Mistral wrote:
Also, I like puzzles of all kinds - wordplay, jigsaws, logics, mysteries, etc., and there's no better puzzle than what makes people behave the way they do.
[snip]
My Kiersey books are packed away, but I vaguely recall something about either NTs or INTs enjoying studying personality theory etc., because of course it helps explain the other types (of which there are so many more people). And people-watching appeals IMO to the love of complex systems, as well.
This NF doesn't see people as puzzles, of course. People are interesting because they present another world-view for you to enter, experience and understand. Which is probably why I write mostly in the first-person.
Una