Talk:INTP
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[edit] Please Refrain from Directly Copying Articles
Third reason I hate Wikipedia, 70% of the material is plagurized from the first three articles a person gets from searching for material. There is also the OR problem (as seen below). Seriously, the trash people spew.
- Agreed. Way to spell plagiarized correctly. --24.170.176.52 08:18, 12 August 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Please Refrain from Adding Personal Experience
I just removed/edited the following section from the Si description: In life, an INTP frequently is completely oblivious to certain subtle changes such as the date, unless they are called to their attention. An INTP will frequently leave something lying on a desk, counter, etc., and it will become all but invisible to them until it is in the way or is needed. This is informed solely by the experience of the contributor and not by typological theory. Please try not to add "stuff you do, being an INTP, ya know". Morgansutherland 02:23, 13 July 2007 (UTC)
This was not merely personal experience, I have added the following to the refferences, it is a link to a series of essays on the personality types, specificaly the one on the INTP by Paul James, very in depth.--Scorpion451 04:25, 13 July 2007 (UTC)
http://intp.org/intprofile.html --Scorpion451 04:30, 13 July 2007 (UTC)
Thats OR on his behalf (What can you really say? It's overgeneralization (as many of the points are... after breifly scanning it)). More importantly, after doing a narrow range scanning... I failed to find anything that remotly resembled what you said. Now IF it is there, your examples are CLEARLY invalid (It's OR to makeup examples) because none of the examples got any hits (if it isn't in the article, it can't be in here) make thing more fun... "I am an INTP and I speak from experiance... you're wrong" But that makes this NPOV rejecting both our oppinions.
- If it's in an article, and it's citable, it is acceptable on Wikipedia, and does not constitute original research on behalf of wikipedia. Research has to come from somewhere, duh? --24.170.176.52 08:22, 12 August 2007 (UTC)
I've read that before... in multiple places... and INTP communities tend to agree. So what's the controversy? Or did it already blow over? Chainedwind 22:08, 31 August 2007 (UTC)
- The problem with examples like this is that they're too specific. Both intuition and introversion tend to focus on the internal world, so IN-- types may at times be oblivious to their external world (though this is perhaps less true of the INTJs than the other three types, due to their auxiliary extraverted thinking). To say that INTPs may sometimes fail to perceive objects in their external world because they're so focused on their internal one is probably true, and you could probably find a reliable source for that. But to say, for example (and I'm just making this up), that INTPs continually misplace their keys isn't appropriate for an encyclopedia. It's an anecdote. For the statement to be reliable, you'd need to be able to say something like, "According to a survey published in XXX, 83.2% of INTPs reported that they continually misplace their keys. This compares to 45.6% for all types combined." Now that would be a compelling statistic if true (although, again, in this instance, it's completely made up). ThreeOfCups (talk) 01:46, 5 May 2008 (UTC)
[edit] Misc
INTPs tend to develop their S more as they get older. This is similar to how ISTPs N tends to develop more with age.
stub for Myers-Briggs Type Indicator
INTP should have its own article, not just a redirect to myers briggs.
Carl Jung, Isaac Newton, Albert Einstein and just about every famous mathematician were INTPs.
INTPs excel in the world of abstract thought and are excellent at recognizing patterns in what seems to be chaos. The world of computer programming is a haven for INTPs. In fact, the concept of a Wikipedia was probably dreamed up by one. Richard M. Stallman is a classic case of INTP. Insightful, quiet, logical, and rebellious.
Er.. RMS's diehard devotion to his cause makes him seem like maybe an INFJ. Definitely doesn't seem like an INTP.
INTPs tend to develop their S more as they get older. This is similar to how ISTPs N tends to develop more with age.
INTPs, always open to new and perhaps even crazy ideas (see Dr. Emmett Brown in Back to the Future), push the limitations of scientific thought and architecture. The frontiers of science are almost always discovered by INTPs. In this way, they are very similar to ISTPs who push the boundaries of the physical world.
