About INTJ
INTJ is categorized as analysts, and they are an architect.
Rational and quick-witted, Architects may struggle to find people who can keep up with their nonstop analysis of everything around them.
These personalities can be both the boldest of dreamers and the bitterest of pessimists.
Architects believe that, through willpower and intelligence, they can achieve even the most challenging of goals.
But they may be cynical about human nature more generally, assuming that most people are lazy, unimaginative, or simply doomed to mediocrity.
Architects derive much of their self-esteem from their knowledge and mental acuity.
In school, people with this personality type may have been called “bookworms” or “nerds.”
They can be single-minded, with little patience for frivolity, distractions, or idle gossip.
That said, it would be a mistake to stereotype these personalities as dull or humorless.
Architects question every ...thing.
The ever-skeptical Architects prefer to make their own discoveries unlike many other personality types.
In their quest to find better ways of doing things, they aren’t afraid to break the rules or risk disapproval – in fact, they rather enjoy it.
But as anyone with this personality type would tell you, a new idea isn’t worth anything unless it actually works.
Architects want to be successful, not just inventive. They bring a single-minded drive to their passion projects,
applying the full force of their insight, logic, and willpower.
And heaven help anyone who tries to slow them down by enforcing pointless rules or offering poorly thought-out criticism.
Architects aren’t known for being warm and fuzzy.
They tend to prioritize rationality and success over politeness and pleasantries – in other words, they’d rather be right than popular.
This may explain why so many fictional villains are modeled on this personality type.
Because Architects value truth and depth, many common social practices – from small talk to white lies –
may seem pointless or downright stupid to them.
As a result, they may inadvertently come across as rude or even offensive when they’re only trying to be honest.