What is the personality type of Atomism? Which MBTI personality type best fits? Personality type for Atomism from Schools Of Philosophy and what is the personality traits.
Atomism personality type is ISTP, INTP, ISFP and INFP.
Atomistic personality type is rare. The average person has broad and limited views about life, and their thinking style reflects this. Most people think in generalities and have a feeling of what it is to be “human”. In contrast, an atomistic personality type thinks in terms of the smallest parts of a situation. They don’t have a larger view of human nature, but rather view human nature from the smallest imaginable part to the largest – atom by atom. With such a limited view of human nature, they usually can’t look past their own needs, wants and feelings to understand the needs and feelings of others. They don’t have a big vision of a more complete view of life.
Atomism personality type is often misunderstood. The reason for this misunderstanding is that they are not “bad” people. Their limited view of the world is simply a result of their being less aware of how the world works and how it affects them. As they get more aware of how the world works, they will naturally learn to stop taking things personally and will begin to understand that they are part of a larger world than just themselves.
Atomism (from Greek ἄτομον, atomon, i.e. "uncuttable, indivisible")[1][2][3] is a natural philosophy proposing that the physical universe is composed of fundamental indivisible components known as atoms.
References to the concept of atomism and its atoms appeared in both ancient Greek and ancient Indian philosophical traditions. The ancient Greek atomists theorized that nature consists of two fundamental principles: atom and void. Clusters of different shapes, arrangements, and positions give rise to the various macroscopic substances in the world.[4][5]
The particles of chemical matter for which chemists and other natural philosophers of the early 19th century found experimental evidence were thought to be indivisible, and therefore were given by John Dalton the name "atom", long used by the atomist philosophy. Although the connection to historical atomism is at best tenuous, elementary particles have become a modern analogue of philosophical atoms.