Whew, this is begging for revision..... LOL
On the diehard devotion of some INTPs- this is the manifestation of our ESFJ shadow, our undeveloped and thus somewhat childish side--Scorpion451 22:00, 4 July 2007 (UTC)
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- I think the size of this article and these discussions says a lot about INTPs (who are probably responsible for half the useless nitpicking on this site). And I really hope the list of famous examples is cited, because I saw half the names in other lists. I get the general impression that people only look at articles for their own type, and are likely to pick all their favorite people and throw them onto the list (by "get the general impression" I mean "I know for a fact"). —Preceding unsigned comment added by 149.152.121.199 (talk) 09:59, 14 March 2008 (UTC)
Stuff moved from the article:
INTPs can be good in science and technology, especially IT. They can be very creative but have trouble following up on their ideas. They have little interest for practical applications anyway. A good way to employ an INTP is to put him or her in an office with a computer and books, and visit him or her regularly to fish for ideas.
INTPs are scientists. Practically every great scientist is an INTP. e.g. Newton, Einstein, Galileo. The definition of an INTP is a logical thinking, introverted visionary that bucks the trend. (I know, crudely put for wikipedia but what the hell, someone else can nuke this or fix it up. In fact by including this sentence will 100% guarantee that it will happen)
INTPs tend to have a special relationship with ISTPs. The Wright brothers were an ISTP/INTP combo. One cooked up the idea that a plane could fly and the other actually did it. Also, the Warchawski brothers that directed the Matrix are a modern day example of an INTP/ISTP combo. The abstract idea of going into the Matrix was probably the INTP idea and all the Kung Fu was totally ISTP.
I can't find much here that goes beyond the information in Myers-Briggs Type Indicator. Perhaps a redirect would be enough. Kosebamse 06:13, 30 Sep 2003 (UTC)
I mentioned this on the MBTI talk page and called for consistency in the way we treat the different types. Some types have their own articles, others had redirects. There really needs to be a consensus right across the board. Jammycakes 22:02, 4 May 2006 (UTC)
LOLs... The discussion page is so... INTP-like. I bet there will be a discussion of this discussion. :) Simoncpu (talk) —Preceding comment was added at 19:11, 23 January 2008 (UTC)
[edit] Some suggestions towards improving the INTP definition that can be applied in part to all 16 types.
I am unfamiliar with that which goes into appropriately editing Wikipedia articles. So rather than edit the article, I thought posting to the discussion area would be better. Particularly given that some of what I have to say is opinion and not necessarily fact. And for that which I believe to be fact, I would prefer there be a concensus.
Concerning the 16 types, there are indeed multiple schools of thought. How they do (or do not) interrelate I felt could use greater clarification. The more popularized versions began with the work of Carl Jung. Upon Isabel Briggs Myers reading Jung's writings on the subject, the Myers-Briggs Type Indicator (MBTI) was born. Upon learning of the MBTI, David Keirsey Sr. developed his "Temperament" theory which disregards the MBTI's Jung inherited notion of extraverted/introverted functional hierarchies (Ne as notation for extraverted intuition for example). Keirsey instead favored grouping preference patterns and forming a hierarchy from that (SP, SJ, NF, NT, and the 4 sub-types of each). Also, Keirsey's book refers to several other variants which supposedly pre-date Jung's work. [Opinion: Both approaches have merit yet paradoxically clash in the structuring of the functions. I think Keirsey's division of SP, SJ, NF, NT is less chaotic than the MBTI approach which groups by dominant e/i functions which for example would place ESFJ and ENFJ together because they share the dominant function of Extraverted Feeling (Fe). Though many may argue this point, the models of Jung, MBTI, and Keirsey are more similar than dissimilar and are variants on the same school of thought. More specifically on Keirsey, I personally avoid using his labels in the interest of clarity. His labels are explicitly defined in his book and make sense with definitions in hand. But his labels employ common words each already with strong and well established implied meanings. Subsequently, most people become confused by the labels applying the conventional implied meanings. I would recommend that if the labels are to be used that their meanings as defined by Keirsey be included. Frankly, each of the Jung/MBTI/Temperament variants of the 16 types really deserve their own independant dedicated pages.]
