Personality Types vs. Stereotypes

Kyle's avatar

The 16 personality types are unique, with each group defined by their traits and the behavioral tendencies that go along with them. Based on statistics, personality typing allows for accurate descriptions and assessments of people. But there’s a difference between personality typing, which can be very helpful in many areas of life, and stereotyping, which can be harmful. Understanding that difference is important for the sake of fairness, accuracy, and usefulness. Let’s consider how personality types differ from stereotypes.

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Likelihoods vs. Certainties

A stereotype assumes that someone conforms to a broad rule. For example, take the beliefs that Introverts don’t like to go out, prefer to be alone, are shy about meeting new people, etc. Those beliefs can influence real-world outcomes, like if an Introvert is excluded socially based on such assumptions. “Sam’s an Introvert and Introverts don’t go out, so we don’t invite Sam to go out.”

Personality typing, on the other hand, says that while Introverts may indeed be less socially inclined than Extraverts overall, it’s relative. Most Introverts like to go out with friends, meet new people, and attend gatherings, to some degree. They might be less likely than an Extravert to accept every social invitation, yet they still do so some of the time – and they appreciate the opportunity either way.

In real life, the truth of Introversion is often nuanced and requires more understanding than simplistic stereotypes allow for. The same is true for all personality traits and types – their associated tendencies can be likely but not completely consistent from person to person or instance to instance. Stereotypes are clumsy and too extreme to be useful.

Identity vs. Perception

Another way that stereotypes and personality types differ is in their origin. A stereotype is a label applied to someone from an outside source, and it may reflect the biases of those who apply it more than the qualities of those to whom it’s applied. Stereotypes are limiting because they only include what’s perceived by the observer, not what’s going on under the surface. Even if bias is minimal, any such assessment is likely to be incomplete at best.

Personality typing, on the other hand, relies on self-recognition and objective evaluation of internal thoughts, feelings, values, and beliefs, as well as measuring behaviors that may be more externally visible. Someone’s personality type is as much a disclosure as an assessment because of their awareness and participation in defining themselves. Personality typing includes critical elements of self-awareness and identity, not merely external perception.

So, in real life, treating people according to stereotypes is like subjecting them to limited external judgments. It’s essentially a one-sided declaration: “Here’s what we think you are because of how we perceive you.” But when you approach someone through the lens of personality type, it’s more like a mutual dialogue that includes self-identified, internal, authentic parts of themselves. It’s more like a conversation than a declaration.

Connecting vs. Dividing

Stereotypes and personality types are often used in very different ways. As simplistic absolutes that tend to reflect people’s biases, stereotypes often function negatively. They can demean or dismiss others by failing to accurately reflect – and respect – who they truly are. Stereotypes tend to encourage barriers between people, often leading to “othering.”

But since it’s far more nuanced, truthful, and inclusive of people’s own awareness and identity, personality typing enables people to understand each other. It expands and humanizes their perceptions and positively affects their interactions. This can encourage communication, respect, and empathy, making personality typing a good way to bring people together.

In very real terms, the difference between stereotypes and personality types can be a matter of belief versus fact. Stereotypes frequently reinforce false perceptions and ignorance, while personality types tend to reveal authentic truths. The former can prevent compatibility, whereas the latter often highlights it. Stereotyping may be an outgrowth of some understandable, basic human instincts, but they’re not our better instincts.

Where to Go from Here

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Comments

Please to join the discussion.

INTJ avatar
sometimes my close friends will invite me to go out, i feel very happy about that.but because of my LAZY i usually will not do that
ENTJ avatar
yes!
ISTP avatar
same with me but my parents will tell me i’m a bad freind for not going so..
A grayscale avatar for an anonymous user
On the subject of introversion… it’s all on a scale. People say, oh you’re an introvert so that means you’re automatically shy, socially awkward, don’t know how to connect with people, etc..thats very ignorant. I’m extremely proud to be an introvert. Sometimes when I’m in public, people are like what you’re an introvert? It’s becuz when you say I’m an introvert ppl think you’re at the extreme end of the introvert scale. And often the same thing will happen for ppl that say they’re an extrovert. Then ppl think the extroverts never need any alone time. It’s all on a scale n ppl need to stop trying to fit others into little boxes.
A grayscale avatar for an anonymous user
I am also an introvert. I am an extreme introvert, but I agree that not everyone in at the same spot on the scale. Like you could be really introverted like me and try to avoid social activitites or you could be a social person that needs time to themselves to recharge or anywhere in between. So I really like this comment and wanted to say something to.
ENFP avatar
I agree. As an extroverted person, I do enjoy spending most of my time with others. But I need alone time too. Also, most of my friends of introverts, and that doesn’t mean their shy and awkward. One of them has no social anxiety whatsoever. They just don’t enjoy being social as much.
INFJ avatar
I think I’m about 4 weeks from the last comment here so uhh, maybe I’m a bit later to the party but I bet we’d discover a lot more introverts if we let ourselves know who the person in question is. For all we know some energetic person you met somewhere would rather be with their extra-close friends instead of being, um, wherever the said place is.
INTP avatar
After check my personality ,I finally find my self,including my interests in Physics,my ability to command,also why did I do every thing in a too serious way. It really told me a lot .
ENTJ avatar
True, that helped me more too, and I'm not confused anymore when ppl call me a robot-like.
INFJ avatar
being introvert is not wrong or bad, and that is the most important thingI learned through this.
A grayscale avatar for an anonymous user
Yeah, I like being introvert actually.
INTP avatar
Yes, I'd suppose an introvert would enjoy being an introvert just as me, an extravert, enjoys being extraverted. I don't know why but people like to say that introverts hate being introverted.
INFJ avatar
me too!
INFJ avatar
maybe they can't fully understand what introvert actually means
A grayscale avatar for an anonymous user
Same here
INFJ avatar
hhhh, wish you happy!
INFP avatar
This was very helpful along with the personality test. Now I'm proud of being an Introvert.