The Psychology of Money - An Investment Manager\'s Guide to Beating the Market

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Self-Diagnosis 23

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CHAPTER


CHAPTER


4


Self-Diagnosis


It is not paradox to say that in our most theoretical moods we
may be nearest to our most practical applications.
—Alfred North Whitehead

Fortunately, there is a tool that can help in the process of attaining
complexity in thinking. The Myers-Briggs Type Indicator (MBTI),
which has been around for more than 50 years and has been taken
by more than 10 million people worldwide, measures these same
polarities in thinking. First conceived of by psychologist Carl Jung,
the MBTI was developed into the practical tool that we use today
by Katherine Briggs and her daughter, Isabel Myers.
The tool measures the way we prefer to use our minds. Similar
to left- and right-handedness, each of us has a preference for one
extreme of the polarities mentioned in Chapter 3. An example: Some
analysts prefer their offices to be neat and tidy, with a place for
everything; others live in the midst of huge paper piles. Neither
is correct, they are just different. Investors with each style have
succeeded.
Here are the four polarities that we’ve already discussed in
“investment” terms, presented in Myers-Briggs language.

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