Socionics differs greatly from the Jung/MBTI/Temperament school of thought. The functional notations are assigned different values and so a Sociology INTP is really a Jung/MBTI/Temperament INTJ. [Opinion: I am not fond of Socionics and strongly feel its credibility must be questioned. Its use of the same notation assigned different values creates confusion among many (including Wikipedia). The most notable injury to its credibility, Socionics asserts that each of its 16 types exhibit very particular physical characteristics whose descriptions border on the absurd and even insulting <www.socionics.com/prof/intp.htm>. And a more minor red flag to the credibility of Socionics; the What is Socionics? page <www.socionics.com/main/intro.htm> includes an image of Jung holding a book <www.socionics.com/main/common/graph/jung.jpg> that has clearly been Photoshopped to say "Socionics" on the cover. (Here is the original) I suggest that if Socionics is to be included at all on Jung/MBTI/Temperament pages that it be as not much more than a footnote which identifies it as differing enough to cause confusion to any person not inclined to taking a deeper look.]
Lastly, you may want to include a deep link to the "Long Description" of the INTP written by Paul James. Not only is it the best description of the INTP available, it is probably the single best type description among any of the 16 types.
I hope this will be of use to Wikipedia editors. Keep up the good work. :)
-Michael (And yes, I am an (Jung/MBTI/Keirsey) intp.) :)
- The functional notations are assigned different values and so a Sociology INTP is really a Jung/MBTI/Temperament INTJ Thats not true. Function are interpreted diffent in MBTI/Keirsey and Socionics, so you can´t just swap the types. --Gronau 14:04, 5 July 2006 (UTC)
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- Function are interpreted diffent in MBTI/Keirsey and Socionics, so you can´t just swap the types. You may not realize it, but you are confirming my assertion. I am not switching the types. The types are defined by their descriptions and by their functions. They are not defined by their labels. I am pointing out that the labeling/notation system differs between Jung/MBTI/Keirsey and Socionics. You simply cannot say that an INTP as labeled for Jung/MBTI/Keirsey is akin to a Socionics INTP. That is what would be an untrue assertion. If you are profiling an INTP, you must entirely separate between the Jung/MBTI/Keirsey systems and the system used by Socionics. Wikipedia already supports my assertion. "A socionics ENTp could well be an MBTI ENTJ and vice versa, although this controversy is more regular in introverted types." --Michael 09:56, 6 July 2006 (UTC)
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I agree thoroughly.The whole fields of MBTI, Keirsey, and Socionics need to be completely reconstructed on Wikipedia. Niffweed17, Destroyer of Chickens 01:03, 12 July 2006 (UTC)- Actually, the above comment I had not read entirely. I do not agree with the initial user's comment that Socionics is not as viable as MBTI/Keirsey, and I do not agree that Socionics is not aligned with Jung as is MBTI/Keirsey, as the first user seems to indicate. Nonetheless, this matter, like all others with these personality theories, must be treated in a NPOV manner. What I do agree with is the idea that these theories cannot be construed as identical.
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- I agree with the NPOV. You'll note that I was careful to devide my personal opinions away from my NPOV observations.
- and I do not agree that Socionics is not aligned with Jung as is MBTI/Keirsey Again I'll emphysize that I am not making any suggestion that the theory is malaligned, I am saying that the notations are malaligned which again I point out is already supported by Wikipedia (and the sources Wikipedia would have cited in the first place).
