Shadow Play
New member
- Joined
- Oct 28, 2018
- Messages
- 236
By "function magic", I refer to the so-called cognitive functions.
I don't know what function magic is.
As an INFP, I strongly believed in magic as a kid into my early 20's. By magic, I mean beliefs which are similar to Wicca; though I leaned more towards magical thinking.
[MENTION=33707]Population: 1[/MENTION] You mean like this![]()
I love that thing and only wear it out if it's 30 degrees (F) or lower)
[MENTION=38365]Shadow Play[/MENTION] Thank you for the explanation. I'll have to look into that some more. I'm completely unfamiliar with it. It sounds very confusing (I can barely remember that, as an INFP, I'm a FiNe SiTe![]()
*sees magical thinking*
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Apparently, NFPs are more likely to flirt with magical thinking.
Which magical thinking? I don't see any beliefs that one's thoughts can influence events in the material world.
I was just being silly.
Wanna explain why you think cognitive functions are bunk? (trying to aid in conversation, not being argumentative)
I firmly believe that functions are a category mistake, and any validity functions such as Ti and Ne can claim is piggy-backed to their respective dichotomy combinations, such as TP and NP. Type dynamics (the so called "function axes") never reflect in statistical data in such a way where you have TP/FJ and NP/SJ or TJ/FP and NJ/SP clustered together. More importantly, I don't believe it makes any sense to limit one's understanding of a type to just two dichotomy combinations, either. The full MBTI model for, say, an INTP is not merely ITP + NP, but instead I + N + T + P + IN + IT + TP + NT + NP + TP + INT + INP + ITP + NTP + INTP.
I'll just quote you from another thread so people know exactly what your position is:
Frankly, I think you need more plus signs. +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
I'm very new to all of this, plus I'm lazy and my concentration isn't worth squat nowadays, so I don't know how deeply I'll ever truly dive into all of this.
I belong to a FB group that linked a YT interview. A lot of it went over my head, but it seemed to me that: Eric was arrogant and too sure of himself. He doesn't seem to want to reinvent the wheel, as it was. Dave spoke in circles, but was more humble and seemed willing to listen and learn. He seems to want to rewrite the whole system.
I felt myself gravitating more toward Eric even though he rubbed me the wrong way, for the most part. It's hard enough, for someone like me, to grasp MBTI as it now is without adding 500+ new categories (if I understand correctly).
MBTI is far from perfect. Brain mapping sounds intriguing but, I agree, that the doodad should be worn for an entire day or week or month for accuracy. Not just for the duration of a test. Once mapping has been worked out, then I could see reinventing what's already here. Until then, it just seems too lofty and circuitous.
Here's the interview. It was the first time I've ever seen or heard from either of them, so perhaps I misread the whole thing.
This thread made me think of the video, lol. Being so far removed perhaps I'm misunderstanding this as well though?