What is the personality type of Mark Benecke? Which MBTI personality type best fits? Personality type for Mark Benecke from Biology & Medicine and what is the personality traits.
Mark Benecke personality type is INTP, not INTJ.
I just wanted to let you know that I think your analysis is very correct with regards to Carl Jung's definition of the "introverted thinking type". Carl Jung was an INTP himself. I am not sure what type Carl Jung would have been if he had the opportunity to choose the 10 types in the Enneagram system. Carl Jung certainly exhibited some traits of an INTP. Carl Jung was one of the few people in the early 20th century who recognized the importance of the functions of logic and rational thinking in human affairs. Carl Jung also was one of the few people who understood the importance of intuition in human affairs. Carl Jung was also one of the few people who appreciated the importance of the inferior function (the tertiary function) in human affairs. Carl Jung was one of the few people who appreciated the importance of the inferior function in human affairs. Carl Jung was also one of the few people who understood that it is not possible to truly understand an issue until one has thoroughly investigated it from several different perspectives (i.e., the perspective of each function).
Mark Benecke (born August 26, 1970 is a German forensic biologist.
Benecke has worked on the identification of Adolf and Eva Hitler's skull and teeth in Moscow, and is the only forensic scientist to work on the case of Colombian serial killer and rapist Luis Garavito. Some of his forensic cases have been covered by the National Geographic Channel and the History Channel.
Benecke has published several best selling popular science books about the biology of aging, criminal cases and forensic biology. He is a member of the editorial board of the Annals of Improbable Research (Cambridge, USA), guest editor for Forensic Science International (Forensic Entomology Special Issue) and scientific advisor to the German skeptic organization GWUP, where he publishes skeptical articles on various topics, including his attempt to explain alleged signs of vampirism. In 2001, Benecke was editor of the Forensic Science International special issue on forensic entomology.