Quote Originally Posted by thehotelambush View Post
@Myst

Here is how I currently view it: Fe is about changeable states or forms, Ti is about static structure. Ti gives structure and stability to the forms with its structure, while Fe gives the structure content / manifestation / a reason to exist by filling it with the changeable states / forms / expressions, or you could say by propagating the structure itself.

To give an analogy, it's like you have a cup with water in it. Ti is the cup - the hard structure that gives the water form and "organizes" it for the person drinking it - and Fe is the water which gives the cup's form "life" and a reason to exist. A cup without something to drink out of it is just a pretty trinket at best, while water without a container won't stick around very long.
You are right that Fe is changeable and Fi is static but everything else is wrong.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A_priori_and_a_posteriori
https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/r...sm-empiricism/