Auburn
Luftschloss Schöpfer
- Local time
- Yesterday 9:38 PM
- Joined
- Sep 26, 2008
- Messages
- 2,298
I'm actually surprised this has had little discussion in this forum. Seeing how it is our nature to question most any concept and theory down to the very nuts and bolts, why not question the MBTI in the same manner?
I wonder...
We all seem to join this forum with the preconception that the MBTI holds at least some, if not a substantial, level of truth in it. I wonder why...
Objectively speaking it doesn't make sense to accept a concept unless it stands up the harshest criticism. Yet many, if not all, of us here have no physical/neurological evidence to substantiate the claims of the MBTI. We believe in it because we see the external manifestations of human behavior fit the model outlined by the MBTI. We see the art, and assume there is an artist. We assume that in order for such patterns to be so accurate, it must have a level of neurological truth. Is that not too large of an assumption to make?
I suspect we overlook this large hole/assumtion in the MBTI and are persuaded to believe it because it describes our own selves so well (subjective). "It works for me, so it must be true". But is there really any empirical/logical evidence for what we believe?
Perhaps I have missed something and there is indeed neurological proof for the claims of the MBTI. However I suspect there are none because I have yet to come across a counselor or psychologist who actually took the MBTI theory seriously. Why wouldn't psychologist use such an asset as the MBTI? The only answer that seems plausible is that perhaps the MBTI is only a mere illusion that is accepted by only a handful of people; by those few who find within it a pattern of their own behavior and therefore find an acceptance in it.
I wonder...
We all seem to join this forum with the preconception that the MBTI holds at least some, if not a substantial, level of truth in it. I wonder why...
Objectively speaking it doesn't make sense to accept a concept unless it stands up the harshest criticism. Yet many, if not all, of us here have no physical/neurological evidence to substantiate the claims of the MBTI. We believe in it because we see the external manifestations of human behavior fit the model outlined by the MBTI. We see the art, and assume there is an artist. We assume that in order for such patterns to be so accurate, it must have a level of neurological truth. Is that not too large of an assumption to make?
I suspect we overlook this large hole/assumtion in the MBTI and are persuaded to believe it because it describes our own selves so well (subjective). "It works for me, so it must be true". But is there really any empirical/logical evidence for what we believe?
Perhaps I have missed something and there is indeed neurological proof for the claims of the MBTI. However I suspect there are none because I have yet to come across a counselor or psychologist who actually took the MBTI theory seriously. Why wouldn't psychologist use such an asset as the MBTI? The only answer that seems plausible is that perhaps the MBTI is only a mere illusion that is accepted by only a handful of people; by those few who find within it a pattern of their own behavior and therefore find an acceptance in it.