|
|
#26 | |||
|
Veteran Member [74%]
|
If only I could figure out what to do with my intuition, other than sounding like a conspiracy theorist to most people |
|||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
#27 |
|
Core Member [133%]
MBTI: INTJ
Join Date: Oct 2009
Posts: 5,328
|
Institutions with legacies and hopes.
A bunch of the older western universities started off with church influences, I think. In terms of the old Oxford and whatnot. |
|
|
|
|
|
#28 |
|
Veteran Member [74%]
|
I think shopping centers are like churches too. The big ones with multiple floors and escalators and big big halls. I was sitting in one in the food court some months ago thinking about how because it echoes, a few people talking constituted a murmur that made it seem like the place was packed with a lot of things happening.
|
|
|
|
|
|
#29 | |||||||||
|
Veteran Member [56%]
|
No idea what this is in reference to...
LOL
No, you're not understanding - again with the ethnocentrism - yes, there were lectures available, they were not part of anyone's required course-work, you never needed to go to one to complete your degree. You're drawing an analogy between the reading of the Bible (presumably?) during a church service and lectures that take place in universities. My point is that the reading of the Bible is an integral part of the service, most often, and while certainly you could walk out, it is not optional - to have fully experienced the service, you must listen to the reading. That is absolutely not the case in terms of lectures (at least at my university) - your full university experience happens elsewhere, you are under no obligation to attend lectures and you receive a degree whether you attend them or not. Therefore your comparison fails, in this instance - once again due to your assumption that your experience is identical to that of other students. |
|||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
#30 |
|
Veteran Member [57%]
|
College is nothing like church - They don't like people to ask questions in church.
|
|
|
|
|
|
#31 | |||||||||
|
Veteran Member [74%]
|
Have you been in lecture theaters? They look exactly like the inside of churches. Rows of seats, big room, a lectern at the front...
It's not compulsory to attend churches either, for one can sit and home and read their bible and still follow god. They still run the services and read from the book whether you're there to listen or home reading the book yourself.
Depends on the questions. If you ask about what it says in the book, they'll have something to tell you about it. If you ask about why you have to pay money to listen to them read the book, and question whether you're getting anything of value for your money, then they don't like it. |
|||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
#32 | ||||||
|
Veteran Member [56%]
|
To be honest, I haven't really been inside many - you know why?(I'll give you a hint - I've already told you) Because my education has been arranged around other ways of learning and they weren't really a part of my university experience (at three universities now!).
|
||||||
|
|
|
|
|
#33 | ||||||
|
Veteran Member [74%]
|
Yeah, churches.
I just explained it. |
||||||
|
|
|
|
|
#34 | |||
|
Veteran Member [56%]
|
And my point is simply that leaping, without caution into accepting such intuitive conceptions is both a lazy, and potentially dangerous way of dealing with the world. You re-enforce your own personal perceptions, flattening the complexities of a given situation to fit your own worldview. It would be wise, in my opinion, to take those intuitive understandings and interrogate them, by considering them from various vantage points and with knowledge of some specifics, rather than INCREDIBLY LOOSE categories that can contain practically anything ("big buildings"), if you do that you can figure out yourself whether what you have intuited has any foundation in truth or is nothing but sophistry. |
|||
|
|
|
|
|
#35 | |||
|
Veteran Member [74%]
|
I would interrogate those intuitions, but it doesn't seem as important when I could be interrogating intuitions about my budget or something that actually can benefit my life directly. I'm aware my Te isn't as developed as I'd like it to be, and I'm working on it. For now, all I can do is present some Ni meanderings, and see if other people with Ni can follow it. Since you can analyse things so critically, do you have any thoughts of your own about churches and universities? Thoughts you came up with yourself? |
|||
|
|
|
|
|
#36 | |||||||||
|
Veteran Member [56%]
|
Probably. Your deployment of MBTI functions as an excuse for your difficulties communicating with people is tiresome. Any person can engage critically with a topic, you would rather not bother to try, is basically what you're saying.
