thinker wrote: ↑Sun Jun 23, 2024 6:36 pm
Lol, Bobs man boobs are in a twist, I triggered him so hard. I can just here him calling me a liar in his feminine lispy voice.
A good while ago I was into the Myers Briggs method of characterizing how people thought. Under that system, I would be qualified as an INTP, or Introverted, iNtuitive, Thinker, Perceptive. That combination would resolve into the Thinker stereotype. “Quiet and introverted, they are known for having a rich inner world.” The opposite would be the Extroverted, Sensor, Feeler, Judger, ESFJ, which is the Caregiver. “Soft-hearted and outgoing, they tend to believe the best about other people.” One theme of the system is that while people are different, you can find a good combination, something a person is fine at.
I was into it for a while. I long ago moved on. Recent posts brought it back,
Thinker? Image the INTP Spock raising an eyebrow. I sense a Feeler Judger. You use emotion to put people into categories. If under Myers Briggs you can find a positive constructive stereotype, there are negative ones too. Not all “tend to believe the best about other people.” Sexists. Racists. Deny the right to choose, to control one’s own body. Hate, oppress and destroy. You seem ready to throw people into categories with lots of bad attributes with no rational basis for the judgement.
Imagine Spock being confronted by a way of emotional judgement into a wrong category? Raised eyebrow. “Interesting. Very interesting.” It would move him not at all save to present a challenging puzzle in irrationality.
Have you considered changing your username? You could become "Feeler". If Republicans attract religious fanatics and bigots, does their thinking reflect Myers Briggs categories?
https://www.verywellmind.com/the-myers- ... or-2795583