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» Committed to Making a Difference: The INFJ Personality TypeSome of the world's greatest leaders of movements to better the world are believed to have been INFJs. We owe a deep debt to these rarest of personality types.Tags: creativity, empathy, relationships» Altering brain chemistry makes us more sensitive to inequalityStudy finds that prolonging dopamine's effects in the brain boosts compassionWhat if there were a pill that made you more compassionate and more likely to give spare change to someone less...» Men are 'more narcissistic and entitled than women'A study examining gender differences across three aspects of narcissism finds that men are, on average, more narcissistic than women - a quality that has unique pros and cons.» Are people who bite their nails perfectionists?Pulling hair, biting nails, picking skin are not simply 'nervous' habits, a new study finds, suggesting they are instead associated with perfectionism, frustration and boredom.
» Committed to Making a Difference: The INFJ Personality TypeSome of the world's greatest leaders of movements to better the world are believed to have been INFJs. We owe a deep debt to these rarest of personality types.Tags: creativity, empathy, relationships
Some of the world's greatest leaders of movements to better the world are believed to have been INFJs. We owe a deep debt to these rarest of personality types.
Tags: creativity, empathy, relationships
» Altering brain chemistry makes us more sensitive to inequalityStudy finds that prolonging dopamine's effects in the brain boosts compassionWhat if there were a pill that made you more compassionate and more likely to give spare change to someone less...
» Men are 'more narcissistic and entitled than women'A study examining gender differences across three aspects of narcissism finds that men are, on average, more narcissistic than women - a quality that has unique pros and cons.
» Are people who bite their nails perfectionists?Pulling hair, biting nails, picking skin are not simply 'nervous' habits, a new study finds, suggesting they are instead associated with perfectionism, frustration and boredom.