Tholomyes
Redshirt
- Local time
- Today 5:00 AM
- Joined
- Dec 16, 2013
- Messages
- 6
Trying to determine my MBTI type;
So, I've taken the MBTI test multiple times, through multiple different venues that offer different phrasings on roughly the same basic questions, and I've scored as INTP every time, so far, but I'm still somewhat unconvinced. I am very certain of my N and P subsets, but F and E are a bit uncertain. I suppose part of the issue is that I suffer from very strong social anxiety, to the point that I have been diagnosed with AvPD (avoidant personality disorder), which in short, means though I want social interaction, I experience strong anxiety and reluctance to do so. I have read enough on the subject to know that Personality Disorders do not necessarily align with MBTI typing. As such, though I test as "I" I'm not convinced that that isn't my AvPD overpowering the rest of my personality on that question. For example, a question that has appeared on many MBTI tests in some form or another is: "I feel very comfortable around people." The issue, however, is that even if I were Extroverted, I would answer "Very Inaccurate" as my AvPD causes me intense anxiety in social situations, especially ones where I am relatively unfamiliar with the people in question.
The other issue that I have is that, while I test "T" and with very few exceptions, when logic and emotion come into conflict on a decision, logic wins out, I can't deny it's a hard-fought mental battle, and the fact that the areas in which I seem to differ most from the "portrait of a typical INTP" are in Feeling; as I've read, the stereotypical INTP can be overcritical, where I tend to be undercritical, and reluctant to actually provide criticism even when I know there's a fault in someone's reasoning. This is especially evident with group projects. As an engineering student, I am frequently put in a situation where a group member or multiple group members plan out an approach that I can forsee failing, for one reason or another. Even if I might know a better approach, if the faulty approach has been presented, I won't press the issue, and allow the first approach to fail, solely for the sake of conflict avoidance. While this might play into the inferior Fe function, it seems like even in this situation, my Ti should overrule it. Moreover, rather than the often cold, relatively unemotional portrait of an INTP, I feel very strong internal emotional responces; repressed very strongly, so they never reach the surface or affect my decision making, but definitely there under the surface. Even when flying in the face of my own rational arguments, I will experience emotional responces such as self loathing and self deprication, or even more perplexing, Survivor's guilt in the case of a natural, unpreventable death, which usually is ouside the bounds of what initiates such a psychological response.
In any event I would like to see if any members more familiar with the theory behind the MBTI can determine the answer to how either of these issues affects the test-given type, in terms of my actual personality type, or if this is within the normal bounds of an INTP.
So, I've taken the MBTI test multiple times, through multiple different venues that offer different phrasings on roughly the same basic questions, and I've scored as INTP every time, so far, but I'm still somewhat unconvinced. I am very certain of my N and P subsets, but F and E are a bit uncertain. I suppose part of the issue is that I suffer from very strong social anxiety, to the point that I have been diagnosed with AvPD (avoidant personality disorder), which in short, means though I want social interaction, I experience strong anxiety and reluctance to do so. I have read enough on the subject to know that Personality Disorders do not necessarily align with MBTI typing. As such, though I test as "I" I'm not convinced that that isn't my AvPD overpowering the rest of my personality on that question. For example, a question that has appeared on many MBTI tests in some form or another is: "I feel very comfortable around people." The issue, however, is that even if I were Extroverted, I would answer "Very Inaccurate" as my AvPD causes me intense anxiety in social situations, especially ones where I am relatively unfamiliar with the people in question.
The other issue that I have is that, while I test "T" and with very few exceptions, when logic and emotion come into conflict on a decision, logic wins out, I can't deny it's a hard-fought mental battle, and the fact that the areas in which I seem to differ most from the "portrait of a typical INTP" are in Feeling; as I've read, the stereotypical INTP can be overcritical, where I tend to be undercritical, and reluctant to actually provide criticism even when I know there's a fault in someone's reasoning. This is especially evident with group projects. As an engineering student, I am frequently put in a situation where a group member or multiple group members plan out an approach that I can forsee failing, for one reason or another. Even if I might know a better approach, if the faulty approach has been presented, I won't press the issue, and allow the first approach to fail, solely for the sake of conflict avoidance. While this might play into the inferior Fe function, it seems like even in this situation, my Ti should overrule it. Moreover, rather than the often cold, relatively unemotional portrait of an INTP, I feel very strong internal emotional responces; repressed very strongly, so they never reach the surface or affect my decision making, but definitely there under the surface. Even when flying in the face of my own rational arguments, I will experience emotional responces such as self loathing and self deprication, or even more perplexing, Survivor's guilt in the case of a natural, unpreventable death, which usually is ouside the bounds of what initiates such a psychological response.
In any event I would like to see if any members more familiar with the theory behind the MBTI can determine the answer to how either of these issues affects the test-given type, in terms of my actual personality type, or if this is within the normal bounds of an INTP.