intuitive sensor

Of the four dichotomies, the largest discrepancy lies in the difference between Sensors and Intuitives. Whereas there is an approximate 50/50 split in the population between the other preferences, a full 70% of the population prefers Sensing versus only 30% favoring Intuition.

When you distill it down, the difference between Sensors and Intuitives is this: Sensors prefer reliability of information, and Intuitives prefer speed and depth of insight. This ends up manifesting itself a couple of unique ways. First, Intuitives learn to trust pattern recognition to help them understand information quickly and see things that aren’t ‘there’. Basically, they extrapolate large amounts of information from only a few data points.

Sensors, of course, have this same ability. But they don’t trust it, and so they don’t hone it. Instead, they trust reliable information – things that can be verified in the Real World. Therefore, they become masters of historical information – their own history as well as other people’s. They also become fantastic at manipulating objects in real time. There is no need to question reality when it’s right there in front of you. Reality is reliable. Speculation isn’t.

Second, how they see information informs how both these preferences see time. If real, reliable, solid information is what you choose to focus upon, then the here-and-now context becomes far more important, as well as past information (which used to be the here-and-now context). Sensors can’t rely on what hasn’t happened yet, so the future becomes far less interesting. On the other hand, Intuitives are already comfortable seeing what ‘isn’t there’ – as in, they’re comfortable theorizing and speculating on what could be in both the here-and-now as well as into the future. The past doesn’t really hold their interest any more than a reference point for future predictions.

Third, these differences alter both values and basic interests. For Sensors, values surround things like family, tradition, getting into action, old friends, etc… these are all rooted in the known and knowable, and therefore can be trusted. For Intuitives, values focus more on the cerebral – possibilities, memes, paradigms, perspectives and concepts. Conversation will generally revolve around these things, with little interest in small talk.

Both Sensors and Intuitives have an important role. Sensors often “hold down the fort” – uphold infrastructures that keep us going as a society. Intuitives are generally the “trailblazers” – coming up with new ways of looking at and doing things which fashion new technologies and paradigms. It makes sense that fewer Intuitives would be needed – too much innovation and everything collapses. But without innovation, the world stagnates.

Understanding and appreciating these differences is how we cooperate to create both a stable system as well as pathways to whole new worlds.

90 comments

  • Ll
    • Ll
    • May 28, 2017 at 6:48 pm

    True, this. It takes a lot of effort to overcome myour run-away impulse, especially SJs

  • Whoami
    • Whoami
    • May 19, 2017 at 3:57 pm

    That’s true. Imma sensor and i cannot handle intuitives conversation. T.T i really get exhausted as fuck.

  • Lisa
    • Lisa
    • May 4, 2017 at 11:41 pm

    Would it be fair, then, to say that sensors can acquire philosophies, but intuitives cannot acquire a factual way of thinking?

  • Lisa
    • Lisa
    • May 4, 2017 at 3:23 pm

    I just thought I’d give you guys a very sensing fact to consider. My adult son is an INTJ. I, on the other hand, am an ISFP. In spite of our differences, we have frequent meaningful discussions about a wide variety of abstract concepts. Some of his ideas I can understand better than others, but I do understand, and I also care. So my point is that a sensor is totally capable of understanding and even caring about abstract concepts, just maybe not on the same level as an intuitive. After all, we all have intuition somewhere in our functional stack, don’t we?

  • Lisa
    • Lisa
    • May 4, 2017 at 3:20 am

    You just put into words what I haven’t yet had a chance to. Thank you!

    —Another ISFP

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