S
Stansmith
Guest
I'd say INTJ, followed by ESTP and ENTP. There's something about that subtle, TeFi condescension that comes off as more grating than the affable TiFe cheekiness of ExTPs.
I'd add ENTJ after INTJ, but other than that, yeah. FPs can have an egocentric bent to them that can appear narcissistic, but it's typically more harmlessI'd say INTJ, followed by ESTP and ENTP
I do not agree with this part. the shit eating grin and Ti/Fe social manipulation tactics of ExTPs make me want to rip off their dick and choke them with it.There's something about that subtle, TeFi condescension that comes off as more grating than the affable TiFe cheekiness of ExTPs.
People use "narcissism" to mean all different things. If you're talking about Narcissistic Personality Disorder, it's characterized by caring a lot what other people think of you. The DSM symptoms (per Wikipedia) include "Expects constant attention, admiration and positive reinforcement from others."
INTJs have a tendency to be arrogant, but in more of a don't-care-what-you-think way, and it really isn't typical of INTJs to have an above-average need for attention and positive reinforcement from others.
In my own experiences, it seems like Se doms are pretty narcissistic.
People use "narcissism" to mean all different things. If you're talking about Narcissistic Personality Disorder, it's characterized by caring a lot what other people think of you. The DSM symptoms (per Wikipedia) include "Expects constant attention, admiration and positive reinforcement from others."
INTJs have a tendency to be arrogant, but in more of a don't-care-what-you-think way, and it really isn't typical of INTJs to have an above-average need for attention and positive reinforcement from others.
Sounds more like a extreme enneagram 3 type, I'd say it would best fit with unbalanced ETPs and EFJs, basically PeFe or FePe loops going by the DSM criteria.
I'm going with this for actual NPD, but if we're just going by how the term "narcissist" is used in slang to just call someone self-obsessed without requiring external input then I'm gonna say INTJ (theoretically). Ni+Fi can make them really into themselves. I've noticed a general pattern of Ni-doms carrying this sense that they're greater than everyone else; I'm not sure how much of that is related to Ni-dominance or if it's just what I've witnessed but I'm still going with INTJ. For the slang term with Enneagram, I'm gonna say 7 although some probably aren't even aware of it. Sometimes I just have this personal expectation that I'll get whatever I want without even realizing it until I start throwing a temper tantrum.
Do you notice this with all INJs or just the ones into typology, I ask this because the type descriptions for INJs are usually very flattering compared to their ISJ counterparts, this can lead to a form of type elitism. Are the INJs who are unaware of typology and their MBTI type like this too, maybe it has something to do with INJs viewing themselves as more perceptive than everyone else because they are usually focused on hidden meaning and depth based intuition. Now a lot of INJs usually are more perceptive when it comes to hidden meaning and viewing things from different conceptual vantage points but this can also lead to interpreting things that aren't there, hence the infamous Ni paranoid/conspiracy theory drivel that spews from unhealthy INJs.
Of the offensive yet non-pathological personalities in the literature, three are especially prominent: Machiavellianism, subclinical narcissism, and subclinical psychopathy. We evaluated the recent contention that, in normal samples, this "Dark Triad" of constructs are one and the same. In a sample of 245 students, we measured the three constructs with standard measures and examined a variety of laboratory and self-report correlates. The measures were moderately inter-correlated, but certainly were not equivalent. Their only common Big Five correlate was disagreeableness. Subclinical psychopaths were distinguished by low neuroticism; Machiavellians, and psychopaths were low in conscientiousness; narcissism showed small positive associations with cognitive ability. Narcissists and, to a lesser extent, psychopaths exhibited self-enhancement on two objectively scored indexes. We conclude that the Dark Triad of personalities, as currently measured, are overlapping but distinct constructs.
We investigated the relations of the “Dark Triad†personality traits—Psychopathy, Machiavellianism, and Narcissism—with the variables of the Five-Factor Model and the HEXACO model of personality structure. Results (N = 164) indicated that all three Dark Triad traits were strongly negatively correlated (rs = −0.72, −0.57, and −0.53, respectively) with the HEXACO Honesty–Humility factor. Psychopathy and Machiavellianism showed moderate negative correlations with Big Five Agreeableness (rs = −0.39 and −0.44, respectively), but Narcissism did not (r = −0.04). However, Narcissism correlated positively with Big Five Extraversion (r = 0.46) and HEXACO Extraversion (r = 0.49). Correlations among the Dark Triad variables were explained satisfactorily by the HEXACO variables, but not by the Five-Factor Model variables.