- Thank you for the acknowledgment to the need for separation. --Michael 14:49, 19 July 2006 (UTC)
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- The notation problem is very real. MBTI and Socionics switch introverted and extroverted functions so that INTP in MBTI is NeTi, but NiTe in Socionics, which is INTJ in MBTI! Far too confusing. INTP is not NiTe. INTP extroverts intuition and introverts thinking. INTJ extroverts thinking and introverts intuition. Working in an office w/two of each, that is quite plain. Ne and Ti are right-brain functions, which is consistent with the all-at-once INTP. Ni and Te are left-brain functions, consistent with the sequential nature of INTJ. INTP just flatly is not NiTe, nor is it TeNi. These concepts are difficult enough to understand and follow without offering inconsistencies at the outset of learning about them. Recommend separating MBTI and Socionics and referencing each to the other with links in the appropriate place at the end of the article. The real peri winkle 16:51, 7 February 2007 (UTC)
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- Further, the Sensing of the INTP is ALSO extraverted. INTPs in general cannot remember what people say to them, cannot remember what they ordered in restaurants the last time they were there, and cannot remember details at all. We are also notoriously inaccurate with arithmetic in our heads. All of this requires introverted Sensing. Our memories are based on our extraverted iNtuition, which provides a sort of "gestalt" memory of relative position. For instance, I can always remember where a fact was on the page or where I left something in relation to where I was standing, but I can't remember what the page said or exactly where I was standing. Further, we can be VERY good at using tools--knives, paintbrushes, etc.--which requires extraverted Sensing, and when we lose something, we "scan" the room "looking" for it, rather than the introverted Sensing approach with is trying to remember where we had it last. So, the idea that INTPs have introverted Sensing just isn't borne out in any of my experience of myself or ANY of my INTP friends.RSGracey 19:21, 19 April 2007 (UTC)
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This is an incorrect statement- I am an INTP who has studied extensively on this subject: The introverted sensing is a tertiary attribute, thus less developed. If we were good at it, we would have it as a primary or secondary. The extroverted would be if, as my brother an ISTP does, wildly run out and embrace new experiences and are able to memorize phone numbers in the middle of a conversation. The extroversion or introversion describes how we experience things. It has no bearing on how good one is at it. The extroverted thinkers are maligned by this also: Socratese is a perfect example of an extroverted thinker; involving others in his thinking process actively. The refference to the use of tools and knives is an incorrect statement also, we deal with these in an extraverted intuitive manner. I never look at instructions, I figure out how it goes together and use my tools however works. Again, this contrasts with my brother who seeks a precise and detailed description of the use of each tool before using it exactly as it is meant to be used. Needless to say, I often frustrate him with my use of the handle end of a screwdriver to hammer a lid back on to a paint can because I opened it with the screwdriver and already have it, rather than using a hammer, which is meant for this purpose.--Scorpion451 22:08, 4 July 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Type Descriptions
I just deleted the descriptions on all of these personality types. A lot of them were copyvios from different sources, several of them being from http://www.geocities.com/lifexplore/ , where they may or may not have been copied from other locations. Nonetheless, the three theories of MBTI, Keirsey Temperaments, and Socionics are quite different and require different descriptions of types, functions, relations, and other concepts. Socionics especially differs from the other two. The three theories should all be expanded upon in Wikipedia, but it is impossible to do this while there is a conglomeration of these three theories and they are treated as one and the same. Niffweed17, Destroyer of Chickens 01:02, 12 July 2006 (UTC)
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- A lot of them were copyvios from different sources I suggest going to the official sources and getting permission. For MBTI, http://www.myersbriggs.org/ is the official site of the Myers & Briggs Foundation, http://www.aptcentral.org/ is the official site of the Association for Psychological Type, and http://www.capt.org/ is the official site of the Center for Applications of Psychological Type. For Keirsey Temperament, http://www.keirsey.com/ is the official site of the Keirsey Temperament Sorter, another credible resource is Linda V. Berens who worked with David Keirsey Sr. Her site is http://www.tri-network.com/ for Interstrength Associates, formerly Temperament Research Institute. I do not have any suggestions for official sources on Socionics. I hope this helps. --Michael 15:42, 19 July 2006 (UTC)
[edit] The MBTI instrument
Does anyone know the source of the claim that the MBTI is 70% accurate? I have a copy of the second edition of the MBTI manual (1985), and it says 75%. My understanding is that the instrument has become more accurate over time, not less. If you've got a newer version of the manual, I'd appreciate your input. ThreeOfCups (talk) 00:45, 18 May 2008 (UTC)
[edit] Asperger syndrome
I've seen some websites that say there's a possible overlap between Asperger syndrome and INTP. That makes sense to me, but I don't know if it's been proven.
See Talk:Asperger_syndrome/Archive04. --Max 02:48, 1 October 2006 (UTC)
- Along with INTJ (the second rarest type—INTP being the rarest). I haven't come across scientific proof for this but would be surprised if somoeone with a diagnosis for AS was not in these two types.
