The Portrait of the Mastermind Rational (iNTj)

| | Comments (4)

I recently spoke with some people who gave the Myers-Briggs personality test to the entirity of Oregon Episcopal School and looked for a correlation with birth order. After hearing of their project, I decided to take an online version of the test myself. The results are surprisingly accurate (at least in my perception of my own character). Here is a description of the iNTj personality type:

"Of the four aspects of strategic analysis and definition, it is the contingency planning or entailment organizing role that reaches the highest development in Masterminds. Entailing or contingency planning is not an informative activity, rather it is a directive one in which the planner tells others what to do and in what order to do it. As the organizing capabilities the Masterminds increase so does their inclination to take charge of whatever is going on.

It is in their abilities that Masterminds differ from the other Rationals, while in most of their attitudes they are just like the others. However there is one attitude that sets them apart from other Rationals: they tend to be much more self-confident than the rest, having, for obscure reasons, developed a very strong will. They are rather rare, comprising no more than, say, one percent of the population. Being very judicious, decisions come naturally to them; indeed, they can hardly rest until they have things settled, decided, and set. They are the people who are able to formulate coherent and comprehensive contingency plans, hence contingency organizers or "entailers."

Masterminds will adopt ideas only if they are useful, which is to say if they work efficiently toward accomplishing the Mastermind's well-defined goals. Natural leaders, Masterminds are not at all eager to take command of projects or groups, preferring to stay in the background until others demonstrate their inability to lead. Once in charge, however, Masterminds are the supreme pragmatists, seeing reality as a crucible for refining their strategies for goal-directed action. In a sense, Masterminds approach reality as they would a giant chess board, always seeking strategies that have a high payoff, and always devising contingency plans in case of error or adversity. To the Mastermind, organizational structure and operational procedures are never arbitrary, never set in concrete, but are quite malleable and can be changed, improved, streamlined. In their drive for efficient action, Masterminds are the most open-minded of all the types. No idea is too far-fetched to be entertained-if it is useful. Masterminds are natural brainstormers, always open to new concepts and, in fact, aggressively seeking them. They are also alert to the consequences of applying new ideas or positions. Theories which cannot be made to work are quickly discarded by the Masterminds. On the other hand, Masterminds can be quite ruthless in implementing effective ideas, seldom counting personal cost in terms of time and energy."

4 Comments

Kiva said:

Hey, I've taken it before and I'm an INTJ, too. Crazy!

adamjanderson said:

From this description, I get the impression that INTJs are a lot like people such as Stalin and Hitler. The whole thing about seeing the world as a giant chessboard really conjures up images of the world conqueror.

Quark said:

Where'd you take this test? I suspect I'm not INTJ, but I am curious about what they label me to be.

Kiva said:

From what I recall, the Stalin/Hitler type is the ENTJ (the same, but extroverted). I was in D.C., and we had dinner with my dad's cousin, and she mentioned she was an ENTJ, and I think she said it was the same as Stalin. If you google it, I'm sure you'll come up with websites that include famous people of each personality type.

Leave a comment

About this Entry

This page contains a single entry by Adam Anderson published on March 6, 2006 9:38 PM.

I Love Physics!! was the previous entry in this blog.

Linea de los Muertos is the next entry in this blog.

Find recent content on the main index or look in the archives to find all content.

Powered by Movable Type 4.01