How Opposites Argue — and How They Can Settle Differences Gently: Rationals (Judgers) vs. Irrationals (Perceivers) in Conflict
When Rationals and Irrationals argue, they’re not just disagreeing about what’s right — they’re disagreeing about how life should flow . Rationals trust structure and closure. Irrationals trust flexibility and discovery. Each believes they’re being responsible; each feels the other is being unreasonable. Why They Argue Differently 1. Different Rhythms of Decision Rationals (Judgers) prefer to decide early and stick to it. Irrationals (Perceivers) prefer to keep options open until the last possible moment. Research on cognitive tempo shows that Judgers experience stress from uncertainty, while Perceivers experience stress from rigidity. So when a Rational says, “We need to decide now,” and an Irrational says, “Let’s wait and see,” they’re both trying to reduce anxiety — just in opposite ways. 2. Time Orientation Rationals live by schedules and deadlines. Irrationals live by flow and responsiveness. In conflict, this means: Rationals want resolution that restores order. Ir...