EN(T) tipo di personalità MBTI

Personalità

"Che tipo di personalità è EN(T)? EN(T) è un tipo di personalità ENTP in mbti, 7w8 - sp/so - 783 in enneagram, SCUEI in big 5, ILE in socionics."

EN(T) by J.H. Van Der Hoop Reason is in intuitive people subordinate to spontaneous inspiration. It is often well developed, but is nevertheless influenced by qualities peculiar to intuition. One of the results of this is a great liveliness and flexibility in reasoning power, and a striving after originality. People of this type are able to converse in a lively way concerning all kinds of problems, and soon come to be regarded in their circle as authorities in any field. Their views often appear original, but they are frequently taken over from other people and cleverly made use of. At the same time they are apt to be ill-considered, and are seldom, if at all, elaborated into useful ideas. Thought is for these people nothing but a means to attain some effect; it is never an end in itself, as with the intellectual person who seeks in it some foundation for his life. At school, children of this type are the despair of the teacher, because while they show clear evidence of good reasoning powers, it is difficult to persuade them to make use of them and to develop them, unless they can see some immediate advantage from so doing. If they have promised themselves to fulfil some purpose, or if their competitive interest has been aroused, they may occasionally distinguish themselves in the intellectual sphere ; but in thought itself they find only moderate gratification. Many intellectual perceptions seem to come to them, as it were, unbidden; but if this does not happen, they generally fight shy of the trouble which it will cost them to master anything. Hence there is often something fragmentary about their knowledge. They will let contradictions stand side by side unresolved without being troubled by them, and in their theorizing they are apt to be very inconsistent. Their knowledge is not regulated by any objective system, but develops in line with their personal experiences and needs. Thus a certain ego-centricity will be evident. Since they must always allow some scope for inspiration, they will never tie themselves up too closely with formulations and rules. Room must be left for further possibilities. This occasionally gives an impression of insincerity, and may indeed lead to it. But if this characteristic is kept under control, it will imply a wide understanding, and receptivity to the views of others. This quality enables them to contribute a great deal in scientific and practical problems towards the examination of new points of view, and to bringing people of various kinds together. The special qualities in the thinking of such an individual are well illustrated by Count Keyserling. Types in Psychopathy In more complicated individuals of this kind, the effect of a subsidiary function may offer further explanation of the structure of conscious orientation. We may expect to find an association with thought, particularly in men. Their adventurous spirit then finds expression in intellectual and practical fields, in the form of inventions, discoveries, scientific publications, commercial and political undertakings, all of which have in common the propagation of premature intuitions by means of intellectual arguments which do not quite meet the case. Intuitions bearing the mark of genius may with these people occur in the midst of more or less nonsensical speculations. The mixture of acuity and fanciful imagination often makes a bewildering impression on their environment. They are found to be accessible to neither facts nor arguments based on feeling, and it is even difficult to get at them through thought, since, in the main, their thinking is determined by intuitions.

Biografia

This combination tends toward speculation, especially speculative philosophy. Many plans are made and sometimes there can be scientific discoveries. Such types are often in a position to make brilliant business deals, whereas the pure intuitive can never reap the fruits of his perceptions. Source: "Personality" by Carl Alfred Meier

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