Oxford and Cambridge were, in fact, mostly supported by the crown. That is why they survived the dissolution of the monasteries (Oxford was never granted a Papal Bull, either, in its early days). |
|||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
#37 | |||
|
Veteran Member [74%]
|
This sentence says it all. I'm not trying to establish categorically whether lecture theaters drew their shape and learning format from churches, I simply "noticed College is like Church", which is the title of the thread. Anyway, you've pretty much proved that spending a long time reading history is a better way to understand things than inferring it in a few minutes. I still think when you consider that there is more knowledge in existence than one can possibly learn, at best all one can work with is probability, and Ni is better at that. But anyway, that's outside the scope of this thread. |
|||
|
|
|
|
|
#38 | |||
|
Veteran Member [56%]
|
Thanks (I mean that), but I didn't spend a long time reading history - I know some, I checked a few facts... mostly I relied on my intuition (like you), but instead of ending at the many universities look like Oxford and Cambridge part, I actually thought about why, specifically, that might be. What I've written above isn't historical fact, it's my considered opinion on the topic. You're perfectly free to argue that, actually, many universities are designed and administered in a way that is intended to provoke religious feelings in students... just, please, be prepared to offer more than 'gut feeling' as a reason why. Otherwise there's pretty much no point in starting a thread about it. |
|||
|
|
|
|
|
#39 | |||
|
Veteran Member [74%]
|
Why sure there's a point. I offer a 'gut feeling' intuition, and then an INTP comes along and does all the manual labor providing a research backed explanation |
|||
|
|
|
|
|
#40 | ||||||||||||
|
Core Member [116%]
|
Is she single? If you aren't attracted to her, then can you get her number for me?
They don't like people to ask questions in college either, not unless it's a question that the lecturers actually want you to ask, like questions that the lecturer already knows the answer to, and the answer is something he wanted to say anyway.
The hierarchy, the economics, the politics, even the attitude to learning and teaching is a parallel of how the churches ran in the Middle Ages. Consequently, the same relationships exist, and they both match the same model. So the problems that one has/had, are the problems of the other.
I went to Manchester University. I was in the maths department. The whole building was modern. I think it was built in the 60s. |
||||||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
#41 | |||
|
Banned
MBTI: INTJ
Join Date: Mar 2012
Posts: 1,268
|
I can assure you that nothing has changed. |
|||
|
|
|
|
|
#42 |
|
Member [11%]
|
I guess I lucked out.
My college had a basilica on campus and monks walking about. Students slept in class, monks slept at mass. The parallels were quite amusing. In both instances, the professor pretended not to notice the sleeping students any more than the Abbot noticed his monks nodding off. But many monks had the excuse of being geriatric while the students were mostly just hungover. |
|
|
|
|
|
#43 | |||||||||||||||
|
Veteran Member [56%]
|
Touché
How, exactly? Examples, please.
Oh, poor little intuitive... what is with this thread and people leaning on their MBTI type to excuse their personal failings.
.
Of course they do! What kind of world do you think we live in?! The same happens in pretty much every corporation/institution that I can think of...again, I don't see that as compelling evidence that a university is like a church - all it proves is that most universities employ the corporate capitalist structure of business which is commonplace in the Western world. |
|||||||||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
#44 | |||||||||||||||
|
Veteran Member [74%]
|
I noticed the same things, and independently arrived at the same conclusions.
I have noticed this too. There are more explanations for it besides dementia with age.
As opposed to you, who is completely oblivious of your 'personal failings', quod erat demonstrandum via our interaction during this thread. 'Personal failings' sounds pretty harsh, but regardless, a more accurate term would be 'limitations of ones preferential functions'. It is a mark of maturity to recognize the limitations of ones preferential functions. Scorpiomover was using the recognizable MBTI terms to say with brevity that a system that discourages problem solving via understanding and encourages problem solving by memorizing methods favors those who are better at wrote memory and is disadvantageous to those who aren't. Why am I even explaining this. I'm sure Scorpiomover knows this too. Hey, he's an INTP too. There is a reason for the difference and I implore you to look into it.
