You’re reading this as a thought experiment. You don’t “believe in” numerology. You’re curious about the framework. You want to see if the logic holds.
That’s exactly the right approach. And it’s exactly how most INTPs end up spending three hours on this at 1 AM on a Tuesday.
The Experiment
MBTI gives you 16 categories. Numerology gives you a profile calculated from your specific birth date — not a questionnaire, not self-reporting, not something that changes depending on your mood. A fixed output from a fixed input.
That kind of consistency is either noise or signal. The only way to find out is to run the experiment on yourself.
Here’s what I’ll predict: your numbers will describe something about you that your MBTI type doesn’t. Something specific enough to make you pause. Whether that’s meaningful or coincidental is for you to determine — but you can’t determine it without the data.
You figure out how everything works. Except yourself.
Run the experiment.
What the Data Shows
INTPs who calculate their numbers report one consistent thing: the profile names something they already knew but couldn’t articulate. The relationship pattern they couldn’t explain. The career restlessness that didn’t fit the “logical” INTP archetype. The emotional depth they don’t show anyone.
Not “believe.” Test. That’s what INTPs do. That’s what the numbers are for.
One hypothesis. 60 seconds. No faith required.
Run the Numbers →