OmoInisa
Active Member
Hello all.
I deliberately chose this somewhat provocative title. I note that there was a thread a while ago about which type was the most 'independent'. Predictably, it quickly descended into a pissing contest with people arguing for their own type or generally talking past each other. The main reason for this was simply that people had different conceptions of independence in mind. Few intuitives, especially NTs, want to be seen as one of the sheeple.
So I hope to ward off any danger of a repeat of that scenario by nailing down exactly what I have in mind here.
For a little while now I have been pondering the idea of what makes a type independent of the external world. This doesn't consider any notion of 'needing' or not needing anything or anyone, or of not liking to control or be controlled. Those are interesting areas as well, but here I'm interested purely in independence or desire for independence from external circumstances. A bias away from external reality.
I contend that it should be fairly easy to gain consensus (even from non-INTPs) on the proposition that the INTP is the most independent, under this definition.
I'd like to know what people think on this. If there's significant dissent, then we'll no doubt delve into the basis for this hypothesis.
Either way, there are likely a number of interesting areas of exploration that follow on from this, not least whether Keirsey's formulation, while ground-breaking for a number of reasons, has led people to fix lazily into certain limited (and perhaps erroneous) modes of thinking.
I deliberately chose this somewhat provocative title. I note that there was a thread a while ago about which type was the most 'independent'. Predictably, it quickly descended into a pissing contest with people arguing for their own type or generally talking past each other. The main reason for this was simply that people had different conceptions of independence in mind. Few intuitives, especially NTs, want to be seen as one of the sheeple.
So I hope to ward off any danger of a repeat of that scenario by nailing down exactly what I have in mind here.
For a little while now I have been pondering the idea of what makes a type independent of the external world. This doesn't consider any notion of 'needing' or not needing anything or anyone, or of not liking to control or be controlled. Those are interesting areas as well, but here I'm interested purely in independence or desire for independence from external circumstances. A bias away from external reality.
I contend that it should be fairly easy to gain consensus (even from non-INTPs) on the proposition that the INTP is the most independent, under this definition.
I'd like to know what people think on this. If there's significant dissent, then we'll no doubt delve into the basis for this hypothesis.
Either way, there are likely a number of interesting areas of exploration that follow on from this, not least whether Keirsey's formulation, while ground-breaking for a number of reasons, has led people to fix lazily into certain limited (and perhaps erroneous) modes of thinking.