INTP
Portrait of an Architect (iNTp)
Copyrighted © 1996 Prometheus Nemesis Book Company.

Of the four aspects of strategic analysis and definition it is
the structural engineering role -- architechtonics -- that reaches the highest
development in INTPs, and it is for this reason they are aptly called the
"architects." Their major interest is in figuring out structure,
build, configuration -- the spatiality of things.
As the engineering capabilities the INTPs increase so does
their desire to let others know about whatever has come of their engineering
efforts. So they tend to take up an informative role in their social exchanges.
On the other hand they have less and less desire, if they ever had any, to
direct the activities of others. Only when forced to by circumstance do they
allow themselves to take charge of activities, and they exit the role as soon as
they can without injuring the enterprise.
The INTPs' distant goal is always to rearrange the
environment somehow, to shape, to construct, to devise, whether it be buildings,
institutions, enterprises, or theories. They look upon the world -- natural and
civil -- as little more than raw material to be reshaped according to their
design, as a formless stone for their hammer and chisel. Ayn Rand, master of the
Rational character, describes this characteristic in the architect Howard Roark,
her protagonist in The Fountainhead:
He was looking at the granite. He did not laugh as his eyes
stopped in awareness of the earth around him. His face was like a law of
nature-a thing one could not question, alter or implore. It had high cheekbones
over gaunt, hollow cheeks; gray eyes, cold and steady; a contemptuous mouth,
shut tight, the mouth of an executioner or a saint. He looked at the granite. To
be cut, he thought, and made into walls. He looked at a tree. To be split and
made into rafters. He looked at a streak of rust on the stone and thought of
iron ore under the ground. To be melted and to emerge as girders against the
sky. These rocks, he thought, are here for me; waiting for the drill, the
dynamite and my voice; waiting to be split, ripped, pounded, reborn, waiting for
the shape my hands will give to them. [The Fountainhead, pp 15-16]
Many regard this attitude as arrogant, and INTPs are likely,
especially in their later years, after finding out that most others are faking
an understanding of the laws of nature, to think of themselves as the prime
movers who must pit themselves against nature and society in an endless struggle
to define ends clearly and adopt whatever means that promise success. If this is
arrogance, then at least it is not vanity, and without question it has driven
the design engineers to take the lead in molding the structure of civilization.
A full description of the Architect and Rational is in Please
Understand Me or Please Understand Me II