Hmm...I need some help understanding this. On most boards, I see Hesse typed as a 4w5, but his character in Steppenwolf, Harry Haller, who is based off of Hesse himself is typed as 5w4. Could this mean Hesse is really a Five or is Haller a 4w5? I can see both points in the book. There's a whole section in the beginning that talks about how he sought independence above all, Type 5, but then there's such a disdain from him about the ordinary/commonplace/bourgeois mentality, which is more commonly associated with Type 4 preoccupations.
Same with Joyce. I see Ulysses motivated by the need to reconcile the Four fixation, by recasting the ordinary as extraordinary, by placing a bourgeois man, Bloom, as the hero of his book rather than the bohemian, Stephen Dedalus, again Joyce's representation of his younger self. The only evidence I could see for Joyce being a Five is his philosophical and intellectual prowess. Maybe I'm being too narrow, though.
What makes these characters 5w4 as opposed to 4w5?