Introverted Thinking

Introverted Thinking, according to Myers-Briggsism, is a judging and decision-making process. It relies heavily on reason and logic. Furthermore, it's very objective in its approach.

In other words, it's an internal framework of how the world works. An introverted thinker focuses inwardly and tries to classify what they have learned within the framework of things they already know. Thus, they place information into categories within the internal model that already exists in their head.

If the new knowledge doesn't fit within what they already know, an introverted thinker will have to re-evaluate their current system of knowledge to adjust to the new information.

Differences with Te
To better understand introverted thinking, it's helpful to compare it to its opposite- extroverted thinking. Extroverted thinking focuses outwardly. It looks for laws and rules within the world around them.

Therefore, an extroverted thinker looks for logic in the world around them. They seek consistency in the universe. Just like an introverted thinker, an extroverted thinker will process and categorize new information. The difference between the two lies in the point of reference.

Whereas the introverted thinker attempts to categorize information within their internal framework, an extroverted thinker attempts to categorize information within the systems that exist in the world.

Basically, one could say the major difference between introverted thinking and extroverted thinking revolves around the focus. Introverted thinkers will classify ideas and theories, while extroverted thinkers will focus on systems. As a result, introverted thinkers focus inwardly and extroverted thinkers focus outwardly.

How to Draw
You're done!
 * 1) Draw a ball;
 * 2) Color it using the colour Blue;
 * 3) Draw glasses or just eyes;

Frenemies

 * [[File::Mbti-Ti.png]] Extraverted Thinking - We both value logic, just I am more free.