simulatedworld
Freshman Member
- Joined
- Nov 7, 2008
- Messages
- 5,552
- MBTI Type
- ENTP
- Enneagram
- 7w6
- Instinctual Variant
- sx/so
Funny thought hit me... EPs have more in common with each other than they have with others in their subgroups.
If you look at ESFP, ESTP, ENTP and ENFP they all seem to share common characteristics that define their very beings.
- Happy-go-lucky.
- Inspiring, in the sense that they make people do stupid shit because it is funny.
- Odd way of thinking, for sure.
- Party animals?
- ...Brief sexual relations?
- ...Tremendously great sex? At least the ones I've been with.
- Authority problems
- Easily bored
- Would rather go skydiving or bungeejumping than staying at home, even if they're lying on their death bed
- Causes general chaos
- Stirs up problems, just because it is fun to watch people go nuts![]()
Yes, this is because they're all dominant in an extroverted perceiving function.
So the common threads are obvious--but just so you know, if you think ENTP and ESFP have anything significant in common, it's because you're really an ESFP.
This is so untrue on so many levels...
Yes, it's because Ns tend to interpret N-type intelligence as the only "real" intelligence, the only perceptive skill set really worth having. (Ss do the same thing for their own smarts, go figure.)
No not really.
The T/F gender distinction, perhaps surprisingly, actually does exist. Something like 70% of women are Fs and about 60% of men are Ts.
For reference, temperament distribution among genders--I've read estimates from most common to least common:
Male: SJ, SP, NT, NF
Female: SJ, NF, SP, NT
Overall average of both: SJ, SP, NF, NT
In any event, NFs are severely underrepresented among men, almost as severely as NTs are among women.