@OneNormalKnight I love your avatar. My mom had that same edition of “The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe.”
I’m an INFJ. Sometimes I consider the possibility I might be an INTJ, but I’m pretty positive I use Fe/Ti and I know I lead with Ni, so cognitively, INFJ is the only option.
However, I’ve tested as INFJ, INTJ, INTP, ISFJ, and INFP, which just goes to show the wide range of results a single person could get depending on the test they take.
@Honeyraven Thanks, I grew up with the books
Consistently get INFJ or ISFJ in all the tests so idk which
Introverted (I) 108% Extroverted (E) -8%
Intuitive (N) 81% Sensing (S) 19%
Feeling (F) 67% Thinking (T) 33%
Perceiving § 75% Judging (J) 25%
Your type is: INFP
INFP - “Questor”. High capacity for caring. Emotional face to the world. High sense of honor derived from internal values. 4.4% of total population.
So I’m negative percent extroverted… Didn’t know that was possible.
I’ve taken several MBTI’s, and I primarily identify as INFJ, since I’ve gotten that score 2-3 times. I’ve gotten INTJ once, INFP once or twice (including this one), and INTP once or twice as well. I’ve gotten a much closer margin for F/T and J/P, almost 1% difference at one point, in favor of F.
@IrisShadow Sounds like we might be pretty similar.
For those of you who are confused about your types, try looking at the cognitive functions and then eliminate the ones you don’t use: http://www.cognitiveprocesses.com/Cognitive-Functions/index.cfm
Personally, I think examining the cognitive functions is the best way to help determine which type one actually is, after mbti tests have narrowed down the options.
For example, an INFP uses completely different cognitive functions than an INFJ: Fi>NE>Si>Te vs. Ni>Fe>Ti>Se. They really aren’t that similar cognitively, so it should be relatively easy to rule out one or the other. Although the INFP is labeled as a “perceiver,” it actually leads with a judging function (Fi). The only reason it is a “p” instead of a “j” is because the judging function is introverted. The exact opposite case is the INFJ, which, while labeled a “judging” type, actually leads with a perceiving function (Ni).