Uncovering The Secret History Of Myers-Briggs - Digg
Isabel Briggs Myers Co-created the Famed Personality Test. But Who Was She?
Incredible Things You Never Knew About the Myers-Briggs Test | Inc.com
Murder Yet to Come: Isabel Briggs Myers: 9780935652222: Amazon.com: Books <-- Here are the sources. ...
The perspective that still stands is the racist one. I'm going to need that debunked.
[MENTION=31909]agentwashington[/MENTION] - Don't worry about ruffling feathers. There is nothing wrong with having threads that are strictly for debating the accuracy of MBTI or any other typing system. Otherwise, this whole forum is just a joke. Actually, without critical thinking, it's basically a cult.
I have been having some internal struggle with grasping and fully accepting MBTI lately. I need to get my hands on some actual books and dive in deeper. The problem for me is that I can't use MBTI solely to explain myself. There are holes and inconsistencies that can only be "explained" by consideration of other typing systems used as supplementation. For example, I am almost certain that I use nearly equal part Fe and Fi, however, I don't often use Te, or at least in comparison to Ti, it's barely noticeable. MBTI has no explanation for this other than I'm "not healthy." Well... you know what I have to say to that? Fuck that. I have stood up multiple times with little regard for consequences or affecting the "mood" of a room, to the point where I probably seem like a major bitch at times. I have put my job on the line to voice my inner moral compass. I have gotten out of my car to address self-centered asshole drivers (three times now, and not in psycho road rage ways but more like "um, excuse me... no... you can't do that shit you asshole"). I recently was upset when my landlord group texted everyone in my building, thereby revealing my phone number to all of my neighbors, so I texted him a rather straightforward response informing him that he was out of line in doing such and that he needed to respect my privacy. How is any of that Fe? If you can tell me, then perhaps I will understand the differences between Fe and Fi better, but for now, I feel like I often sacrifice harmony for voicing my opinions. With that said, it is also obvious that I Fe all over the fricken place, or so I'm told at least.
For your consideration, here is the text I sent my landlord:
"You do realize that you just violated our individual privacy by group messaging us, don't you? Private would have been more professional (not even sure this is legal). Please respect my privacy and rights from here on out."
I know several INFJs irl, and I can't see any of them (maaaaybe one...) asserting their landlord or bosses like I have in the past. Rather, I see them sort of just dealing with it and letting things go. Now, for the mean time, I have explained this away through my enneagram, as I am double-reactive, and actually, I can see e1s being reactive too because of their strong moral code and judgy nature. Furthermore, being Sx/So could potentially make me more assertive. Point is, I can't explain myself with just MBTI.
I have considered the fact that perhaps I am an INFP, but that just doesn't seem to line up when I look at the other functions, and I also consistently test as INFJ, regardless, for several years now. I think maybe it's time to dive deeper into socionics and see what I find there.
If I am still not grasping exactly what Fi is, feel free to school me.
Well there's many issues here. First, Jung's typology is kind of speculative and unfinished ideas. I don't think he fully justified his ideas. The MBTI itself was kind of a move to implement Jung's ideas in a more empirically validated form, but in some sense it proceeded too akin to mainstream personality psychology and thus wound up being a different beast from Jung...where people pawn off the idea that this common functions theory you hear of (like ENTP being Ne+Ti+Fe+Si) is just straightforwardly valid, when it's one of many models out there, highly controversial, and devastatingly far from empirically tested. So I kind of scoff when people out there try to pretend as if they're doing MBTI the "Right" way, because they're going by what the "official theory" really says. In reality this is a highly speculative ongoing interpretive enterprise.
Secondly, did Jung ever say his book and insights were unfinished ideas?
This is news to me. Do you have a respectable source you can point us to?
FYI, Carl Jung (mystical streak notwithstanding) was a believer in the scientific approach, and Myers took Psychological Types and devoted a substantial chunk of her life to putting its typological concepts to the test in a way that Jung never had, and in accordance with the psychometric standards applicable to the science of personality.
The MBTI actually represents a major advance — in multiple respects — beyond Jung's original categories and framework.
