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I read the Real ENTP post, which was awesome by the way, and I was wondering if you could expand upon the differences between ENTPs and INTPs and how you can tell which one you are. Thanks!
MBTI is a wonderful and sad tool. On the one hand, thereās no surefire way to know someoneās type. On the other hand, there are countless thousands of little ways that type presents itself. I owe my success at typing others to my experience cataloging these quirks, and thatās what Iāll now impart.
Speaking Style
INTPs have a very unique and telltale manner of speech. When an INTP talks, there is an awkwardness. A slowness. Every few words there will be a tiny pause, only milliseconds long, but a trained ear can hear it. The reason they speak this way is that they are constantly reevaluating what theyāre going to say. Constantly checking their words against what they believe, and deciding how best to adjust what theyāre saying to more adequately express that belief. Because of the depth of Ti and the breadth of Ne, this process takes far longer than it does for other types. And despite years of searching, I have yet to find a non-INTP exhibit this nor an INTP who does not.
I should point out that everybody takes pauses, especially introverts. Itās the nature of the pauses that matters. Other people will speak fluidly, then take long pauses. INTPs will speak in a choppy manner punctuated by a pause every few seconds.
Problem Solving
When an ENTP solves problems, their approach is to find patterns and connections. Some of these are internal patterns. As soon as they find one truth, they will try to populate any similar things with the same truth, often without checking to make sure thatās actually valid. Some of these are external patterns. ENTPs will recall other problems theyāre familiar with that are related in some way to the problem theyāre currently addressing, and they will try to map the solution to the problem they recalled onto the problem theyāre addressing. Often without checking to make sure thatās actually valid.
When an INTP solves problems, there is no such thing. The INTP will dive directly into the logic of the problem, looking for as many ways as they can to prove simple declarative statements about the solution that they can use to narrow it down. This is this way, and that is this way, so this must be this way, which means that canāt be this. The INTP will do this exhaustively and meticulously until they have an impenetrable argument for the solution they eventually find. Now, often this solution is not as impenetrable as they believe because INTPs can often fail to see the ābigger pictureā dynamics of whatās going on, inadvertently limiting the problems by making assumptions they arenāt aware of. However, within these potentially erroneous assumptions, their solution is invulnerable.
I have seen this crop up many times between my best friend (INTP) and me when we solve riddles or explore mathematics together. He will dive right into the meat, and I will say āno, thereās gotta be some clever way to approach thisā. I will try to sum up the problem in simpler terms and generalize it, while he will try to wield the specifics of the problem to destroy it. He doesnāt care how the solution is reached, or whether it is elegant. He cares that it is true. And I care that it is pretty. Even if it isnāt true; if I find a pretty idea, and it isnāt the solution, Iāll just find a problem to which my idea is the solution so I can enjoy how pretty it is. And then Iāll argue with him about how my problem is superior.
Extraversion
Obviously, a lot of the differences between INTPs and ENTPs boil down to introversion and extraversion. What confuses people is that the everyday meaning of the word āintrovertā has almost nothing to do with the Jungian definition. In typology, an introvert is a person who is primarily absorbed by their subjective interpretation of the world rather than the objective nature of the situation at hand. An extravert is the opposite, concerned with the situation more than their interpretation. The easiest way Iāve found to determine who is a Jungian introvert and who is a Jungian extravert is this:
An ENTP, when involved in a conversation, will take on a dominant role. They will actively contribute and often be a controlling force in the direction the conversation takes. When the ENTP is bored, they will leave altogether.An INTP, when involved in a conversation, will take on a submissive role. They will frequently recede back into their minds, absorbing the ideas, only contributing when they want to steer the conversation in a more interesting direction or away from an impending calamity they see.An ENTP, when having a deep one-on-one conversation, will be actively interested in you. They will want to discover a new connection they share with you, or explore a new idea with you, or learn about you, or show you something you didnāt know before about yourself. They take pleasure in novelty, enlightenment, and learning, and itās all about you.An INTP, when having a deep one-on-one conversation, will be actively interested in talking about themselves. They will want to share all of their memories, experiences, convictions, beliefs, personal projects, and even emotions (yes, emotions). Itāll be fun for them to finally be able to share themselves with somebody else. And as some of you have come to know, when you get an INTP talking, they never, ever stop. Which to me is more endearing than it is annoying, though it is both.
Summary
Look for cases where Ne and Ti conflict. Does the person love finding connections and new ideas more than they love truth? ENTP. Does the person love logic and deduction and truth more than the elegance of the solution? INTP.
Look for introversion and extraversion. Do they dominate conversations? ENTP. Are they quiet until they can talk about themselves? INTP
Introvert's horrid spring break:
Spring break was supposed to be a time for recharging and recuperating from all the heavy social crap of school and work, but this week so far has been almost just as hard as a heavy week of school, maybe worse. Usually my family works more during spring break and my sister will still be busy with some classes, but not this year. The majority of my family has been home all week; my sister who I share a room with, usually works most of the day now has had two weeks off. I swear it's kill me; every where I go in my house there are people, I can't even hide in my bedroom. I am soooo so tired; I have been surrounded by people this entire week and I can't breath. I don't know how I will manage a another week of this constant state of falsified energy and emotion.
I speak in songs, how else do you tell someone they're both your greatest joy and the person who could shatter you into a million perfect pieces? The chorus is the sound of my heart screaming his name, even knowing the danger. But then we kiss, and it's pure, electric, blood-pumping chaos. (ļ¼ā²ā`)
"I crave time by myself to sit and heal my heart before I step out into the world again." - Gemman Troy
My Introvert Life on the Top of the Mountain July 2020 | Contructing my ...
the 8th wonder of the world is getting to know me on a personal level