Post by peppergirl on Jul 17, 2013 15:36:39 GMT -5
Daniel radcliffe is Gryffindor Gamma, I think Tom Felton (Malfoy) is a Gamma too. So they can be extremes which doesn't surprise me. As a side note, Harry Potter was almost sent to the Slytherin House! So Gammas have both heroe/dark side ^^ Rupert Grint (Ron) is NeFi I think, Ginny is TeSi, Matthew Lewis (SiTe), Lavender Brown (FiNe), lots of Delta Gryffindors... Hermione (FeSi), well Gryffindor too... It means a majority of Gryffindor are Ne/Si. *trying desparately to find a pattern*
Post by The Doctor on Jul 17, 2013 19:20:33 GMT -5
Jul 17, 2013 12:41:10 GMT -5 ayoungspirit said: Heron : I believe I know where the Beta are (The Doctor) ! I approve !
I'm not going to comment on my own opinion of my quadra until I get a consensus on my type me thread, but I can say that I think this system is much better at identifying quadras than specific types, since people change the functions they lean on depending on their mood or the activity / thought process performed. Within a quadra, there are four functions that can be leaned upon (dominant, auxiliary, tertiary, and inferior). However, it is very unlikely that an individual will exhibit traits of functions outside their quadra.
Wait. You're looking for an animal with piercing eyes and a big mouth to represent betas?
Easy. Wolves or Lions. Highly social, piercing eyes, loud howl or roar. I'd be more inclined to vote Wolves though. Cats seem to be Fi/Te to me, while dogs are very Fe/Ti.
Last Edit: Jul 17, 2013 19:47:40 GMT -5 by The Doctor
Disclaimer: Everything I say here is my OPINION. Please keep that in mind.
I don't think this is a good representation. Gryffindor is NF, Ravenclaw is NT, Hufflepuff is SJs, and Slytherin is a collection of types that only exist in fiction. Trying to apply these houses to quadras is begging for confusion.
Disclaimer: Everything I say here is my OPINION. Please keep that in mind.
Post by peppergirl on Jul 17, 2013 19:51:26 GMT -5
The Doctor I had the same thoughts about felines being more Fi/Te and dogs/foxes being Ti/Fe. However the wolf gives an impression of aggressiveness and asociality not really related to Fe...
Post by ayoungspirit on Jul 17, 2013 19:56:17 GMT -5
The Doctor : Thought of it actually, but since I chose a doe with a pointy muzzle to represent Fi/Te, I excluded other animal potentially presenting the same qualities or something mildly similar, and the ones with a flat one, like lions, have not an explicitly large mouth like the dolphin seems to have. But this is not to be taken seriously, this was just a joke about physical cues
peppergirl : actually, their ambiguous social nature and potential aggressiveness make them even more of a good representation of Ti-Fe I guess, Fe has its dark side after all.
Last Edit: Aug 30, 2013 11:25:17 GMT -5 by ayoungspirit
The Doctor I had the same thoughts about felines being more Fi/Te and dogs/foxes being Ti/Fe. However the wolf gives an impression of aggressiveness and asociality not really related to Fe...
Only for those who don't know wolves very well. ;-) They're very elusive, cautious, and typically not aggressive to anything they're not sure they can take - only going full throttle when they're certain. Lupine social structure, loyalty, and cohesion to act as a whole are a very good representation of Fe, while their ability to track is legendary (Ni). In action (Se), wolves are amazingly good with strategy and tactics (Ti). Very Beta in my opinion. However, you do make a point that the general perception of wolves is that they're the outlaw biker gangs of nature.
Perhaps simply dogs? Golden retrievers?
Disclaimer: Everything I say here is my OPINION. Please keep that in mind.