Yeah, but you're looking at this too idealisticly, because such scenario happens 1 out of 10 times.
And this is only in some carriers, in some other you just have to be hard working to succeed, like in medicine. Creativity can help but hard working and not asking many questions at begining is more important... maybe in science is okay to be P, but surprisingly I'm not that into science either.
I enjoyed actually one class this academic year, it was physiology, but I got bored with it after 3 weeks. :/
There is a huge variety of opportunities to be creative, when you walk down the street, you could do it backwards just to see what happens. You don't know what could possibly come about from doing that, you might be caught by a secret camera and end up on the news. I admit, the opportunity doesn't come along very often, but it's just like going to the casino, or placing bets on horses or whatever animal suits your fancy.
Okay, here's a scenario for you. There are a whole heap of chemicals sitting about on a shelf, your J friend knows that it is against the rules to play with chemicals, or experiment on patients (more likely with a TP

). You on the other hand, love to play with things, and you go and mix a few of them up. The resultant mix turns out to be a cure for cancer
... okay that was a terrible example...

, I think I just got a bit carried away...
I'm finding this hard to actually explain... alright, say you go to a casino with a J friend, they decided to keep their well earned cash and stick with what they find to be familiar, you decide that you want to risk it all, so you risk, risk away. At the end of the night, you could have more money, or less money than your J counterpart, but
in the long run your winnings and losings balance out, you've both likely arrived at the same place, you just traversed upon a different path.
Being a Perceiver is naturally more risky, but in the grand scheme of things, you'll find that it's worth it overall. Now what the hell am I arguing about here...
oh, and btw, I think you mean optimistically. By definition, that was an optimistic approach, considering the glass is half full.
Optimism: A tendency to expect the best possible outcome or dwell on the most hopeful aspects of a situation: “There is a touch of optimism in every worry about one's own moral cleanliness”
Idealism: 1. The act or practice of envisioning things in an ideal form.
2. Pursuit of one's ideals.
3. Idealized treatment of a subject in literature or art.
4. Philosophy. The theory that the object of external perception, in itself or as perceived, consists of ideas.
Realism: An inclination toward literal truth and pragmatism.
It seems like idealism is just a deluded version of optimism though...
