http://gladwell.com/2004/2004_09_20_a_personality.html

Myers-Briggs was invented by an ordinary woman who didn't understand Jung or
her son-in-law.... read on!

Where did the Myers-Briggs come from, after all? As Paul tells us, it began
with a housewife from Washington, D.C., named Katharine Briggs, at the turn
of the last century. Briggs had a daughter, Isabel, an only child for whom
(as one relative put it) she did "everything but breathe." When Isabel was
still in her teens, Katharine wrote a book-length manuscript about her
daughter's remarkable childhood, calling her a "genius" and "a little
Shakespeare." When Isabel went off to Swarthmore College, in 1915, the two
exchanged letters nearly every day. Then, one day, Isabel brought home her
college boyfriend and announced that they were to be married. His name was
Clarence (Chief) Myers. He was tall and handsome and studying to be a
lawyer, and he could not have been more different from the Briggs women.
Katharine and Isabel were bold and imaginative and intuitive. Myers was
practical and logical and detail-oriented. Katharine could not understand
her future son-in-law. "When the blissful young couple returned to
Swarthmore," Paul writes, "Katharine retreated to her study, intent on
'figuring out Chief.' "She began to read widely in psychology and
philosophy. Then, in 1923, she came across the first English translation of
Carl Jung's "Psychological Types." "This is it!" Katharine told her
daughter. Paul recounts, "In a dramatic display of conviction she burned all
her own research and adopted Jung's book as her 'Bible,' as she gushed in a
letter to the man himself. His system explained it all: Lyman [Katharine's
husband], Katharine, Isabel, and Chief were introverts; the two men were
thinkers, while the women were feelers; and of course the Briggses were
intuitives, while Chief was a senser." Encouraged by her mother, Isabel—who
was living in Swarthmore and writing mystery novels—devised a
paper-and-pencil test to help people identify which of the Jungian
categories they belonged to, and then spent the rest of her life tirelessly
and brilliantly promoting her creation.

The problem, as Paul points out, is that Myers and her mother did not
actually understand Jung at all. Jung didn't believe that types were easily
identifiable, and he didn't believe that people could be permanently slotted
into one category or another. "Every individual is an exception to the
rule," he wrote; to "stick labels on people at first sight," in his view,
was "nothing but a childish parlor game." Why is a parlor game based on my
desire to entertain my friends any less valid than a parlor game based on
Katharine Briggs's obsession with her son-in-law?


On Jan 24, 2008 9:22 PM, Anthony Colfelt <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

> Hi all,
>
> I'm drafting the second part of an article on Hiring UX professionals
> for Boxes and Arrows at the moment and researching people's thoughts
> on the all important axis of personality when hiring UX folk.
>
> Can you tell me whether you think that personality typing tests like
> Myers Briggs or DISC are helpful to you in either hiring or working
> with others in your discipline?
>
> When thinking about the individual streams of Research, Information
> Architecture, Interaction Design, Graphic Design and Writing, do you
> reckon each of these should display any particular personality
> attributes as you might find in typing tests like Myers Briggs?
>
> The obvious answer is "Well, that depends on your context". But I
> thought it would make an interesting discussion point here and then
> summarized in the article. What are your thoughts?
>
> Anthony Colfelt
>
> ________________________________________________________________
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