I can see how it's not very INTP-like to have that connection, but as I said in another thread, I have found connections to myself in almost every introverted MBTI category, INFJ especially. INTP always fits me better in the end, though, and every test I've taken (and I've taken quite a few for the most definite results possible) has labeled me an INTP. I doubt one can fit the mold absolutely perfectly, because of differing situations, experiences, etc.
Correct. You'll generally find yourself relating to bits and pieces of lots of different profiles because the profiles aren't really the core of personality, but lists of common 'symptoms' of the personality. For example, in medicine, an upset stomach can be a symptom of hundreds of conditions. Likewise something as broad as shyness can be a symptom of many types (even some versions of extroverted types).
The Myers-Briggs model was formed as a (poor) practical application of Jung's (more rich) Cognitive Functions model. It is essentially a condensed form of the theory that makes it easier to market as a career assessment - and providing "instant insight" into your psyche. Really, it's part of the American culture of wanting instant results.
I vs E is something that most people can understand. As with the rest of the four dichotomies. Myers over-stereotyped Jung's work for the general populace, but that really isn't how the psyche works. The four dichotomies (I vs E, N vs S, T vs F, J vs P) don't even
exist in reality. Those concepts do exist, but they are not pivoted against each other in a way that one is either one or the other. They are attributes. Attributes of the real processes.
The real psychology of Types is much more complex and takes serious study to understand. Not just a 5 minute crash course. Carl Jung never made a quicky questionaire. He understood Type was much too complex to measure with a simple 50 answer quiz, and to try to do so is sincerely quite absurd. Instead, he himself (as a psychiatrist with decades of experience with people) would assess his patients, their personality and a whole lot more.
The irony is that most of us (myself included) would not have even grown an interest in Type theory were it not for the MBTI's popularization of Jung's work. But since the MBTI is only a "face" of the theory, it lacks depth and as you've already seen, leaves many questions dissatisfied. That doesn't mean there aren't answers though, but those limits are only surpassed by weening off Myer's model and studying Jung's model. =p
Believe me, the rabbit hole goes so much deeper, into much more awesomeness. Err, for the record, the acronyms/faces MBTI gives, and the 16 Jungian psyches underneath:
INTP = TiNe
ISTP = TiSe
INFP = FiNe
ISFP = FiSe
INFJ = NiFe
INTJ = NiTe
ISFJ = SiFe
ISTJ = SiTe
ENFJ = FeNi
ESFJ = FeSi
ENTJ = TeNi
ESTJ = TeSi
ESTP = SeTi
ESFP = SeFi
ENTP = NeTi
ENFP = NeFi
You'll see me use those nicks a lot of the time instead, since I prefer to use function-theory over Myers theory. Learn the functions! \o/ Join the revolution! *cough* >.> ...er, got carried away.
Anyhow, here's a place to start:
http://intpforum.com/showthread.php?t=11697
And much more here:
http://intpforum.com/showthread.php?t=6602
That's interesting, what leads you to say that most INTPs only experience connections with nature through nostalgia, as opposed to, say, fascination due to its workings (and analyzing those workings, which seems very INTP to me)?
Because INTPs have Si as their concrete perception function, which isn't a proactive process. Their proactive sensory process is Ne, which is a proxy/abstract perception of reality that rarely sees it for what it is, but instead for what it eludes to. So they don't actively engage with reality, but instead an ever evolving hypothetical of it -- feeding the disconnected/impersonal process of Ti.
In contrast, types like TiSe or NiFe have a proactive sensory process (Se) which takes in reality richly, literally, sensually, and interacts
with that reality -- while slowly creating an abstract web of interconnections that those real moments have, into Ni.