Moray Eel - Gamma Judging
Great Barracuda - Gamma Perceiving
Black-Banded Leporinus - Beta Judging
Red-Bellied Piranha- Beta Perceiving
Jellyfish - Delta Judging
Tiger Shark - Delta Perceiving
Lionfish - Alpha Judging
Lobster - Alpha Perceiving
Moray Eel - Gamma Judging
Great Barracuda - Gamma Perceiving
Black-Banded Leporinus - Beta Judging
Red-Bellied Piranha- Beta Perceiving
Jellyfish - Delta Judging
Tiger Shark - Delta Perceiving
Lionfish - Alpha Judging
Lobster - Alpha Perceiving
Jellyfish are Si base.
I disagree; jellyfish have no need to create and share judgments, rather they judge what they know based on collective input from their senses and create changes in sense accordingly; they seemed able to distinguish and respond to different people around the aquarium, even anticipate them...The tiger sharks were obviously IEE and SLI, and seemed interested in preserving a calm, peaceful vibe in the aquarium. The barracudas seemed like they were at a attention in military ranks, and were ultimately very philosophy-oriented in their actions and consistent in their communication, in the same tank the moray eels, while very serious and sweet in a rational way, were either very Se or very Ni. The lobsters and other crustaceans in the tidepool didn't like being watched but seemed interested in understanding the observers. The lionfish seemed to understand the hesitation at their posionous spines and their communication seemed to hinge a lot on reasoning. Piranhas are very decisive, they seemed to respond collectively, in packs, but also tend to be very understanding. The Banded Leporinus I had never heard of before but they were obviously very involved in maintaining the balance of power in the Piranha tank, mostly by constantly understanding the circumstances and creating decisions...they turned out to be another ferocious amazon species after I looked them up on the internet...
Last edited by Nexus; 12-26-2010 at 07:48 PM.
Jellyfish drift around, swimming vaguely, collecting whatever food comes near enough to paralyse and eat.
That's minimal energy expenditure right there. Si base.
wow you are a genius, I guess viruses are also Si base, like you
I don't think I saw any. I was hoping for an octopus but I didn't see that either. The sea lion and dolphin were harder to type because they behave differently than humans, and being warm-blooded, large-brained mammals have more capacity for deceit and subconscious id activity (or rather, superconscious, if you consider that non-mammals are far more subconscious in their functioning).
I wouldn't mind being a virus. At least retroviruses get to leave their mark.
It's certainly interesting to think of the human organism as a network of organic computers. The implications for biocomputing have always fascinated me.