Stop and just analyse what you just said. We both know there is many examples of how the analogy you propose fails to qualify. If you analysed it, you will have a list of examples. Now you can see that if a university is analogous to basic training, it would only hold true in a lose sense, and that is exactly what analogies are meant to be.
Analyse what you just said. You claimed that 'the same' happens in many cases, when you know that each case is an individual case that needs to be thoroughly analysed before you can come to any conclusion on each. To apply a universal affirmative here without sufficient evidence is making a logical fallacy and you know it. But don't worry, you are not being hypocritical or contradictory, because you haven't done 'exactly' what you told us not to do, and to think that you did contradict yourself would be making another logical fallacy |
|||||||||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
#45 | |||||||||
|
Veteran Member [56%]
|
You've misunderstood me once again, I'm honestly not not sure if you're being deliberately obtuse...
I don't know if I have the patience for this anymore... yes, the analogy doesn't stand up to more detailed analysis. That was my point about broad-strokes analogies....they're useful primarily as a starting point, not as universalizing claims. But, yay, you went further, and realized that beyond the MOST BASIC level they really aren't much alike at all - progress!!!
Yes, you two are aggravating me... as a result, my use of language is less precise than it ought to be. I have tried to be very careful to use qualifying terms throughout this discussion, I slipped up here - apologies. |
|||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
#46 | |||||||||
|
Veteran Member [74%]
|
You're making a valid point, and I understand that, but that poses a problem. When does recognizing and labeling ones incompatibility become justifying why one has difficulty with something? The answer, it's always justifying. Pointing out the fact that someone is justifying their difficulties is stating the obvious. The real question is the meaning of the justification. If one is justifying why they are having difficulty as a means to not address the problem, that's probably a psychological defense mechanism, and it's worth trying to make them see that so they can rise to the challenge of overcoming their problem. If someone is justifying their difficulty as a means of understanding where the incompatibility is, so that they can circumvent it and still solve the problem, that's simply someone using their head. You are not in a position to judge whether someone is justifying to avoid or to circumvent, if you have incomplete information about what they are doing with their justification. NTs may find an education system based mostly on wrote memory difficult, and in those cases it's recommended to rely on ones strengths.
Thank you for finally revealing your point. I agree with your point. Attempting to convey that point by showing that analogies fail to identify correlations if analysed critically is an ineffective method of communication, as seen by how long it took to arrive at the point. Were you hoping that we would infer your point if you implied it? I speculate that a likely explanation is that you didn't know what point you were making, at least not in a form you could initially put into words, and had to discover it through interaction that would place demands upon you to explain your logic. However, I have insufficient evidence for that speculation, and it's only a hypothesis. I'd tell you about more effective methods of communication, but I have no evidence those methods would work for communicating with anyone else but me
I could make a joke that you're justifying your 'personal failings' blaming others to avoid responsibility, but I won't |
|||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
#47 |
|
Core Member [115%]
|
I only went to community college, which was much more like high school than church.
|
|
|
|
|
|
#48 | |||
|
Veteran Member [56%]
|
See the last sentence of my first post in this thread. |
|||
|
|
|
|
|
#49 |
|
Member [24%]
|
I have noticed that the students group together in the lecture halls the same way in which masses come together in Sunday church service.
|
|
|
|
|
|
#50 | ||||||
|
Veteran Member [74%]
|
It's only conclusive in isolation. When taken as part of the whole it comes across as more of an afterthought.
What, with the talking and laughing and then getting quiet when it starts? Now I see it. I usually come in on time and sit down without talking. I also stay quiet all the way through while others get bored and start chatting. |
||||||
|
|
|
![]() |
| Thread Tools | |
|
|