Took the survey, did most of the extra questions. IQ 122 apparently. I’m sceptical of what that actually means but it sounds quite good so next time someone asks me, that’s what I’ll say :)
Didn’t do Myers-Briggs because I’m pretty sure it’s bullshit.
Not too surprised to find that my political views are measurably left libertarian. Wasn’t happy with a lot of the political policy questions though—most of them were phrased in a way that I wanted to answer “it depends” or “yes, BUT...”, or even “mu”.
That Myers-Briggs test was a lot less thorough than what I remember from a lot of the ones I took online back in TheSpark era. Though, part of me is kind of glad that each of the extra credit questions could be completed in under an hour.
Took the survey, did most of the extra questions. IQ 122 apparently. I’m sceptical of what that actually means but it sounds quite good so next time someone asks me, that’s what I’ll say :)
Didn’t do Myers-Briggs because I’m pretty sure it’s bullshit.
Not too surprised to find that my political views are measurably left libertarian. Wasn’t happy with a lot of the political policy questions though—most of them were phrased in a way that I wanted to answer “it depends” or “yes, BUT...”, or even “mu”.
That Myers-Briggs test was a lot less thorough than what I remember from a lot of the ones I took online back in TheSpark era. Though, part of me is kind of glad that each of the extra credit questions could be completed in under an hour.
I’ve seen this a lot now; what does “mu” mean in this context; where does the term come from?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mu_(negative))
It was popularized by Hofstadter’s GEB.
I interpreted “Strongly agree” as plain ‘yes’, and “Agree” as ‘it depends, but more often than not, yes’ or ‘yes, but...’.