Basics:
Welcome back fellow MBTI enthusiasts!!
In this post, I will briefly explain and go over the basics of MBTI types.
As I have mentioned in my previous post- and will do so again - 16Personalities is not the best website when it comes to typing due to its commonly occurring mistypes. 16Personalities does not look behind the labels of each MBTI, meaning the test does not take cognitive stacking into consideration but instead only types a person based on introversion/extroversion, intuition/sensing, feeling/thinking, and perceiving/judging. With all this explained, my purpose of creating this blog was not only to help those who want an in-depth, yet beginner-level explanation of what the whole personality typing thing is about, but I wanted to explain personality typing in a way I haven’t seen anyone do so far. I plan to explain MBTI’s, then tie them with cognitive functions, then bring in enneagrams to add a finishing ribbon to the process.
Without further ado, let’s begin.
There are 16 MBTI personality types, each represented by a 4 letter acronym, and each letter in the acronym has two opposing variants. This may seem badly worded and quite confusing so let me demonstrate:
The first letter in the acronym represents whether the type is more introverted or extroverted, so it is represented by an I for introverted, or an E for extroverted.
The second letter in the acronym represents if the type relies more on their intuition, or their sensing when they process information, so it is represented by an N for intuition, or an S for sensing. note: an N is used to represent intuition because it simply would be confusing if there were two I’s in an introverted, intuitive type.
The third letter in the acronym represents whether thinking or feeling is the type’s dominant conclusion reaching or decision-making process, so it is represented by either a T for thinking and an F for feeling.
The fourth, and last, letter in the acronym represents whether a type is more of a perceiver or a judging type, so it is represented by a P for perceiving and a J for judging.
The 16 Types themselves are:
ENFP ENFJ ENTP ENTJ ESFP ESFJ ESTP ESTJ INFP INFJ INTP INTJ ISFP ISFJ ISTP ISTJ (not organized in any specific order).
















