Hello dudes and gents,
I've seen quite a bit of commotion on the interwebs and it appears people love getting at each other's throats. I wanted to be of help and make everyone's life a bit easier. I thought of something interesting with the interaction between the 'Creative' and 'PoLR' functions. So on the wiki in regards to the 'Base' and 'Role' functions it reads: "When a person is actively using his base function, the role function is essentially turned off. The two cannot both be "on" at the same time, because they represent two opposing approaches to similar things".
So by that logic, it should also apply to the 'Creative' and 'PoLR' functions (1 - 3 and 2 - 4?). The whole idea being: When the creative is "on", the PoLR should be "off". In regards to how this works, on the wiki, it reads: "Accepting/producing is a dichotomy that separates the two functions of each block of Model A. Accepting functions 'come first' in each block and are odd-numbered: 1, 3, 5, and 7. Producing functions 'come second' and are even-numbered: 2, 4, 6, and 8"
Also:
"Originally, Aushra Augusta suggested that accepting functions focus on obtaining a picture of reality, and producing functions create some sort of 'new' product that is molded to that cross-cut of reality obtained by the accepting function."
This is a bit weird, I think what it means is you should focus on "producing" more than "obtaining". I'm probably missing something else that might help.
Additionally on 'base/creative' section on 'subtypes' it says:"Base/Creative subtypes is a system-less notion that refers to strengthening or either base (first) function or creative (second) function"
This is pretty simple, you can improve your 'Creative' function more in order to get it strong enough to "turn off" your PoLR.
The other 2 systems of subtypes (accepting/producing) and (contact/inert) which I'm not so sure about, but I don't think is too important.
Summing it up
Essentially, the "important" part is the idea to be able to "wax off" your weakness PoLR by "doing more stuff" with your Creative function. This idea was taken from the Base + Role interaction of one being 'off' when the other is 'on'. Pretty simple, but how to put it into practice is another thing all together, as well as how "valid" the idea is.


Reply With Quote

