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#21 (permalink) |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2008
Type: ENFP
Location: New Jersey
Posts: 870
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Here is my story on culture/race and mbti. Yesterday I went to the gym and it was all african americans, and you know what, I felt much more comfortable around them then your standard white guy. This is my thinking. The african american culture seems to be a much more XSFP culture. I'm not saying there are more XSFP's, I'm just saying they have a very XSFP outlook on life. When in the gym, I wanted to use a bench and there was someone on it so I asked if I could work in. As he looked up I realized he was an ISTJ but he happily chimed "sure man no problem, let me just finish this set". Now usually if I ask a guy who is a white ISTJ, he has to pull the whole macho thing (this is in my gym, I'm not saying all ISTJs are like this) and and tell me to wait till they are completely finished, usually in a very rude manner (not that I care that much). In white corporate America, you dont necessarily need to be extremely smart to get ahead, as long as your a hard worker. To me, white corporate America tends to seem to look well upon the XSTJ culture. Even some XSFP white guys I know have this XSTJ mentality. When in the gym with all of the african americans, even the XSTJ's put me at ease because of what I see as a culture that accepts XSFP.
That's just from personal experience. Wouldn't mind hearing other ideas.
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"Honest differences are often a healthy sign of progress. " "You must not lose faith in humanity. Humanity is an ocean; if a few drops of the ocean are dirty, the ocean does not become dirty." "An eye for an eye makes the whole world blind." Mahatma Gandhi MBTI: ENFP | Enneagram: 9w1 | Acetylcholine dominant Choleric according to Eysenck's system. Big 5: Primary Inquisitive | Socionics: IEE Gardner: Inter/Intra-personal/Visual Spacial |
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#22 (permalink) | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Jun 2008
Type: INFJ
Location: MN
Posts: 591
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Quote:
I do a lot of work with urban schools and when we can get teachers to reframe behaviors as "extraverted" rather than disruptive, they start learning how to change the classroom environment to help these students succeed...
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edcoaching |
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#23 (permalink) | |
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Vader MacSith
Join Date: Jul 2007
Type: ENTJ
Location: the most important skill of the suicide bomber!
Posts: 1,136
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Quote:
Most people try to be extroverted over here, it's kind of the "ideal" to behave in ESTJ manner. ISTP and ESTP are also hugely popular. Male NF's and male introversion is very much discouraged. If a guy is introverted over here, at least where I live (way up north) it is seen as kinda gay to be silent and goofy.
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"Tell a kid he can't have a rifle, and he'll grow up to be a sniper"
![]() Scots, wha hae wi' Peguy bled, Scots, wham Haight has aften led, Welcome tae your gory bed Or tae Typology C! Wha for Edahn's tea and Law Freedom's sword will strongly draw, Uber stand or GZA fa', Let him follow thee! |
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#24 (permalink) |
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Resident Snot-Nose
Join Date: Aug 2007
Type: INFP
Location: Slums of Shaolin
Posts: 1,418
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I also think it is as a whole much more laid back than the United States for example. But that is very vague:
I don't agree that culture will determine type all that much. It will determine to some degree how the type expresses itself, but not the type itself. And in a place like Canada, culture is different from one town to the next depending on the demographics (i.e. french or english, large asian/arab/ect population, average income and standard of living/education, east coast, southern ontario, prairies, west coast, north, ect). The difference even in one town between two different high schools could be completely different, so I say it makes no difference because culture can mean too many things and have too much variation. I think pretty much every country will be some kind of SJ, most likely STJ, just because those are the kinds of people that make the laws that govern the culture. But as Murkrow said, there are non STJ's that have a large effect on culture and law, and I guess that could be different in different places. Like In Canada I guess it would be some kind of F, maybe INFJ or ENFP.
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I hit the ground and I'm still running but I need a place to stay tonight, I swear I'll be gone in the morning I just need somewhere warm to close my eyes |
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#26 (permalink) | ||
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Senior Member
Join Date: Mar 2008
Type: iNtP
Location: NYC
Posts: 389
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Quote:
Quote:
Caucasian: In Charge (aggressive, serious) African and African American (aggressive, fun loving) Asians: Chart the Course (withdrawn, serious) Jews were perhaps Behind the Scenes or Phlegmatic, because of their humorousness, as well as being influential in a less aggressive way. This wasn't looking at Keirsey temperament, but it is obvious thay the dominant Caucasian society is SJ, making ESTJ. (LaHaye would call this "Choleric Melancholy" or ChlorMel). I never thought about what African American society would be in the "conative" area. Their influence is probably what is softening the country down from it's strict ESTJ model. (Didn't Jennifer or someone also mention it becoming more P now?) So perhaps it is some sort of E_FP. But then, on second thought, there is traditionally a lot of Fe in the culture, especially regarding families, along with tradition. Could it be ESFJ? Or possibly ENTP? Asians would also seem to be very SJ. So, overall, ISTJ. I would think Jews are also SJ, so that may be ISFJ? It seems SJ is the dominant model in the world, because it maintains the people's identities and institutions (in addition to it being the most common temperament for individuals to begin with).
