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Life would be meaningless without them.
There's two sides to everything in life; considering the ethical perspective gives you a more balanced and effective decision.
Why is emotion necessary for purpose?
Dear intj,
Emotion is information.
Information is knowledge.
Knowledge is power - which you know, or you wouldnt be asking this question.
In my case, this type of information is also fascination and happiness, as its knowledge allows me to diminish suffering in tve world. It is kind of like getting the remote to an enormous fire alarm that's been blaring since i was born.
What you re asking is akin to someone who doesnt feel pain asking why you stop running just because your foot got broken.
Because it fucking hurts - and for a good reason. Pain is a warning system that helps us be kind to our body.
While emotions are a more complex system with a wider range, it is equally vital, unignorable and worthy of consideration. While your body removes the pain st first so you can flee, it doubles down on it when you re safe so you re forced to let it heal. I find the same logic applies to emotions. Yes, they sometimes get in the way short term, so by all means turn them off then, but in the long run, doing so chronically cripples you and worse.
There is a reason a person who feels no pain has to check their body all the time for damage.
Ime, this is no different.
There is alot of talk about emotions on this board but it looks to me that there is little about something quite basic in this story.
Why NFs care so much about emotions? What is so special about them?
Are they important because you have alot of them or it here something else?
(or both)
Are there situations in which emotions are totally irrelevant from your perspective?
I remember that once one NF on this board said that one of his/her worst fears is that he/she will become a robot. (in emotional sense)
So I am wondering how many NFs can relate to this.
Wow.. I didn't realize I caused such commotion on an initially dead thread lol.
[MENTION=32548]Glados[/MENTION]
I was rather tired, and I realize I left out some things I wanted to say, so I didn't explain myself properly. But thank you for respectfully bringing it to my attention. Using both rational and ethical intelligence to make a decision is not simply derived from "my ethics." A lack of emotional intelligence can disrupt even your work life. Employers are looking for people who know how to listen and communicate well, to be able to work with others. These are important aspects of emotional intelligence. Emotion affects all aspects of your life, it doesn't mean you shouldn't value rationality but ethics are equally as important. I think a lack of understanding towards your emotions can come out two ways, depending who you are. Either acting impulsively on your feelings, which as you said, doesn't require justification like ethics would. Or, you compulsively deny them, numb your feelings entirely.
But neither of these approaches work because you can't selectively deny feelings. You can't go "here's my fear, anxiety, anger, disappointment, shame, etc. I don't wanna feel these" and then go numb it with alcohol or drowning in your work or whatever your escape is. Because we also numb our positive feelings by doing so. And then we are miserable, looking for purpose and meaning, and we feel vulnerable again so we go back to our numbness. It's this vicious cycle. And then you can't focus, you lose the clear rational perspective that you wanted to preserve by ignoring these emotions. But emotions will find a way to leak out even if you deny them. You may not understand them or even express them, since you refused to acknowledge their importance, but you are nonetheless feeling them. People get angry whether they want to or not. Some people might get angrier than others, depending on their temperament, but they will still get angry. But being able to understand and cope with these feelings is what gives you true power over them.
When you have no control over your emotions they control you. You don't get the opportunity to grow if you refuse to control them. You don't need to "highly value" them but you should welcome them into your life. Refusing to frankly self sabotage. I believe overvaluing anything is bad, overvaluing logic is a way highly rational people create a "safe zone" to avoid the unpredictability/irrationality of emotion and preserve their objectivity.
I'm curious about something though, why don't you believe in a self?
Not all information is equally useful. A main task of problem solving is determining what information is relevant, and what is not. It is only relevant information that becomes useful knowledge and in turn leads to power, or at least a greater ability to control the outcome.Dear intj,
Emotion is information.
Information is knowledge.
Knowledge is power - which you know, or you wouldnt be asking this question.
In my case, this type of information is also fascination and happiness, as its knowledge allows me to diminish suffering in tve world. It is kind of like getting the remote to an enormous fire alarm that's been blaring since i was born.
What you re asking is akin to someone who doesnt feel pain asking why you stop running just because your foot got broken.
Because it fucking hurts - and for a good reason. Pain is a warning system that helps us be kind to our body.
While emotions are a more complex system with a wider range, it is equally vital, unignorable and worthy of consideration. While your body removes the pain st first so you can flee, it doubles down on it when you re safe so you re forced to let it heal. I find the same logic applies to emotions. Yes, they sometimes get in the way short term, so by all means turn them off then, but in the long run, doing so chronically cripples you and worse.
There is a reason a person who feels no pain has to check their body all the time for damage.
Ime, this is no different.
Exactly. When trying to make the case for everyone having emotions, people often give examples that instead illustrate the role of values. That I understand, but like you, don't see them as inextricably linked to emotions.As a INFP my internal values will also shape my decisions but values do not necessarily equate with emotions.
This doesn't follow. How do emotions enable me to understand others' needs and desires? I find it better simply to ask them.Understanding people needs and desires.![]()
I don't see how emotions are necessary for the highlighted. We can understand the benefits of communicating and cooperating on a rational basis.Using both rational and ethical intelligence to make a decision is not simply derived from "my ethics." A lack of emotional intelligence can disrupt even your work life. Employers are looking for people who know how to listen and communicate well, to be able to work with others. These are important aspects of emotional intelligence. Emotion affects all aspects of your life, it doesn't mean you shouldn't value rationality but ethics are equally as important. I think a lack of understanding towards your emotions can come out two ways, depending who you are. Either acting impulsively on your feelings, which as you said, doesn't require justification like ethics would. Or, you compulsively deny them, numb your feelings entirely.
Not all information is equally useful. A main task of problem solving is determining what information is relevant, and what is not. It is only relevant information that becomes useful knowledge and in turn leads to power, or at least a greater ability to control the outcome.
Yes, emotion is like pain in serving as an early warning system. Once we have heard and heeded the warning, though, there is no benefit in continuing to hear the siren or feel the pain. This is why alarms can be turned off, and doctors prescribe pain meds. Dwelling on or dissecting the emotion itself is about as useful as taking apart our alarm clock. Better to focus on what caused the emotion/pain and address that. Not only will this correct the underlying problem, but will reduce the chances of our having to endure.
It is also why people wrench their bodies if they're put on those painkillers at too high a dose. Too much is dehabilitating and chronically, it is damaging to the psyche. Too little and you get people using their leg instead of restibg it, crippling it in the process. Pain management is a complex subject because of it. And emotions are a symphony compared to the simple melody that pain is. Each emotion has its own range, triggers, variety and can be mixed with others. And its information has similar depths that often cannot be gauged by a single note before it is muted.. As for what information is useful - believe me when i say, i have just as little use for the information you find to be so useful and interesting due to its problem-solving capabilities and complexity. And i use my preferred information for just that - problem solving. One very important aspect of emotions is to understand other and recognise what state theyre in. If you ve never felt the full gamut of emotions, let alone its infinite combinations, how can you be there for a person who just lost their son, for example? It is why people angrily yell 'have you ever buried a child????'
This totally resounds with me, in such a deep way , my exact wavelength![]()
This doesn't follow. How do emotions enable me to understand others' needs and desires? I find it better simply to ask them.