- —Joe Llywelyn Griffith Blakesley talk contrib 14:41, 13 March 2007 (UTC)
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- The people with asperger syndrome I've met are INXX, rarely ENXX and never XSXX. CrazyEddy 12:34, 31 May 2007 (UTC)
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- INTP's do share traits with aspergers sydrome, and there is some testing to see if certain disorders like autism and aspergers may be linked to personality types take to the extreme. It isn't necessarly a sentance to have aspergers, however, I deal well with people one on one, but social occasions still make me very uncomfortable.--Scorpion451 22:13, 4 July 2007 (UTC)
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- Hmmm, this sounds a bit like original research to me. Or do you have any reliable sources? Snthdiueoa (talk) 10:45, 18 February 2008 (UTC)
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[edit] Spock paragraph
This paragraph strikes me as very "trekkie" and not very informative, but it does introduce some new ideas. Perhaps we can salvage the good ideas but get rid of all the geekspeak and references to specific Star Trek episodes. What do you think? Davemcarlson 09:36, 29 May 2007 (UTC)
I'm open to suggestions. How would you do it? It's often helpful for people in understanding types to refer to well-known fictional characters. "Spock" is certainly a durable fictional image, given the global popularity of the "Star Trek" saga, at least as well-known as, say, Ebenezer Scrooge (INTJ, at least as portrayed by George C. Scott). The important issue to illustrate is that there is always the dynamic tension in the INTP between the ultra-logical and the ultra-relational. RSGracey 20:32, 4 June 2007 (UTC)
Dave, I agree with you re the Spock paragraph, so I've deleted it. In tone, it's almost laughably Comic Book Guy. It's also unencyclopedic; unreferenced and reading like a personal reflection. RS, if it's important to illustrate 'the dynamic tension in the INTP between the ultra-logical and the ultra-relational' please do so with reference to reliable external sources. SpaceyHopper 08:35, 19 June 2007 (UTC)
So how does one get to be a "reliable external source?"--If the information is true and easily understood, who cares about the "tone?" Did you understand it? Do you know anything about INTPs? If so, is it true?
[edit] Link to INTPCentral.com
Someone deleted the link I placed to INTPCentral.com, which is by far the largest INTP forum. There is a link to a different forum at the top of the article, which is not the place for it. I am deleting the link at the top and adding the INTPCentral link back at the bottom. Please do not delete it without discussing here. Thanks. Tokipin 12:33, 1 September 2007 (UTC)
- I added it back in one of my edits, not knowing it was removed before or that there was something here referencing it. I think for a lot of people, the link sets off some advertising red-flags, so to prevent anyone from getting into a long-term edit war they're not aware of I'm about to add a comment before the link that asks people to mention something here before removing it. --Aristeo (talk) 18:31, 29 February 2008 (UTC)
[edit] "Personality description" formulation(s) completely unencyclopedic
It basically quotes verbatim snippets of various online personality test results (I happen to be familiar with these, having taken pretty much all of them in another, brighter period of my life, before I learned what pseudoscience is). Issues of copyvio aside, it is completely out of place to have this prominent chunk of text rambling on the nature and characteristics of the INTP as if they, or this "type" existing at all for that matter, were some sort of established fact. I call for this section and its analogues in the other type pages to be either re-written from an encyclopedic perspective or axed entirely. --AceMyth 14:30, 16 October 2007 (UTC)
- 1) Are you referring to a specific section anywhere? It would be helpful if you could point to actual examples, or even quote the entire irrelevent section if it is short enough. 2) The question of the existence of the INTP type is invalid; since this is a page ABOUT the INTP type, the existence of the type itself is a basic axiom. I believe the validity of the MBTI is addressed on the MBTI page; it is redundant and - dare I say - unencyclopedic to bring the issue up on each of the sixteen pages. --Chainedwind 01:05, 18 October 2007 (UTC)
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- 1. I'm not suggesting that the issue be fully addressed on all sixteen pages. That would be redundant. 2. To wit: "since this is a page ABOUT the INTP type, the existence of the type itself is a basic axiom" - Nope. The axiom is not that actual people are INTPs but that there exists such a concept as the INTP type and that it is notable because it has received coverage and attention. The same is true of Cold Fusion and Perpetual Motion- yet you don't see text there to the extent of "Type III perpetual motion machines work by tapping the nth dimension then inverting the polarity on the neutron flow..." and so on. And that's exactly the kind of thing going on this article ("INTP types are quiet, thoughtful, analytical individuals...", "An insulted INTP, however, has a tendency to unveil their full mastery of logical intuition..."). I'm not looking at a total re-write here as much as a change of perspective, and, appropriately, tone. --AceMyth 06:19, 18 October 2007 (UTC)
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- I see what you're saying. However, what's the alternative? Change all references to "INTP individuals" to "hypothetical INTP individuals"? Obviously that's not a good solution, but having been hammered by physics for the last two hours, I can't think of anything else. --Chainedwind 01:29, 19 October 2007 (UTC)
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[edit] INTPCentral Link
The current hyperlink directed to a urbandictionary.com entry on a sexual term. I removed the link. Anyone who knows where it originally directed to should replace it with the correct site. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 68.230.161.164 (talk) 22:37, 12 November 2007 (UTC)
[edit] Lists of INTP people
Seems to be unfounded. Take Alighieri, for example. He'd have been hard put to get hold of an MBTI test in the 13th century, right? So including him was just somebody's judgement based on his writings.