If you're interested, your reprogramming could begin with this post and the posts it links to.
existence said:So, it's the four dichotomies (the four "letters") that's straightforwardly valid. That's what the "official theory" says.
mbtifoundation said:Type is more than just the sum of the four preferences. The four-letter MBTI® type formula is a shorthand way of telling you about the interaction of your four mental functions and which ones you prefer to use first. This is called type dynamics, and it is an important part of understanding your MBTI® results. Below are some basic facts about type dynamics.
One preference has the most influence on you. This is called the dominant function.
The next strongest preference is called the auxiliary function. It is important because it serves to support and balance the dominant.
The third strongest is the tertiary function.
One preference is the least strong. This is the fourth function, often called the inferior function.
There is one preference each person tends to show first to the outside world.
The eight function-attitudes are expressed very differently in the inner world and the outer world.
The middle two preferences are called the function pair.
Over the course of your life, different preferences may emerge and be used more often, as well as more easily. This is referred to as type development.
I agree with a lot in your post but... yeah, Jung's stuff is an unfinished theory. Not gospel![]()
And most of us are 'Good Germans' here as we overlook the fake personality test called mbti.
Various techniques are used, such as saying it is all a joke, and then we go deeper and claim mbti will help us understand ourselves and each other - thank God we say, we have discovered mbti, and the sophisticated add, and thank God mbti discovered me.
In reality mbti preys on the vulnerable, those who are unhappy and are trying to understand why they are unhappy, and mbti give us a jargon to repeat over and over hypnotising us into believing we have discovered the meaning of life, when all we have discovered is another way to manipulate ourselves and how to manipulate others. And for those desperately unhappy, that is enough.
Well, both Myers' Gifts Differing and this site The Myers & Briggs Foundation - Understanding MBTI(R) Type Dynamics
state things like
(...)
Over the course of your life, different preferences may emerge and be used more often, as well as more easily. This is referred to as type development.
Basically, it seems to me that, while you're right what WAS actually verified is the dichotomies, or more precisely, the dimensions (there aren't true dichotomies as far as we can tell), unfortunately it seems very hard to find sources that are completely divorced from Myers' original prescription. That she actually took the trouble to say that P/J tells you whether you "use Ji or Pi"/"use Je or Pe" -- that is, actually build her own theoretical assumptions about functions theory into her interpretation of the dichotomies, suggests to me that the problem is very deeprooted. If she simply offered some mention of Jungian ideas just to acknowledge those roots, OK, but I find it a little hard to believe that she'd argue for her version of the theory to be correct if she didn't take functions seriously. Still, I guess I can take the possibility as not being entirely ruled out, as I don't know her innermost thoughts.
That isn't to say we can't take this with a grain of salt and acknowledge that the type dynamics stuff is more a matter of "you can give meaning to it in certain ways" than "it's straightforwardly inferred from the data." Some people seem to prefer to just use the dichotomies by themselves, which is fine. I don't know of any reasonable way to say that this is the "official position" though personally, though I'm open to hearing of such.
What I can say about the Jungian types and other such ideas is that you DO see these patterns in various places, just that they aren't what I'd call the "typical" patterns. The dichotomies/Big 5 seem to offer the typical much more clearly, and in a way that isn't so surprising, because the more exotic patterns you see aren't what you'd even expect to be the typical case.
existence said:The last statement you quoted kinda does away with the strict model of NeTiFeSi.
As you develop your tertiary and least-preferred functions later in life, the range of behaviors available to you opens up even further. But the dominant and auxiliary functions will always be the core functions of your conscious personality.
Well sure, I certainly don't subscribe to the idea of it being strictly true in some empirical sense, more like "I can define what I mean by the pattern and it carries some descriptive value".... and for what it's worth, even Myers only really decided the first two/fourth with much finality, to my understanding, and the third one being the same attitude as dominant is another development.
But basically, one can't be optimistic about the MBTI foundation itself: I suspected that they're just talking of becoming more comfortable than before with your third/fourth functions, not with genuinely "changing type patterns" ... and if you follow their own link to the type development page, they say this