- MBTI
- INFJ again
- Enneagram
- 4w5
When I'm reading all the MBTI talk about F on this forum, a lot of times it seems like people see Fe as THE function that cares for others (while Fi only cares for itself and Te and Ti don't care?)
Some of the descriptions I read about the judging functions say the same. When talking about Te or Ti it states "Te/Ti bases there judgements on logic so ..." and " Fi makes decisions based on feelings and allows al person to know what they value" but then on the Fe thing it is not anymore about values but Fe is the ability to relate and the desire to connect with others.
As far as I know is Fe a judging function that makes decisions based on the values and morals of the group. Caring for others isn't bound to one function only the way you do is defined by the function you use: doing stuff for others, making things for others, solving their problems, giving them advise, listening to their story, ...
jungs descriptions of the functions:
Some of the descriptions I read about the judging functions say the same. When talking about Te or Ti it states "Te/Ti bases there judgements on logic so ..." and " Fi makes decisions based on feelings and allows al person to know what they value" but then on the Fe thing it is not anymore about values but Fe is the ability to relate and the desire to connect with others.
As far as I know is Fe a judging function that makes decisions based on the values and morals of the group. Caring for others isn't bound to one function only the way you do is defined by the function you use: doing stuff for others, making things for others, solving their problems, giving them advise, listening to their story, ...
jungs descriptions of the functions:
How come that the "connecting with others" is seen as the playground of Fe? and is it correct in your opinion?"Sensation tells you that there is something. Thinking, roughly speaking, tells you what it is. Feeling tells you whether it is agreeable or not, to be accepted or rejected. And intuition—now there is a difficulty. You don't know, ordinarily, how intuition works. ... So my definition of intuition is perception via the unconscious."
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