Unless serious references are added both lists should probably be deleted. 78.50.18.208 (talk) 16:43, 24 February 2008 (UTC)
- MBTI test can be deduced based on how a person expresses him or her self. It is suggested that Dante Alighieri's writings reflect a certain personality that matches this MBTI type. Which type do you think he is? --mrg3105 (comms) If you're not taking any flak, you're not over the target. 21:12, 24 February 2008 (UTC)
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- But without any refs, it's all speculative and OR, right? Carl.bunderson (talk) 04:45, 25 February 2008 (UTC)
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- Well, no. The article itself explores one of the aspects of the Jungian theory in psychoanalysis. This was OR in the 1930s. It is now a widely used method to assess personality for various purposes. This list is here to allow those interested in the method to try and explore it by analyzing lives and works of notable individuals about whom this information is available in their articles, or who can be analyzed through their works (acting, writing, etc.). The purpose of the list is for the reader to explore the method. This is why it is not a "List of". You may be interested in my proposal here.--mrg3105 (comms) If you're not taking any flak, you're not over the target. 05:22, 25 February 2008 (UTC)
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- Well my problem isn't with the list itself; the idea of the list is fine, and indeed good. But the content is what I'm curious/concerned about. I feel (along with the anon, I think) that saying Dante (and everyone else on the list) is an INTP is speculative and OR without a reliable, secondary source saying that--per the tags on it. It looks like random people have just decided "oh, he seems like an INTP from what I've read about him and the MBTI test", rather than scholars who actually know what they're talking about saying it. Carl.bunderson (talk) 05:37, 25 February 2008 (UTC)
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- Fair enough Carl. Do you want me to move the list to my sandbox? I can tell you that this would not be a problem, but I will be unlikely to contribute references because I am supposed to be working on a historical project for the better part of the next two years. This is besides other side issues. If you prefer, a request to contribute references can be added.
- Many of these individuals had biographies and autobiographies published, so these can be added to the entries as a means for those interested in understanding why they are listed here to go and read them. Psychology is not an exact science. As far as I'm concerned much of it is OR outside of Wikipedia also ;o)--mrg3105 (comms) If you're not taking any flak, you're not over the target. 05:55, 25 February 2008 (UTC)
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- Well, I guess this was pointless, as I'm fine with the status quo. Leaving them in the article with the tag up is fine with me. I'm willing to invest a little time looking into it. How about I do a Google search, and a Google scholar search, to look for sources for all this, and I'll delete those things for which I don't find references. Is that agreeable? Carl.bunderson (talk) 06:06, 25 February 2008 (UTC)
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This list is soo bogus.. IT IS *WORSE* THAN RANDOM. Total B...s... —Preceding unsigned comment added by 76.176.186.107 (talk) 05:18, 20 March 2008 (UTC)
- Sorry, but I agree with ANON on this. It's an unsourced list of people with an allegation - made on no authority - that they have a certain personality type. Unless anyone has a sensible objection (which squares with WP:BLP) I'll remove the list, then only allow back onto the page items which are adequately sourced. AndyJones (talk) 08:22, 20 March 2008 (UTC)
[edit] INTP Central link
There is a comment before this link in the article that says "Please see talk page before removing this link", yet there is nothing on the talk page about why this link shouldn't be removed. I have removed it because it is an example of "links normally to be avoided" in the External Links guideline (it's a discussion group). These links are discouraged because discussion forums contain original research and personal opinions, both of which go against core Wikipedia principles neutral point of view, verifiability and reliable sources. If you would like to add the link back again, please explain why we should ignore the External Links guideline and go against the core principles mentioned. Thanks, Somno (talk) 03:22, 2 March 2008 (UTC)
- It's not there as a source of information in the way that you're thinking. Consider the link a recommendation for visitors to observe large populations, as it were, of INTPs.
