I never thought people would be so motivated to slander theories and support others based on their perceived relationship to Nazis... Seriously man, common. Reich?![]()
My main criticism of Carl Jung is psychological rather than political.
And although I do criticise Carl Jung for freely and enthusiastically collaborating with the National Socialists, I think his unresolved relationship with his father is more important psychologically.
Jung tries all his life to resolve his relationship with his father. First he sought Sigmund Freud as a surrogate father. But Jung failed his Analysis with Freud and in reaction rejected Freud.
And having rejected Sigmund Freud as a surrogate father, Carl Jung turned to the Führer as his next surrogate father.
And Carl Jung never rejected the Führer as his surrogate father, even after the war.
And so Carl Jung was never able to resolve his relationship with his own father.
In fact he remained in psychological competition with his father his whole life.
Carl Jung's father was a Minister of Religion. So Carl Jung rather than coming to accept his father, decided to beat his father at his own game.
And Carl decided to form his own religion. And he did - a kind of secular religion.
However Carl was psychologically compromised from the very beginning.
So Carl Jung is less than a good psychological guide.
I am going to have to disagree that a person's own "issues" makes their intellectual theories invalid. We could disect many current psychiatrists and psychologists, I'm certain, and find trouble in their psyches. There's a joke that goes every shrink needs a shrink. Same with philosophers - Nietzche for one was a kook who had monumental trouble with his relationships with women, but does that make him less of a great philosopher? I personally don't hold Nietzche up as one of my personal favorites, but I don't think it's a good idea to dismiss a person's ideas just because of their dysfunctional childhood or personal neuroses.
This is true of Physics as it is the study of the objective world.
However Carl Jung's Psychology is a a study of the subjective world.
And so I think it is important to study Carl Jung's own subjective world.
So this tells me you don't like JTI, how about you tell the story about how you objectively dislike MBTI - I suggest talking a lot about Myer's heritage as well. Oh, and definitely include references how they continued Jung's "fascist" work, and that the real answers lie in that we are all sexually frustrated.
I was beginning to think no one had a sense of humor around here.
You're entitled to this opinion of course. I just don't necessarily agree with it. I would have probably disliked F.Scott Fitzgerald as a person, but I love his writing. I don't have to adore the personalities or behaviors of my favorite writers or artists to admire their work, and I use this as an example because art and literature are also subjective fields.
First I am told MBTI is a valid and reliable personality test. Now I am being told it is an example of art and literature, that it is an invention of the imagination.
I think you have been scammed by Mrs Briggs and her daughter Mrs Myers.
I think you have been caught up in the popular cult of MBTI and now can't get out.
A popular cult acts a bit like a drug -
When you can get out, you don't want to.
And when you want to get out, you can't.
First I am told MBTI is a valid and reliable personality test. Now I am being told it is an example of art and literature, that it is an invention of the imagination.
Victor--
Marmalade didn't say anything of the sort.
Cut the crap and quit making up shit.
Victor--
Marmalade didn't say anything of the sort.
Cut the crap and quit making up shit.
No. I shouldn't have to elaborate on what a person with DEPTH means.
Right about now, I am certain I am not ENTP.
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There is no MBTI theory without function order.
Don't you get that?
You can't do it your way and still call it MBTI.
Never assume anything.
On this board, in another area, was this verbal exchange about Barack Obama:
"There seems to be a consensus of sorts on Barack's type,
with most believing him to be ENFJ."
"You really think his fourth function is Ti?
I can't buy into that.
His thinking function would most likely be first or second, not fourth.
He's far too strategic and logical to be Fe dom."
Now, clearly this person thinks an ENFJ has a predetermined function order,
as if all ENFJ's are burped out of their mother's womb that way.
I don't think people have healthy skepticism about this predetermined function order at all.
Quite the contrary!
And the name change from MBTI Central to Typology Central was good luck.
