ThatSkyWing
Well-Known Member
I'm an ISTJ.
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What's the difference betwen Intuition and Sensing?
One of my "narrow obsessions" includes personality typology, especially Meyers Briggs.
And I am currently very interested to see what types are most common in people on the Spectrum.
I am an INTJ.
Personality test based on Jung and Briggs Myers typology
If ya'll would take this test, it's not so long, and post your type, it would be greatly appreciated and could actually help me understand things within Aspergers and typology better.
<3:cute:
I love My Little Pony!
The INTJ one, I don't know the name of, but looks like a unicorn.
It's common for on different days for the J or P to change, Meyers Briggs is the most basic form of understanding brain functionality and its infulence on personality.
Sensing or iNtuition Preference
"Sensing refers to how people process data. Sensing people focus on the present, they are "here and now" people, who are factual and process information through the five senses. They see things as they are, they are concrete thinkers.
Intuition refers to how people process data. Intuitive people focus on the future and the possibilities. They process information through patterns and impressions. They read between the lines, they are abstract thinkers."
I believe our only E is an ESTJ.
Anyone else have a 100% on Introversion.
There can be only one mastermind... *twirls his mustache like a supervillain*
Your Type is
INTJ
Introverted Intuitive Thinking Judging
Strength of the preferences %
89 25 100 33
Oddly enough, I don't think of myself as an INTJ, but rather as an INTP. And if you were to look at my apartment, you'd probably agree. :lol2:
I just took it for myself, and did a little test on that test... because trying to break such a test is fun.
I went ahead and answered everything in the middle as a neutral stance.
I've come to the conclusion that if I'm ambivalent of everything, there shouldn't be a type, unless the statements are biased towards one or the other. Leaving everything neutral leaves me with an ESTJ... to me that's an odd "starting point".
Also, we can't assume that the questions are designed in such a way that a neutral response indicates ambivalence.
In tests like these, I suspect the words of Rush provide more truth than ever:
"If you choose not to decide, you still have made a choice."