+1
People with a certain temperament more likely to play go? Board game lovers!
I think this is why we are likely to find a greater number of "introverts" than would be reflected in the general population.I think that the first characteristic needed in order to play go is the ability to sit down and be quiet for three hours.
drmwc wrote:Isn't the Myers Briggs test on a par with the flying spaghetti monster?
My educated take is this. Psychology is full of dichotomies, nearly all of which are matters of degree. In terms of personality, a person's place on these scales tends to persist over time, so the dichotomies are valid in that sense. The Myers-Briggs makes use of four such dichotomies. What is problematic is the implications of these differences. Even generalizations which have been tested in certain populations may not be valid in other populations. And, OC, their application to any individual has very limited validity. For instance, tall people tend to be more successful than short people, by a variety of measures — and then there's Napoleon Bonaparte.anonymous wrote:There are two kinds of people in the world: those who think there are two kinds of people in the world, and those who don't.