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APS Profile: Inclusion: e/w=1/6 (Supine) |Control: e/w=7/3 (Choleric) |Affection: e/w=1/9 (Supine) Ti 44.3 | Ne 47.2 | Si 37.8 | Fe 21.7 | Te 27.7 | Ni 10.6 | Se 19 | Fi 30.9 ![]() (Homemade bar graph with informal "Step II subscale" approximations) |
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#27 (permalink) | |
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Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2008
Type: ENFP
Location: New Jersey
Posts: 870
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Quote:
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"Honest differences are often a healthy sign of progress. " "You must not lose faith in humanity. Humanity is an ocean; if a few drops of the ocean are dirty, the ocean does not become dirty." "An eye for an eye makes the whole world blind." Mahatma Gandhi MBTI: ENFP | Enneagram: 9w1 | Acetylcholine dominant Choleric according to Eysenck's system. Big 5: Primary Inquisitive | Socionics: IEE Gardner: Inter/Intra-personal/Visual Spacial |
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#28 (permalink) | |
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Member
Join Date: Sep 2008
Type: INFP
Posts: 67
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Quote:
No way!! No way in hell is India N. It might have been at one time, and sure, I think if you equate India with Hinduism, Jainism or Buddhism, as religions in themselves - whcih would be an almost fundamentalist thing to do, and very wrong - then perhaps India could be called N. And yeah, Gandhi, the Father of the nation, was N, but his vision for India and the India of today are so very very different. ![]() I've lived here all my life, and Sensors thrive. You need to be street smart, you need to be alert, you need to know how to talk to people and use every opportunity you get to get what you want and to get where you want. You need to know how to sell yourself here. Right from the bosses in the big corporates to the beggars on the street to the swamis on dope - everyone is marketing themselves and everyone's on the move. The education system depends on how much you can 'mug' up - that is, learn things by heart, which can be torture for right-brained people like me! Employment in a good place or government position more often that not depends on whom you know rather than what you know. And as for the J-ness? There's a running joke in India that IST (Indian Standard Time) stands for Indian Stretchable Time. NOTHING is on time, people. If your bus/train is scheduled for 7:00pm, it's bound to leave only at 8:30. Oh yeah, by the way, all timings are always rounded off for convenience. The only time they aren't rounded off is for the writing of a newborn baby's birth certificate, for astrological purposes. ![]() The bureaucracy can kill you (this is what we really have to blame the British for ) but it isn't efficient at all (the way a bureaucracy is meant to be.) This is mostly because the bureaucrats themselves have no idea of what is going on or if your form reached them or if your passport got made or not, and worse, they don't care anyway.India is P. Very P. So P that J people are constantly cursing. Oh yes, and it's a very F country. There's a lot of feeling and 'brotherhood' amongst people, most of the time, that is. The fact that there's suffering and poverty makes closeness very important to any given community. Festivals are celebrated with great splendour, people fall at the feet of their gods, it's all very F with a feeling of emotional saturation. I've made India sound so terrible. But this is everyday-India I talk of. Not how it used to be 2000 years ago. And you know what, it's not so difficult to live here once you're used to it! I looovvvve my country! It's ESFP-heaven. It's just one big party, people! ![]() Edit: Maybe it's ISFP. I can't be too sure.
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I 78% N 62% F 62% P 67% [From http://www.humanmetrics.com] ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Do you want to see the Indian sun? It's shining into my green eyes, Dappling my fur a patchy brown, Brightening up my spotty white. Purr...
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#29 (permalink) |
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Junior Member
Join Date: Sep 2008
Type: uman
Posts: 12
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i think that probably all cultures have preferred personality types, which represent the "ideal" members of that society, and which influence the individuals within it when they take MBTI tests; but the true distribution of personality types is probably similar across cultures.
it seems to me that most people in any given culture tend to prefer whatever traits are preferred culturally, whether they really have them or not (they may even really believe that they have those traits when they don't). i think this is true of sub-culturally preferred traits too (and i think this is why there are so many N's online but not in real life--i think most online N's are really S's--they post like S's at least). this is one of the problems i have with MBTI results, i think they reflect more often what people wish was true about themselves than what actually is true.
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to accomplish great things, we must not only act, but also dream; not only plan, but also believe--anatole france |
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#30 (permalink) | ||
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Senior Member
Join Date: Oct 2007
Type: INFx
Location: With the other flowers by the wall.
Posts: 100
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Quote:
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I'm curious to know what it is that makes Canada seem F to you. As for the S-N dimension, I live on the west coast, and although I find that, probably like everywhere in the world, we have a fair share of Sensors here in the general population, the general "atmosphere" is quite N. I don't know about the east coast, though. Never been there.
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4w5 so/sp ~ ~ ~ ~ "I love you, but it's none of your business." ~Rainer Maria Rilke In a lifetime of empty rooms, this was another. ~Dorothy Dunnett, The Game of Kings |
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