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cm2012 commented on We should have the ability to run any code we want on hardware we own   hugotunius.se/2025/08/31/... · Posted by u/K0nserv
ranyume · 4 hours ago
>why shouldn’t Netflix have the right to choose who they distribute content to?

power asymmetry

cm2012 · 4 hours ago
There are dozens of sources of online streaming entertainment, and its not exactly a vital good.
cm2012 commented on Cognitive load is what matters   github.com/zakirullin/cog... · Posted by u/nromiun
BlarfMcFlarf · a day ago
You can pick any set of axis you feel like and get similar results. “Do you like X? Wow you are an X person!”. So yeah, technically better than horoscopes, more like a “warm” reading where you tell a person what they told you earlier. But it’s entirely unclear why these axis are the right ones over a million other possible ones, if these are particularly stable categories in time and context, or if the harm of encouraging people to box themselves or others into specific stereotypes has any possible benefit to outweigh the obvious harms of simplifying stereotypes.
cm2012 · a day ago
It's good questions. Here's why this axis is the right one in my opinion:

1) As I mentioned, it has a lot of statistically significant correlations, including to all the variables of the Big 5. Example: Surveys show that % of the overall population that is each type (like INFJ) is very consistent across time and populations.

2) Beyond that, youre right, there are a lot of personality systems with pros and cons. But Myers-Briggs has by far the must supporting materials, tools, ease of use, and so on. I think its the quickest to make useful to the average person.

3) I've found it really helpful as a lens for self analysis in my own life.

cm2012 commented on University of Cambridge Cognitive Ability Test   planning.e-psychometrics.... · Posted by u/indigodaddy
hirvi74 · a day ago
> how the world actually functions

In a cruel and inhumane manner virtually devoid of all empathy and compassion for our planet, the life our planet supports, and for each other? I honestly wish I didn't understand how the world actually functions.

cm2012 · a day ago
The ostrich approach is certainly an approach!
cm2012 commented on University of Cambridge Cognitive Ability Test   planning.e-psychometrics.... · Posted by u/indigodaddy
hirvi74 · 2 days ago
I still do not understand why we are wasting scientific resources trying to stack rank humans on arbitrarily defined concepts like cognitive ability or intelligence.

After over a century of psychometric research in cognitive abilities and intelligence, what do we have to show for it? Whose life has actually improved for the better? Have the benefits from such research, if any, outweighed the amount of harm that has already been caused?

cm2012 · 2 days ago
It is generally good to have an understanding of how the world actually functions.
cm2012 commented on Cognitive load is what matters   github.com/zakirullin/cog... · Posted by u/nromiun
Zarathruster · 2 days ago
I'll leave it to others to make the argument for why Jungian psychology (and by extension, MBTI) is/isn't bullshit.

But since nobody has mentioned the alternative yet, the framework used by anyone in any scientific capacity is the Big Five: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Big_Five_personality_traits

The link between programming and conscientiousness seems fairly straightforward. To fully translate Mort/Elvis/Einstein into some kind of OCEAN vector would take a little more effort.

cm2012 · 2 days ago
Big 5 correlates to MBTI very closely in any case. With the exception of neuroticism.
cm2012 commented on Cognitive load is what matters   github.com/zakirullin/cog... · Posted by u/nromiun
whatevertrevor · 2 days ago
MBTI is absolutely bullshit, it's like one level above horoscopes and astrology, but very similar type of BS. There's also the Gallup crap that many corps were doing to evaluate the strengths and weaknesses of each employee so they could fit them into neat buckets such as "Leader" vs "Follower", as if these aren't skills people develop over time but actual personality traits.
cm2012 · 2 days ago
Its kind of a common thing to say Myers-Briggs typing is useless because its pseudo-science. I dont think this is supported by the data in the way people think.

For one, many studies of identical twins raised in separate households show they have the same personality type at a much higher rate than chance.

Two, there are incredibly strong correlations in the data. In different surveys of 100k+ people, the highest earning type has twice the salary of the lowest type. This is basically impossible by chance.

The letters (like ENTJ) correlate highly to the variables of Big 5, the personality system used by scientists. Its just that it's bucketed into 16 categories vs being 5 sliding scales.

Scientific studies are looking for variables that can be tracked over time reliably, so Big 5 is a better measure for that.

But for personal or organizational use, the category approach is a feature, not a bug. It is much more help as a mental toolkit than just getting a personality score on each of the 5 categories.

Deleted Comment

cm2012 commented on My take: Myers-Briggs is a useful tool with evidence behind it    · Posted by u/cm2012
kingkongjaffa · 9 days ago
Idk if its my own confirmation bias but basically everyone in tech is shades of INTJ
cm2012 · 8 days ago
N types are over represented in every profession that requires a college degree. Thinkers are more likely to be into programming than Feelers. So that makes sense, along with INTP and ENTP being over represented.
cm2012 commented on My take: Myers-Briggs is a useful tool with evidence behind it    · Posted by u/cm2012
taraharris · 8 days ago
My first encounter with MBTI was at work, eight years ago. I resisted categorization because I dismissed it as being too geometric (like the four elements, or the four humors), and I tried to skew my results so that I'd be the type (ENTJ) that I thought would be promoted. (I've always scored ENTP on tests, no matter how I tried to skew my answers.)

Over the years, I learned more about Jung, what cognitive functions are and how to identify them, the research of Dr. Dario Nardi, etc. When I think about MBTI types these days, I have a lot of experiences to draw on that make them more real to me.

It took me a long time to understand that the MBTI tests out there are of limited value. I only treat them as a starting point when establishing someone else's type in my mind. To really figure someone out, you have to be able to take into account a ton of other things, including childhood traumas, neurodivergence, etc.

cm2012 · 8 days ago
For sure. I was super skeptical at first and the more I dug in the more compelled I became. I actually made my own conversational version of the test and ask people if they want to be typed - its fascinating, I have helped type 50+ people.
cm2012 commented on My take: Myers-Briggs is a useful tool with evidence behind it    · Posted by u/cm2012
brudgers · 9 days ago
All models are wrong. Some models are useful. [1]

Geocentrism, a flat earth, and your thumb is an inch among those.

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/All_models_are_wrong

cm2012 · 9 days ago
Absolutely agreed, I find MBTI as a mental model much more predictive than my prior mental models. But its not magic.

u/cm2012

KarmaCake day9459December 6, 2012
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