Jung, Isabel Briggs Myers, and Katharine Briggs were essential in the development of the MBTI. Jung was the first to propose the theory of psychological type, while Myers and Briggs were the proponents of the research and creation of the actual test. These individuals worked to make Jung's theory applicable to everyone, and to make sure that any person can be knowledgeable about the wide variety of personalities that exist. Taking the test will result in one of the sixteen possible personality types. There are four categories within each that give rise to the four letters that are representative of one's type (e.g. INFJ), depending on how they best fit the two contradictory tendencies within each category. The first of the four divisions determines whether one displays extraversion (E) or introversion (I), in other words, whether one tends to look internally or externally to gain energy and contentment (e.g. staying home and reading versus going to a social gathering). In the second section, the way one processes information can be either to absorb the raw facts, known as Sensing (S), or to analyze the given information and add application, called Intuition
Jung, Isabel Briggs Myers, and Katharine Briggs were essential in the development of the MBTI. Jung was the first to propose the theory of psychological type, while Myers and Briggs were the proponents of the research and creation of the actual test. These individuals worked to make Jung's theory applicable to everyone, and to make sure that any person can be knowledgeable about the wide variety of personalities that exist. Taking the test will result in one of the sixteen possible personality types. There are four categories within each that give rise to the four letters that are representative of one's type (e.g. INFJ), depending on how they best fit the two contradictory tendencies within each category. The first of the four divisions determines whether one displays extraversion (E) or introversion (I), in other words, whether one tends to look internally or externally to gain energy and contentment (e.g. staying home and reading versus going to a social gathering). In the second section, the way one processes information can be either to absorb the raw facts, known as Sensing (S), or to analyze the given information and add application, called Intuition