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This explains me.

Chad

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I was doing some research on INTP and I came across this description of INTP on the website BestFitType.com it was very eery like I had somehow written this about myself years ago and just now reading online. What do you guys think? Is this a good description of INTP?

"I want to know the truth and get down to the bottom of things. It's an internal life, living in the head, theorizing constantly about how things work.
I can link many thoughts and shoot off in multiple directions at once in an attempt to clarify and explain things really well or to try to represent the fullness of who I am and all the different things I can do and can't do. I like to design-not just implementation but the stuff before that. There is a goal, a theme, and I start from that and work through the specifics one by one, keeping the whole thing integrated as I go, until I come up with "the elegant solution." Often when I talk to people they only get from me a few steps-one, thirteen, a hundred. That's all that gets verbalized, and what's very clear to me either I've forgotten or find unnecessary to say out loud, which can come across as confusing at times.
I am very knowledge and big picture oriented. I want to bring everything that can be known into understanding a problem or situation. I enjoy working with those who think like I do but verbalize better. We can end up leaping forward rapidly and building off of ideas, asking questions with an answer in mind but wanting to verify things and learn more. If I am knowledgeable in that area, I always have something to add, to help better understand the idea and add something new. Although sometimes, even when I know we agree, people feel like I am trying to challenge them, which is frustrating because I am just doing it out of excitement. I try to understand all the variables and possible influences and then apply as broad a range of information as I can bring to the problem, to impact why the problem exists. I am interested in developing new skills and trying new ideas with those skills, and I am a good team member, and yet sometimes a little group work can go a long way. Most of all, I love to learn
Central for me is honesty and integrity, especially intellectual integrity. If it's not an honest approach to the issue at hand or to the relationship or organization, then it becomes an illusion-it only appears to have substance. I respect people who are genuine, honest, and open and doing what they are good at and what they enjoy and are up front about what is important to them...
I can be seen as too unfeeling, too quick to start into work with not enough basis laid out for the day, and I'm not much for the personal amenities or socializing. Yet it is important that others are aware they are important to me. It's not the first thing, but it's in my awareness. I tend to try solving personal problems all by myself. Then sometimes I wind up without accurate information from others or about how it will affect others. I believe there must be an answer or a solution if I can just figure it out."
 

Chad

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The only part that didn't quite work for me is the Team work part. I can work in a team if I have to but I don't feel comfortable with my ability to relate to a team.

However, maybe they are talking about a setting were I have my own assignments and jobs in a team setting. I tend to do fine in that type of set up as long as I don't have to depend on someone else's insights.
 

Chad

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Here are a few more interesting tid bits for the same site. They explain some other interesting part on of my personal (INTP) personality but not as well as the OP

How INTPs Build Relationships

For them, team relationships are about sharing expertise. They want to have a joint area of interest and competence to share and energetically engage in collaborative problem solving and strategizing. They typically seek out relationships so they can have different thoughts and experiences yet often feel they lack interpersonal skills. In fact, their relationships can become competitive and may interfere with the intellectual needs that drove them to seek the relationships in the first place...

How INTPs Deal with Conflict

The disruption that comes from team conflict keeps them from thinking clearly, so they avoid confrontation unless it is absolutely necessary. They might avoid conflict for too long, hoping it will go away...

To Forge Better Relationships with INTPs...

Provide a team environment that is calm and conflict-free and where consultative rather than hierarchical relationships are the norm. Give them enough freedom to reflect on how things work, to generate ideas, and to see connections and patterns. Offer them opportunities to direct their energy toward acquisition of knowledge and competence...

How INTPs Approach Doing Work

They are inclined to first analyze a situation, seeking to understand the principles that apply. Then they will want to integrate all kinds of information from a variety of sources. They tend to focus on how things work, why they work that way, and what makes them not work and then try to come up with an elegant solution that really solves the problem...

How INTPs Make Decisions

They tend to quickly decide on the accuracy of theories and frameworks, yet they labor over the accurate expression of ideas. They may avoid decisions regarding an action or establishing order and structure...

How INTPs Respond to Change

They are likely to say they are not resistant to change since they are constantly developing and revising their designs and approaches. However, they do tend to resist change that appears illogical and seems to violate principles. Change that means changing their habitual way of doing routine tasks is also hard for them, especially if a big learning curve is involved...
 

Montresor

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What exactly do you want to talk about?
 

Chad

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What exactly do you want to talk about?

What do you guys think? Is this a good description of INTP?"

basically just wondering how other interpret this description of INTP.

For me it's so far is the one that clicks for me on the most levels.
Since all personal personalities are slight variations on the 16 personality stereotypes I was wondering if anyone else related to this description as much as I did.

I have yet to fine a description of INTP that I didn't find eerily accurate however this one hit home more than any other.
 

HiddenScholar

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Well, from what I've read there are much better written and more detailed descriptions out there... Though it is decent in its own right (far superior to any of my work but then again I'm not a writer).
 

Architect

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Fairly generic description but this part is problematic

Central for me is honesty and integrity, especially intellectual integrity. If it's not an honest approach to the issue at hand or to the relationship or organization, then it becomes an illusion-it only appears to have substance. I respect people who are genuine, honest, and open and doing what they are good at and what they enjoy and are up front about what is important to them...

This seems to lean more in the NF direction. INTP's, as NT types lean towards the pragmatic. I've known NF's who must have this integrity, but for myself and other INTP's I've known having a pragmatic relationship with an organization is often a necessity, and not a burden. For example, take school. What INTP loves school? None of us ... what INTP has/had an honest relationship with school? Very few I believe.

INTP's aren't made for institutional life as the INTJ's are, but given to science and engineering as we are often end up there with a resulting pragmatic working relationship. Not a lot of honesty about it.
 

Chad

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Fairly generic description but this part is problematic



This seems to lean more in the NF direction. INTP's, as NT types lean towards the pragmatic. I've known NF's who must have this integrity, but for myself and other INTP's I've known having a pragmatic relationship with an organization is often a necessity, and not a burden. For example, take school. What INTP loves school? None of us ... what INTP has/had an honest relationship with school? Very few I believe.

INTP's aren't made for institutional life as the INTJ's are, but given to science and engineering as we are often end up there with a resulting pragmatic working relationship. Not a lot of honesty about it.

I guess I can agree with that. I myself don't agree the the description 100% however I found more connections than a lot of other descriptions I have read over the years.

As far as loving school I would disagree with you on this. I love school and if I could be a career student I would be. This of course has nothing to do with the love of the structure of our education system and far more to do with the love of learning everything I can possibly learn.

I as don't have the bad taste in my mouth about school that seem to plague a lot of intellectual children. I.E. I was never bullied or at least I never payed much attention to it if someone was trying to bully me. I did see other people being bullied. However, I have a bigger build than most intellectuals and I have a ability to turn people off in my head. This added to the fact that I had no need to claim the social ladder of the high school, meant that people never saw me as a partially valuable target of ridicule. This may account for why many INTPs hatted school and I loved school. Than again maybe not.
 
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