It was good luck because Typology Central now includes MBTI as well as Wilhelm Reich's book, "Character Analysis".
And, "Character Analysis", is intellectually and morally superior to MBTI.
As, "Character Analysis", is still on the curriculum of University Psychology Departments.
While MBTI has been consigned to the rubbish bin along with astrology and alchemy and creationism.
Then can you elaborate on why you don't think I have any? That's kind of a bold statement based on very little information, wouldn't you say?
Jaguar said:You seem to have a need for expediency over accuracy and truth.
I don't declare someone to be INFP and then completely stop analyzing him
This is a valid criticism of the MBTI testing tool; you're right about that. It uses 70 questions to attempt to arrive at an average of overall preferences--most people actually *do* prefer Mom or Dad slightly more often than the other.
For people who are very balanced on at least a couple of the sliding scales, MBTI isn't very helpful. It's most useful for very polarized people, because the stronger the behavioral preferences the more predictable that person's behavior will be. Again, anyone who understands MBTI in context, including its inherent limitations, will understand that there are situations where it doesn't apply, and will have the good sense not to overextend it or expect an unrealistic level of utility from it.
I really don't put much stock in Jungian function theory at all, but he said himself that Ne and Ni are effectively the same thing; the only difference is the direction of the libido.
Are you really missing this point or just being deliberately difficult?
The INFP is just an arbitrary label that means he shares a certain number of very broad characteristics with other people that I label INFP, and it's only for my own indexing uses when making decisions as to how to interact with this person.
The fact that you can't see the connections between a 51% N ENTJ and a 100% N ENTJ isn't really my problem; they still have enough in common to place them under the same arbitrary label.
Again, you're expecting S-level specificity from an N concept, and it's because you don't understand the use and inherent limitations of generalized descriptions.
You've also made a gigantic blunder by assuming that this loose association between general groups of people is the entire store of information from which I derive my decisions in interpersonal interaction, hence your accusation that I have no depth.
Sounds to me like something crazy-assed Freud would say.
Not Jung.
I just think what you claim you are doing and what you are indeed doing, are in conflict.
But rather than continue on about it, let's just agree to disagree.
Glad you brought up INFP.
I know of several who claim to be such.
Very different people.
I'm sitting here shaking my head reading your words.
There is no way to say this other than directly:
If you are so deficient in knowing how to interact with people,
that you need some arbitrary 4-letter system to help you,
I suggest you seek some professional help,
to ascertain why you can't relate to people on your own.
The thought of you having an N in your own type is amusing.
There is nothing "intuitive" about a person who does what you do.
Intuitive people can read others without a cheat sheet.
No, they do not have enough in common.
As a matter of fact, MBTI was forced to address this very issue,
and changed how they categorize people.
The "new" MBTI or MBTI II, or some such nonsense.
That's old news, by the way.
I gather, all the bad press got to them,
and they tried to make themselves appear less ignorant.
I'm well aware of the inherent limitations.
I--as opposed to you--expect accuracy.
You keep calling it specificity.
Pick up a dictionary, the words have different meanings.
If you don't care there are INFPs out there with well-developed T's,
and you still think they belong in the same group as those who do not,
then let's cut this nonsense already.
Let me tighten those blinders on your eyes, and take you out on the horse track.
You actually expected me to fall for that line of bait?
See, here is where you expect me to tell you why I think you have no depth.
I guess you will just have to go on wondering.
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I would contend that function order is key in our situation.
What one person requires to "know" something of another,
may literally be undeveloped in the other person.
BTW, it's not just the function *order* I take issue with in MBTI,
it's the method of data collection: forced-choice questions.
Say you came into my office and said:
Hey Jag, that person you want to hire is an ENTP.
I'd say, based on what?
You show me a test with questions that look like this:
I love:
A) Mom
B) Dad
So I am to conclude that the person in question,
forced to choose against their will,
prefers Mom or Dad?
That's what forced-choice questions do.
Force inaccurate conclusions.