Jaguar
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Depends what you mean by "type as".
If you mean: how would she score in an MBTI questionnaire? Then yeah, that will likely be affected,
MBTI questionnaire.
Depends what you mean by "type as".
If you mean: how would she score in an MBTI questionnaire? Then yeah, that will likely be affected,
MBTI questionnaire.
I was thinking about this last week when a woman from China was on the Stephen Colbert Show. She said something to the effect of "You people in the U.S. are different from us. You're thinking of the individual and we think of the group or the collective." Well, if that's her culture, I can already guess what she will not type as - anything involving individuality. So would the MBTI work for her? She'd get a result, but one that reflects her culture.
I don't have much information on this myself, and I'm not deliberately trying to be contrarian, but I'm curious. Can the MBTI be considered something specifically Western? It sprung from a German guy and continues to be mainly popular in Western cultures, as far as I'm aware. I've gotten a bit into k-pop, and I've noticed that they use the Myers-Briggs in reality or talk shows in Korea as some kind of ice-breaker, but also as some kind of pigeon-holing device (knowing how South Koreans in this day and age like to classify). But considering that a lot of the lingo can be difficult to translate, I can't help but wonder if it should remain in er, Western "canon." Many Korean idols take the tests and don't know what's going on, and I attribute this to them having a collectivist culture where taking cute personality quizzes isn't viewed the same way as in individualistic cultures like the US or Canada. You must belong to the crowd, not stand out from it. But can these tests really describe them as people, being that they view reality so differently? Of course, we'd be debating the validity of MBTI as a whole at that point... (But why not, honestly...)
No, as generalized as MBTI and to a lesser extent cognitive functions tend to be, its categorization system has its conceptual and lingual roots in the German, French, Roman (and Arabic), Greek and earlier traditions translated and approximated over time - like Jung's alchemy of western ideas or the visual example of once-gaudily painted Greek architecture and statuary emulated for its later skeletal-white beauty - simplified as rational ideal, not biologically accurate. Like the Pali canon or egalitarian jungle tribes can be incomprehensible outlooks divorced from historical and cultural context for Western minds to grasp accurately, so too is the opposite true for applying MBTI to collectivist cultures. As Mircea Eliade observed in Myths and Reality, "In one way or another one "lives" the myth, in the sense that one is seized by the sacred, exalting power of the events recollected or re-enacted." Archetype and western myth-making of the individual's struggle to exist as atom in a cosmos of human constellations is totemic, a story of one small chapter in the human experience.What say you? Is MBTI universally compatible with any type of belief system or walk of life or was it made for a certain type of people with mostly common roots, therefore lending to shared understanding?
There are even more ways how to take a stab this topic.
Typology tends to proclaim that there are certain typological groups that are very focused on injustices and all law braking. As a matter of fact MBTI generally claims that SJs are about half of the population. However if that is true then what is this ?
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So MBTI is evidently culturally biased on many levels.