Do you feel the innate need to manipulate things in your environment?
That's the question.
INTJMom brings up a good point. SP are artisans.
Artisan (definition)
1.
One who professes and practices some liberal art; an artist.
2.
One trained to manual dexterity in some mechanic art or trade; and handicraftsman; a mechanic.
This is willingly submitted to by the artisan, who can . . . compensate his additional toil and fatigue. Hume.
Syn. -- Artificer; artist. -- Artisan, Artist, Artificer. An artist is one who is skilled in some one of the fine arts; an artisan is one who exercises any mechanical employment. A portrait painter is an artist; a sign painter is an artisan, although he may have the taste and skill of an artist. The occupation of the former requires a fine taste and delicate manipulation; that of the latter demands only an ordinary degree of contrivance and imitative power. An artificer is one who requires power of contrivance and adaptation in the exercise of his profession. The word suggest neither the idea of mechanical conformity to rule which attaches to the term artisan, nor the ideas of refinement and of peculiar skill which belong to the term artist.
Everyone is creative. All types.
Creativity is . . .
Carl Rodgers (psychologist an writer) -- The emergence of a novel, relational product, growing out of the uniqueness of the individual.
Henry Miller ( writer) -- The occurrence of a composition which is both new and valuable.
John Haefele (CEO and entrepreneur) -- The ability to make new combinations of social worth.
Newell, Simon, & Shaw (team of logic theorists) -- A special class of problem solving characterized by novelty.
H. H. Fox (scientist) -- Any thinking process in which original patterns are formed and expressed.
Rollo May (writer, philosopher) - Creativity is the process of bringing something new into being...
Roger von Oech - Creative thinking involves imagining familiar things in a new light, digging below the surface to find previously undetected patterns, and finding connections among unrelated phenomena.
Carnevale, Gainer, Meltzer - ... the ability to use different modes of thought to generate new and dynamic ideas and solutions