Werl... a friend likes to test his girlfriends. One of them took the test three times, different result each time, none of them ISFJ, which is what I believe she fits.
Not surprising. The repeatability of MBTI results is dismal.
But anyway by "strongly functional" I meant something like "actually works, delivers the goods".
Consciously delivering and unconscously delivering are two different animals.
You are assuming what you are conscious of, is actually accurate.
Don't think I'm picking on you, I include myself in that statement I just made!
We can't be 100% certain what functions are actually "delivering the goods."
There's an unconscious factor at play.
I own to being a believer. I like function orders that pair an e with an i. I like the idea that using one kind of function will preclude easy simultaneous use of some others--like for example someone trying to say they use Ti and Fi at the same time doesn't seem right.
So you are looking for what seems "right," rather than what might actually be
true.
I won't touch that with a 10-foot pole
I'm content too with the idea that the lower in the function order, the more mentally costly it is to maintain conscious use.
What could be "costly" for one person, may not even phase another at all.
The thing that bugs me however is, I guess, the lack of really personal expressive depth. [...]
So for example, I'd guess there'll be some IRL correlation between being NT and being intelligent, but it seems like MBTI really doesn't have the juice to genuinely say why (or why not). Or what, or how. The really interesting parts of the person, as far as MBTI goes, are left up to accidents of birth, environment, and who the hell knows what else.
Years ago there was a Wendy's commercial with a little old lady in it.
She got her face right up into the camera and yelled: "Where's the beef!?"
That damn commercial just popped into my head, talking about MBTI.
There's no beef. No substance. No depth.
Not to this NT, anyway.
I'm not sure what you are after from typology,
but there are others out there.
And the results exist for perfectly functioning human beings,
to have any order of functions.
Thinking restrictively by suggesting or "liking" the functions to alternate:
E/I/E/I or I/E/I/E, is unfair in my opinion.
I'm a truth-seeker.
What I like or don't like should not be relevant.
At the risk of sounding cliche: Imagine other possibilities.
I have no problem imagining any function order for anyone.
I don't view people's function order existing like a prefabricated home.
