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    John Law Personality Type, MBTI

    What is the personality type of John Law? Which MBTI personality type best fits? Personality type for John Law from Economics and what is the personality traits.

    John Law
    ENTP

    ENTP (6w5)

    John Law personality type is ENTP, which means that he is a thinking type.

    ENTPs are often described as having a “mind wandering” quality, and I’ve been accused of this quality myself.

    In fact, I’ve been accused of it by people who don’t really know ENTPs, and they may be right. In general, ENTPs are more likely to “legitimately” be accused of this by others.

    But there is a difference between the ENTP who is mind wandering and the ENTP who is a psychopath.

    Here are 7 signs you’re with a psychopath:

    You feel no remorse for their past actions. You always feel “alive and well”, even if you’re not. You feel no emotional bond with others, even those you know well. You feel no discomfort when you hurt someone else, even if it’s someone you know well. You can’t be trusted. You seem to enjoy manipulating people and getting them upset. You don’t care how you hurt others — just as long as they get upset and you don’t get caught.

    John Law (baptised 21 April 1671 – 21 March 1729) was a Scottish economist who distinguished money, a means of exchange, from national wealth dependent on trade. He served as Controller General of Finances under the Duke of Orleans, who was regent for the juvenile Louis XV of France. In 1716, Law set up a private Banque Générale in France. A year later it was nationalised at his request as the first Central Banque Royale. The private bank had been funded mainly by John Law and Louis XV; three-quarters of its capital consisted of government bills and government-accepted notes, effectively making it the nation's first central bank. Backed only partially by silver, it was a fractional reserve bank. Law also set up and directed the Mississippi Company, funded by the Banque Royale. Its chaotic collapse has been compared to the 17th-century tulip mania in Holland. The Mississippi bubble coincided with the South Sea bubble in England, which allegedly took ideas from it.

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