Vie
Giggity
- Joined
- Jun 9, 2010
- Messages
- 792
- MBTI Type
- ENTJ
- Enneagram
- 8
ENTJs are actually quite rare on forums, but genuinely more common than they are among the general population, simply because the internet is N-dominated. Most ENTJs here don't seem mistyped to me, and the ones that are I'd say aren't any of the types you just described (I'd argue they're both either ENFP or ESFP -- likely the latter).And of course, as most people aren’t overly grounded in basic statistics, it’s not uncommon for people on this forum to see “ENTJs†everywhere, despite our extreme rarity. Most of these non-tested “ENTJs†are of course far more likely to be ESTJs, ESFJs, or even ESTPs.
Aside from the fact those descriptions are rooted in Keirsey (which is a different system that happens to use the same letter code), being a Rational doesn't necessarily make one inquisitive -- it is Engineers (NTPs) who are described as naturally curious. ENTJs fall under the Coordinator sub-temperament, and are thus described as visionary enterprisers -- which they are. Not investigators.Going back to those magnificent profiles, comments such as "I don't care to sit by the window on an airplane. If I can't control it, why look?" casts us as NTs who are ironically enough, incredibly lacking in curiosity.
On a purely personal basis, such a dislike for ENTJs on this site has kept me away from it rather well. It simply isn’t worth socializing with individuals who by practice dislike me when I could be using my time more valuably by doing anything else: improving my small business, learning a language, discovering the cure for cancer. Anything.
Man there really is a lot of ENTJ hate floating around. Everyone thinks Hitler's ENTJ just because he's teh evulz.
He's INFJ though.
Just to nitpick one particular point...
ENTJs are actually quite rare on forums, but genuinely more common than they are among the general population, simply because the internet is N-dominated. Most ENTJs here don't seem mistyped to me, and the ones that are I'd say aren't any of the types you just described (I'd argue they're both either ENFP or ESFP -- likely the latter).
People tend to score similarly enough between the two systems that both of them are almost interchangeble. Which is to say that there are far more people who consistently seem to score as an INTP on both the Keirsey Temperament Sorter and the MBTI than can be said for say, Socionics, on which an individual who is INTP in MBTI will often score as an INTJ. Other than that Keirsey Rationals as a group are almost always described as "knowledge seekers". According to Please Understand Me II they are naturally drawn to scientific and technological pursuits. ENTPs only differ in how they use the knowledge that they gain: INTJs and ENTJs are, for instance, far more practical in the application of what they know than ENTPs and INTPs.Aside from the fact those descriptions are rooted in Keirsey (which is a different system that happens to use the same letter code), being a Rational doesn't necessarily make one inquisitive -- it is Engineers (NTPs) who are described as naturally curious. ENTJs fall under the Coordinator sub-temperament, and are thus described as visionary enterprisers -- which they are. Not investigators.
Yes, yes, we're all losers for wasting our time on here instead of doing something better with our lives.
Why do people hate ENTJs again?
I was actually referring to the extreme abundance of supposed ENTJs that people on this particular forum identify as existing within their off-line, personal lives. The fact that someone's father is controlling, for example, isn't part of him being an ENTJ, it's part of being a teenager. But I agree: ESTJs, ESFJs, and ESTPs are quite rare on MBTI forums but are extremely common in the "real world". Thus when people claim to know four ENTJs when I'm not even aware of two that I've tested, it leads me to believe that they're actually attaching the ENTJ lable onto representatives of the previously mentioned types, who are far more common outside of the internet.
There's still like a 25% error margin, at least, though. The two systems are only superficially similar; Keirsey basically describes how people of a given MBTI type are expected to act outwardly. People I know whose Keirsey and MBTI types don't match include my INTJ friend (Healer), his ENTP girlfriend (Promoter), and my other ESTP friend (Field Marshal). Myself I'm likely a Field Marshal, but I could be an Architect or Inventor.People tend to score similarly enough between the two systems that both of them are almost interchangeble. Which is to say that there are far more people who consistently seem to score as an INTP on both the Keirsey Temperament Sorter and the MBTI than can be said for say, Socionics, on which an individual who is INTP in MBTI will often score as an INTJ.
Dr House is some sort of NTP.If Dr. House is an ENTJ, ENTJ's are awesome.
That’s very interesting. Do you work in a technological field or among those in a position of management? CEO’s for instance, are vastly overrepresented by xxTJs: ESTJs, ISTJs, ENTJs, and INTJs, in that order by raw numbers but in the general population the last of these four types are quite rare. I can’t imagine an ISFP running into too many ENTJs amidst their daily routine, as people will often claim on Typology Central. As you say, the personalities tend to cluster together into different interest fields. To elaborate on the test results, I obtained, they were taken amongst some forty high school students and teachers. Me and two INTPs, one of them a psychology teacher, were the only Rationals amongst those forty and most of the individuals that I suspected of being ENTJs actually turned out to be ESTPs. Once people reach adulthood people have a tendency to separate based upon their personalities and interests so it would seem that a high school sampling of individuals over the age of sixteen would be one of the better representations of the general population.I know...9 ENTJs. Usually, it's (we are) a "clustered" type.
MBTI in itself has a high rate of error as well, which is to say that individuals who take the exact same test a second time will often retrieve different results. It’s difficult to say whether these same individuals would have achieved different results even if both of the tests that they had taken were versions of the MBTI. This is especially true since the sample size appears to be relatively small, if your not basing the percentage upon individuals that you don’t personally know as well. At 3 people equaling to 25% of the sample, that only makes an overall sample size of 12, which doesn’t seem stringent enough to make a hard and fast observation about the test’s compatibility with the MBTI. I simply don’t see as many compatibility problems between the two different systems discussed often enough to justify a 25% margin of error.There's still like a 25% error margin, at least, though. The two systems are only superficially similar; Keirsey basically describes how people of a given MBTI type are expected to act outwardly. People I know whose Keirsey and MBTI types don't match include my INTJ friend (Healer), his ENTP girlfriend (Promoter), and my other ESTP friend (Field Marshal). Myself I'm likely a Field Marshal, but I could be an Architect or Inventor.
I've met many introverts of all shapes and sizes through different interest groups and just through school in general. Since I tend to take a more dominant role, the more passive introverts tend to feel more comfortable having someone by their side who can lead them. I don't feel all that comfortable around INTJ's, though, and not around feeling-type introverts.That’s very interesting. Do you work in a technological field or among those in a position of management? CEO’s for instance, are vastly overrepresented by xxTJs: ESTJs, ISTJs, ENTJs, and INTJs, in that order by raw numbers but in the general population the last of these four types are quite rare. I can’t imagine an ISFP running into too many ENTJs amidst their daily routine, as people will often claim on Typology Central. As you say, the personalities tend to cluster together into different interest fields. To elaborate on the test results, I obtained, they were taken amongst some forty high school students and teachers. Me and two INTPs, one of them a psychology teacher, were the only Rationals amongst those forty and most of the individuals that I suspected of being ENTJs actually turned out to be ESTPs. Once people reach adulthood people have a tendency to separate based upon their personalities and interests so it would seem that a high school sampling of individuals over the age of sixteen would be one of the better representations of the general population.