Myers-Briggs



         


The Myers-Briggs Type Indicator (MBTI) is the name of a personality indicator designed to assess psychological type. It was developed by Katherine Briggs and her daughter Isabel Myers during World War II. The use of type follows from the theories of Carl Jung. The phrase is also sometimes used as a trademark of CPP Inc., formerly known as Consulting Psychologists Press, Inc. The trademark is registered by the Myers-Briggs Type Indicator Trust.

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Dimensions

The test asks participants a number of questions about themselves. Based on the replies, four binary decisions are made about each participant:

IIntroversion - ExtroversionE
SSensing - IntuitionN
TThinking - FeelingF
JJudging - PerceivingP
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Common descriptions

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Keirsey-Style Interpretation

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Descriptions

In Myers-Briggs' system, each of these dichotomies has specific, non-normative meanings. Quite often any particular person can act in any way, but prefers particular ways.

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Types

This process results in a classification into one of sixteen types. Overall the population breakdown by type is:


MBTI SF ST NF NT Total
IJ ISFJ13.8% ISTJ11.6% INFJ1.5% INTJ2.1% 29.0%
EJ ESFJ12.3% ESTJ8.7% ENFJ2.4% ENTJ1.8% 25.2%
EP ESFP8.5% ESTP4.3% ENFP8.1% ENTP3.2% 24.1%
IP ISFP8.8% ISTP5.4% INFP4.4% typology employed by the Classical Greek Physician Hippocrates, called the four humors. In Hippocrates system there are the Sanguine, Choleric, Phlegmatic, and the Melancholic. Because this system was heavily steeped in the pseudo-medicine of the day (each of the above "temperaments" actually are the four archaic bodily fluids -blood, yellow bile, phlegm, and black bile- recognized by ancient physicians), it incurs a certain level of physiological symbolism not entirely pertaining to personality; though, it is very useful in documenting the early attempts at personality profiling. What is more helpful, and Keirsey explains, is using characters from Classical Greek Mythology to be poster-children for the four recognized temperaments. They would be as follows : Epimetheus, the SJ, Dionysus, the SP, Prometheus, the NT, and Apollo, the NF.
SJs are the most practical, in the sense of following tradition, of the four temperaments. They value being of service over all else, and enspirit the Epimethean sense of duty. They trust what is familar and actual, things that have happened before and can be looked upon for further judgment, and because of this they have a deep sense of tradition. They have a strong need for belonging, and because of this have a keen sense of social placement/order. They value hierarchy over egalitarianism, and see everyone in terms of what they can be doing. Think of George H. W. Bush, Uncle Owen from Star Wars. NFs understand people, literally from the inside out. They're always aware of people's feelings. They can be warm, sympathetic friends, but find offense in the smallest careless remark. They tend to be very skillful negotiators. The essence of their character is one constantly trying self-actualize, finding out who they really are; though, this is done with the full knowledge and intent of never actually achieving self-actualization, as that would negate the life-long journey this person needs. "One becomes oneself if and only if one does not." Think of Dante, Lao Zi. NTs are the people most concerned with 'how it works' and 'does it make sense?' They embody the deepest sense of wonder, and value, above all else, knowledge and understanding of their universe, not to mention competence about such subjects. They are eager to constantly improve situtations that they find they can be in control of, and because of this are prone to self-doubting to unhealthy extremes. They think the real world is a mutable network of logical possibilities, moved by skills. An example would be Albert Einstein.
SPs are adventurous, fun-loving, observant, physically skillful, impatient, easily bored and good with tools and art. They read minds, by observing people. They can briefly emulate the other types. To truly live for this temperament is to live life in the now, without hesitating. They are terribly egalitarian, and go out of their way to make sure everyone gets their fair share, even when that means the SP does with little or none. Think of Han Solo from Star Wars, or Owen Wilson in many of his characters.

The MBTI is popular with recruiters and managers, because studies using this assessment show clusters of different personality types in different professions. For instance, the proportion of engineers who are INTJ is higher than the 2% found in the general population.

There are significant differences by sex, especially on the T vs. F distribution.

Proponents of the system claim that almost all arguments between people tend to be manifestations of a type conflict (e.g. P vs J, T vs F, E vs I, S vs N). The P-J conflict is said to be the clearest - one person gets mad when the rules are broken and the other gets mad when rules are made. The T-F conflict is also said to be clear, as the basis of most husband/wife jokes.

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Skeptical views of the Myers-Briggs Type Indicator

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Unscientific

Skeptics, including many psychologists, argue that MBTI has not been validated by double-blind tests (in which participants accept reports written for other participants, and are asked whether or not the report suits them) and thus does not qualify as a scientific assessment. Some even demonstrate that profiles can apparently seem to fit any person by confirmation bias, ambiguity of basic terms and the Byzantine complexity that allows any kind of behavior to fit any personality type. See for an extensive skeptical treatment of the subject.

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A Temptation to Pigeonhole

Another argument says that, while the MBTI is useful in self-understanding, it is commonly used to pigeonhole people or for self-pigeonholing. Supporting arguments include :

  • It emphasizes each person being one specific type rather than each person using a certain type of thinking most of the time.
  • Real people do not fit easily into one of sixteen types because they use different styles of thinking at different times. This is why there have been questions about answering the indicator (like "do I answer the indicator according to how I act at work or at home"). This is also why some people have trouble finding a type that really "fits" them.
  • Predicting how a person will react based on a personality test that only measures their predominant style of thinking is foolish. Excusing your own bad or inefficient behavior based on such a test is also foolish.
  • Typical examples of certain personality types are given but these are always highly successful and admirable people. We are not told where the typical petty thief fits in, nor where we might find Hitler.
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