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Venkatesh Rao@vgr·Jun 18, 2015Replying to @puellavulnerata@puellavulnerata @SebastosPublius @RachelHaywire @sarahdoingthing True F-types make intuitive judgments of worth that seem absolute to them10
Douglas Edwards mastodon.social/@dedicto@SebastosPublius·Jun 18, 2015Replying to @vgr@vgr @puellavulnerata @RachelHaywire @sarahdoingthing Some of Keirsey's talk about T-F makes it sound as though true T's are sociopaths—1
Venkatesh Rao@vgr·Jun 18, 2015Replying to @SebastosPublius@SebastosPublius @puellavulnerata @RachelHaywire @sarahdoingthing Keirsey is seriously off. Yes.3
Douglas Edwards mastodon.social/@dedicto@SebastosPublius·Jun 18, 2015Replying to @vgr@vgr @puellavulnerata @RachelHaywire @sarahdoingthing But all three other axes—E-I, N-S, & J-P—came across as perfectly coherent in Keirsey.2
Venkatesh Rao@vgrReplying to @SebastosPublius@SebastosPublius @puellavulnerata @RachelHaywire @sarahdoingthing N/S can be complicated the way T/F can. E/I and J/P are just simpler.3:58 AM · Jun 18, 2015
Venkatesh Rao@vgr·Jun 18, 2015Replying to @vgr@SebastosPublius @puellavulnerata @RachelHaywire @sarahdoingthing If a type is a sentence E/I and P/J are modifiers rather than verb or noun