Tayshaun
New member
- Joined
- May 13, 2007
- Messages
- 172
- MBTI Type
- INTP
- Enneagram
- 5w4
Is MBTI only appealing for those who feel unusual, misunderstood, or like they 'do not fit in''?
According to CAPT the rarest types are:
INFJ 1-3% of total population
INTJ 2-4%
ENTP 2-5%
ENTJ 2-5%
INTP 3-5%
INFP 4-5%
ESTP 4-5%
ISTP 4-6%
ENFP 6-8%
95% of forum presence is filled by types which represent about 25% of the total population.
A common interpretation is that their type is so uncommon that they are most likely to be interested in personality theories. Perhaps it's the magical N-intuition, which can realize the potential of classifying personalities unlike the oh-so unimaginative S, which allures to them?
Could a general feeling of being misunderstood, unrelated with personality type, be responsible for such enthusiasm?
To refresh some memories:
For many, it seems that it's the impression of being dissociated from peers, or having society work against them, that drives them to exploring MBTI.
Thoughts?
According to CAPT the rarest types are:
INFJ 1-3% of total population
INTJ 2-4%
ENTP 2-5%
ENTJ 2-5%
INTP 3-5%
INFP 4-5%
ESTP 4-5%
ISTP 4-6%
ENFP 6-8%
95% of forum presence is filled by types which represent about 25% of the total population.
A common interpretation is that their type is so uncommon that they are most likely to be interested in personality theories. Perhaps it's the magical N-intuition, which can realize the potential of classifying personalities unlike the oh-so unimaginative S, which allures to them?
Could a general feeling of being misunderstood, unrelated with personality type, be responsible for such enthusiasm?
To refresh some memories:
- An individual takes an MBTI assessment.
- Several dozen answered questions later, four seemingly random letters show up.
"PRFV, hmm..."
- Then comes the type description
"except for a thing or two, that's pretty accurate!"
- PRFV are estimated to account for 1-3% of the U.S. population.
"It's true, there aren't many like me that I know", "that explains a lot!"
For many, it seems that it's the impression of being dissociated from peers, or having society work against them, that drives them to exploring MBTI.
Thoughts?