinking, in reciprocity for the INTP not having committed and followed in the first place. Both parties encroach on one another (at least in their idea of what that entails).
ISFP I imagine would certainly be a bit more perceptive to see that the INTP doesn't necessarily have bad intentions simply because he doesn't say please and thank you. Perhaps the ISFP might appreciate the INTP's calculations for different reasons than he does. But maybe not. ISFP might be Amish and think it's the work of the devil. And maybe the ESFJ was raised in a house by an INTP who went into deep shit like the INTP she lives with now, and maybe she has Electra complex which is why she's with an INTP so she can be with her dad vicariously.
It all sounds pretty Freudian to me.
It really all depends on the final outcome -- functions are just functions. Prisms -- not the light itself. Depending on the light you may end up with the same or similar spectra with dramatically differing prisms.
Or just as plausible; perhaps the combination of the two differing prisms is not something negatively aesthetic.
I say again, I am of the opinion that there is no antitheses in type. There is no set function order... none of that crap. Beebe can go fall in a well. He's a bad scientist.
Approaching people searching for these things, rather than observing indiscriminately, (and forgive me for agreeing with PT -- I'll do a few hail mary's or whatever those religious idiots do later) is confirmation bias.
So which type is the nemesis of the INTJ according to this method, Jennifer?
The only known ISFP I have really ever had any interaction with is Sarah, on another board.
That would be ISFJ: Si-Fe-Ti-Ne-Se-Fi-Te-Ni vs. Ni-Te-Fi-Se-Ne-Ti-Fe-Si
The only known ISFP I have really ever had any interaction with is Sarah, on another board. It seems all of my T-ish theorizing went past her, and some of the F-ish things she used to be concerned about (such as how people perceive librarians), I didn't think anything of. But then the same happened with INFP Patrick, even though we shared the Ne-Si. With an ISFP, you would have that clash in judgment, plus a clash in perception. I do not know enough about ISFP's to see how Se and Ni manifest in their behavior, and how it would clash. I imagine with Se, you would only see it more in person.
You seem like an active, adventuristic type.Hey, whenever you want to interact, you just let me know.![]()
Yeah, that I knew! (which is why I could use your name, and people would know who was talking about).I'm on this board too, Eric! :hi:
Well, as a BtS (Introverted, Informing), that is closest to the traditional Phlegmatic temperament. Peaceful, amiable, etc. So the people I was describing also seem like BtS types.Yeah, I can't say I'm very phlegmatic about anything.
Yeah; I imagine they could easily drift apart if they didn't work at it.I think it's possible to have a good close relationship with an INTP, but because of the clash of cognitive processes, it would take conscious effort from both people make it a good relationship. You've got two people whose favorite functiosn are in the others' shadow:
INTP: Ti, Ne, Si, Fe (shadow: Te, Ni, Se, Fi)
ISFP: Fi, Se, Ni, Te (shadow: Fe, Si, Ne, Ti)
No complimentary functions there, and the two favorite functions of each are least favorite in the other person's shadow. So there would have to be a lot of conscious desire to learn from the other and respect the other, without anyone needing to be "right" about anything.
Sarah
ISFP
Because they're in the same ego-syntonic tandem, and the true "opposite", is actually the opposite function with the same attitude, (which will be in the deepest shadow for a preferred process). Because as was said, they are both trying to operate in the same area, but with opposite standards.So if:
INTP = Ti + Ne + Si + Fe
and the opposite is:
ISFP = Fi + Se + Ni + Te
then:
INTJ = Ni + Te + Fi + Se
xxxx = Si + Fe + Ti + Ne
I'm curious as to why the opposite of Ni isn't Se?
You seem like an active, adventuristic type.
Not too boring for you?![]()