--68.100.120.39 (talk) 00:38, 26 March 2008 (UTC)
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- Several other ways to look at it: An article about RPGs has external links to continually updating collections of RPGs; similarly, INTPc is a continually updating collection of INTPs. The Barack Obama article has a link to the subject's website; "INTP" is not a person, but this is pretty much the closest you can get to an official INTP website. I can see the point of not linking discussion forums in general, but the thing is, INTPc is pretty big (in the influence sense) as far as INTP-related sites go, you know? 68.100.120.39 (talk) 22:50, 1 May 2008 (UTC)
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[edit] POV Problems in this article
In my opinion this article is quite clearly written from the point of view of someone who is, or considers themselves to be, INTP type. Consequently it is a poor article by WP standards. I don't consider myself an expert, so I will refrain from editing, but let's please get away from emotive statements like "Many previously secure, confident people have been left crushed by an INTP's sudden and piercingly accurate criticism". My N tells me that this sentence is pure self-congratulatory rubbish. Let's please show rigour in the social sciences. Dhatfield (talk) 08:30, 4 April 2008 (UTC)
- From socionics' standpoint, one out of 16 people are INTPs/LIIs. This kind of POV statement is like asking a conservative not to contribute to an article about conservatism. The concept of POV wasn't developed with typology in mind, and if you try to combine traditional POV theories with typology then all you get is a mess.
- I can link you to an article showing just how pointless the discussion is.
- On the other hand, I'm an INTp type myself and I agree that the phraseology you are critiquing is a little much.... Tcaudilllg (talk) 05:20, 8 May 2008 (UTC)
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- The problem isn't with INTPs editing the article; it's with including material that isn't reliable and objective. I think there's a certain amount of value in the quoted statement, which relates to behavior of INTPs under the influence of their inferior Extraverted Feeling. The solution isn't really to delete the statement, but to rewrite it so that it's less "emotive." The INTP might consider a criticism piercingly accurate, but they tend to be pretty poor judges of emotional data, according to Isabel Myers. As she wrote about Introverted Thinking types in Gifts Differing, "They are not apt to know, unless told, what matters emotionally to another person." ThreeOfCups (talk) 00:51, 9 May 2008 (UTC)
[edit] INTP =/= ILI
I'm going to perform the redirection, as it is only confusion is stemming from this pair of articles pointing towards each other. A comparison between the function models makes it clear: INTP corresponds to LII, not ILI. Note that ILI's most confident function is their ability to make plans (introverted intuition), none of which is discussed in this article. —Preceding unsigned comment added by Tcaudilllg (talk • contribs) 05:32, 8 May 2008 (UTC)
[edit] Templates
I created templates for text that's the same across all 16 MBTI type articles to eliminate the hours of work it takes to update the same text 16 times. This is a recommended use for templates according to Wikipedia policy WM:TEMP.
To edit the templates:
1. Click the Edit link on the section of the article you want to change.
2. Select and copy the title of the template page (the text between the double braces).
3. Paste the copied text into the Wikipedia search box and press Go (not Search).
This will take you to the template. Make sure that the changes you make to the templates are appropriate for all 16 MBTI type articles! (ENFJ, ISTP, etc.) ThreeOfCups (talk) 02:00, 22 May 2008 (UTC)
[edit] Spelling of Extraversion
The MBTI, Keirsey Temperament Sorter, and related Jung Typology assessments use the original spelling, Extraversion, rather than the modern corruption, Extroversion. In this context, Extraversion is jargon and should be thus spelled. ThreeOfCups (talk) 14:54, 7 June 2008 (UTC)