GavinElster
Member
- Joined
- Feb 13, 2017
- Messages
- 250
No, it's not as long as you're reasonable in how you interpret the test. If you interpret the test as saying there are 4 *dimensions* N/S, T/F, I/E, and J/P, namely continuous with room for grey (like at minimum probably N n X s S), which is how the Big 5 is interpreted, then actually MBTI 'works' for the same ho-hum reasons the Big 5 works, really. It's based on the idea of grouping intercorrelated personality-oriented terms into large scales (that is, for instance, taking lots of related but not identical facets of personality like for instance tough-tender and logic-feelings).
McCrae and Costa's main criticisms seem to be if you regard the MBTI as predicting discrete dichotomies and if you regard the dichotomies as actually related closely to Jung's types to the point of predicting they exist the way described by Jung in nature (rather than just loosely motivated by them).
There are advantages to the Big 5, like its claim to 'completeness,' since supposedly you could claim the Big 5 really summarizes all of personality in the most parsimonious and useful way....however, at the end of the day, there are lots of more specialized psychometric tools, designed to describe facets of personality the Big 5 is too general about, and one could say the MBTI is probably a good balance between Big 5 and Jung. Although, methodologically it is way more similar to the former, it's pretty clear the kinds of personality terms it considers are motivated from Jung (vs the Big 5's from a dictionary.
McCrae and Costa's main criticisms seem to be if you regard the MBTI as predicting discrete dichotomies and if you regard the dichotomies as actually related closely to Jung's types to the point of predicting they exist the way described by Jung in nature (rather than just loosely motivated by them).
There are advantages to the Big 5, like its claim to 'completeness,' since supposedly you could claim the Big 5 really summarizes all of personality in the most parsimonious and useful way....however, at the end of the day, there are lots of more specialized psychometric tools, designed to describe facets of personality the Big 5 is too general about, and one could say the MBTI is probably a good balance between Big 5 and Jung. Although, methodologically it is way more similar to the former, it's pretty clear the kinds of personality terms it considers are motivated from Jung (vs the Big 5's from a dictionary.