cascadeco
New member
- Joined
- Oct 7, 2007
- Messages
- 9,080
- MBTI Type
- INFJ
- Enneagram
- 9w1
- Instinctual Variant
- sp/sx
There isn't really much more to MBTI than surface level dude.
If you make any set of questions even weakly related to personality large enough, and make enough groups you'll have pretty 'good' descriptors of 'groups' corresponding to their respective sets of preferences.
The mbti isn't bad, it's a useful tool but only to a fraction of the population - ie people who have strong enough preferences to strongly fit into a type , however it's not precise enough to be of much use to ppl who are 'borderline" (lets say near 50% I/E and near 50% P/J) - in which case they might as well read the horscope.
I actually agree with all of this. I do think the way mbti is actually utilized by the 'real world' (ie outside of any internet forum) - tests, understanding of it by the general populace, and so on - is pretty clearcut. The tests are either/or, you choose one, you get a type. And it does end up being superficial the way it is applied. I mean we're putting humanity into 16 buckets - how could it be anything but superficial / generic? Superficially, I'd be an N, I believe. The way things are discussed on the forum, though, things get a lot more nuanced, and it's why I changed my type a while back. Now I really just don't care and the reality is that I do think I fall into your category of being borderline on at least two, if not three, elements. For me, the whole system is extremely useless for my own understanding of self - even how others see me. So I 100% agree with it only being a truly useful tool for a % of the population.
