I agree with Carl -
In Myer-Brigg's terminology, I think it's the NFP versus ITJ and the variants that are more important.
I'm an NFP, and I describe a golf course as a journey, a painting, a work of art. I have a friend that's an ITJ and he's like an engineer - measuring angles, distances, and green contours in terms of degree of slope. A "just the facts, Jack" type of guy.
I think you meant STJ and not ITJ, but it is interesting because as I mentioned earlier on in the thread you and I seem to be very much alike in terms of preference and viewpoint, despite the fact that you are NFP and I am STJ. I view golf courses very much as a journey, painting, or work of art, despite the fact that so many other areas of my life are dictated in what would be the equivalent of "angles, distances, and degrees of slope."
But then again, I'm closer to borderline on the STJ than I am on the E/I scale. That's why it isn't quite as simple as bucketing people in the 16 categories. We aren't all decisively one or the other for all categories.