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MBTI
Personality Types
INTJ
Introverted
- iNtuitive
- Thinking
- Judging
What Is the INTJ
Personality?
The
INTJ has a mind for complex and abstract thought. They develop models
that explain the abstract and that model physical reality, thus creating
structures that are applicable to business, science and technology. They
can be seen in disproportionate numbers in science, mathematical fields,
research and development and computer science.
INTJs observe the complexity of the physical world
and are adept at seeing patterns and how they fit into other patterns.
Alan
Greenspan,
b. 1926, is best known as the Chairman of the Federal Reserve Board, the
U.S. national banking system. As an INTJ type, Greenspan was enormously
effective at seeing the patterns in the economy and guiding the nation
through booms and busts, warning of "irrational exuberance" and guiding
in downturns to "soft landings."
INTJs value knowledge and often have formidable
minds which they like to apply to achieve practical outcomes. From this
process they identify the relevant models and create ways to give them
future practical application.
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Click on any one of the 16
MBTI types for a full description of your type or descriptions
of colleagues, family and friends.
They are
efficient and appreciate the simplicity of an elegant theory
that explains hugely complicated ideas. They are confident in
their ideas and trust them over the ideas of others. If there
is disagreement with many opinions, INTJs are sure that they
alone can be correct.
The primary function
that directs the INTJ is his or her Intuition. They search for a
central insight onto which they add logical analysis and data.
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INTJs want to be sure that
their process is efficient and that they begin with the "right
questions," knowing then and only then that their answers will be right.
INTJs have a reputation for getting practical results in the
implementation of their ideas and do not want to be seen as "ivory
tower" thinkers, though in many cases people may assume them to be that.
They can be quite tough, practical, and relentless in bringing practical
ideas into use.
They work to be concise; as
one INTJ told us, the best email is one word: "Yes" or "no."
INTJs as Team
Members
INTJs are often team "power players." At the same
time, they most often are a power unto themselves. They will often have
more subject knowledge on the issue at hand than others. Their ability
to apply thought to implementation often make them invaluable. INTJs
often rise to high positions because of their long-range planning
ability.
Edwin
Hubble
(1889-1953), an INTJ type, was an
astronomer who saw previously unseen patterns in the universe. He
discovered the galaxies moving away from each other. By calculating
their speed, he reasoned that they came from a single point. He and
others discovered the "Big Bang," the beginning of time as we know it.
INTJs can sometimes be seen in groups as unbending, although they often
don’t see themselves as unwilling to change.
They
simply want data that would convince them to change their minds. People
can find INTJs to be frustrating in that they can be quite compelling
and charming in presentations, but at the same time seem aloof and
difficult to know in social conversations. They can seem to always be
keeping a bit of themselves deep inside that is not displayed to those
around them.

What Are INTJ Issues and
Challenges in Groups/Best Alliances?
INTJs can appear
"Spock-like"—logical, intriguing and distant.
INTJs do well to ally
themselves with those personality types who tend to convince through
gaining the support of others.
C. S. Lewis
(1898-1963) was one of the most gifted writers and thinkers of the 20th
Century. An INTJ type, Lewis depicted unseen worlds in writings such as
the Screwtape Letters and the Chronicles of Narnia, still popular today
in bookstores and movies.
The INTJ will do well to ally himself or
herself with those who are more sensitive to the political realities of
the workplace, as well as to team dynamics and interpersonal relations.
In this way they can ally themselves with those who will not just be
convinced by logic and data.
INTJs and the Rest
of Their Lives
INTJs are fascinating conversationalists to those who are in their
inner circle. They can be great lecturers on complex and unknown topics
and delight in explaining the difficult to explain. They are intensely
loyal to family and friends and are protective of others in
relationships. Their need for economy and efficiency of speech can be
quite frustrating to some. This is one of the reasons they are seen as
hard to know. Those in relationships with INTJs will need to "give them
space," realizing that they must have distance to think and analyze.
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