06-21-2019, 11:03 AM
Quote:I'd argue they are extroverted because their Will pushes them to be extroverted - the HAVE TO be so in order to fulfill their Will. Someone like me, an introverted individual, might want to travel the world, but I lack the Will to do so in any significant capacity. If I wanted it stronger I would have to become more extroverted.
I'd argue that extroversion is not the result of will, but of personality; and that if the will contradicts the personality, then there is conflict. That results in discomfort, and fear is often the result.
If an introverted individual wants to travel the world, they have to overcome the fear they feel in order to do so. Barring that, their will cannot overcome their fear and the reaction to it, which means their will to travel succumbs to their will to stay safe from whatever they fear.
Will does not exist as a constant; it is a variable because each and every level, layer and part of your awareness has its own will. It is the question of, which of these parts has the dominant will?
If you are introverted and you want to travel the world, you must either cause your will to do so to override your will to stay safe from whatever you fear in doing so, or you must override your fear in doing so and thus cause that part of you to stop interrupting your will to travel.
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The scientist has a question to find an answer for. The pseudo-scientist has an answer to find a question for. ~ "Failure is the path of least persistence." - Chinese Fortune Cookie ~ Logic left. Emotion right. But thinking, straight ahead. ~ Sperate supra omnia in valorem. (The value of trust is above all else.) ~ Meowsomeness!
The scientist has a question to find an answer for. The pseudo-scientist has an answer to find a question for. ~ "Failure is the path of least persistence." - Chinese Fortune Cookie ~ Logic left. Emotion right. But thinking, straight ahead. ~ Sperate supra omnia in valorem. (The value of trust is above all else.) ~ Meowsomeness!