You are referring to a typographical error. I had no purpose to change the content of your message. I must have accidentally altered your post when quoting you.
No probs, bobs. You don't seem the shady kind.
Intuition: A solidified unconscious tendnecy to engage in the cognitive faculty of abstract perception or imagination.
Sensation: A solidified unconscious tendency to engage our five senses.
...
Any further concerns with regard to the way the terms are defined?
Yes, are they: in tandem? Parallel? Converges? Discord? Dichotomy (vaguely rings a bell

)?
For example, human communication can be said to have three components: articulating (language), gesticulating (gestures & actions), and modulating (tone). It is most often considered complete in communication when above three work together. If so, this would indicate that intuition works simultaneously with sensation, when we utilize that which is communicated to us. We not only take information from the direct input (actual words, gestures & tones), we also, extrapolate certain assumptions/cues from that which is 'indirect'/not spoken. We intuit and sense, together, in order to wholly understand a person. Those who do not 'intuit' such things, an extreme case of this can be Autism Spectrum Disorder. High levels of fxing Asperger's still does not negate one from being an N.
Second issue, this is more a commentary on MBTI, though, but, sum total=100%. What does that mean for a person, who say, has 100% P? Does that mean no real Judgement functions at all? (you'd say, of course not, a really high
preference, such that the scales are limited in their measurement). Then, what is the ordinal meaning of the difference between, say, 60% versus 80%? What is said of the measurment we take? What real commentary does it make, rather than a 'whole picture' type scenario of a person? I.e., why this parsing in measurement in the first place?
Finally, I never had issues with how the terms were defined. Just how you would actually go about measuring it, if the terms were defined as such. And, I think I've given a lot of examples of why measurements of such terms would be tricky, at best.
Is it true that we all engage our five senses?(Sensation) Is it true that we all have an imagination? (Intuition) Is it true that we all tend to engage in dispassionate contemplation? (Thinking).
Yes, yes, a thousand times yes!

Well......
......actually...I disagree with one point:
Is it not the case that we all engage in impulse. (Feeling)
Feeling is not an impulse. It is an emotion. That doesn't make it an impulse. I think you have a very skewed understanding of Feeling. It is not the loss of rationality - hence, impulse. A value-based judgement can be thought of/contemplated long and hard, just like a logic based contemplation. Speed of output is not relevant. Unless I misunderstood 'your' definition of the word impulse, and Jung defined it in some other way.
Sensation is 'measurable' in the regard of how quickly one responds to physical stimuli. Feeling is 'measurable' in the regard of how easily one's passions are evoked. Thinking is 'measurable' in the regard of how easily one engages in dispassionate contemplation. Intuition is 'measurable' in the regard of how easily one conjures ideas.
Sure. I'll buy that for 2 cents. But, this measurable quality does nothing to validate this 'dichotomy' that supposedly exists. I'm a quick motherfucker with my reflexes and I'm an N. Maybe, it's cuz my intuition told me that the cup would tip over, hence, such 'quick reflex'. A high measurement on Feeling would not negate a high measurement in Thinking. Etc, etc. So, this method of measurement would really do nothing to support your theory.
Tests can be concocted to 'measure' one's ability to engage such faculties, such tests would be similar to classical IQ tests. The classical IQ test is concerned with measuring one's ability to performing cognitive tasks, similar to those described above.
Not a good analogy. IQ tests measures one's ability in certain domains, but, makes NO commentary on the predictive validity of an opposing domain (well, cuz there is no opposing domain). This is best tackled in the realm of divergent validity of concepts within one scale. Correlation matricies. Predictive validity. And, on, and on....
Unlike IQ tests, these tests would work on a heavy assumption - A versus B as preference. It is much easier proving presence or absence of A. To prove that the absence of A means more presence of B, or vice versa, is a whole another (more complicated) ballgame. Thus, analogy fail.
What are you talking about? What exactly has been defined by the 'larger scientific community'?
Sensation & Perception, which is not defined in the same way Jung does.
Correct me if I misunderstood your views. You assert that it is not the case that we have five senses, that we all engage in dispassionate contemplation, that we all process emotion and that we all engage in imagination.
Possibility to do those things, yes. Can we? Not all of us. Again, clinical cases.
Originally Posted by Qre:us
Not my question. My question was, according to how *you've* labelled such terms, *how do we know that there is sensation and perception?* Again, an issue with measurement of YOUR terms. Ad nauseum.....?..
Again, I say, I have given many issues (2 examples above) of when the terms and their relationship, as defined by Jung, faces problems with measurement. How is this a hard concept/point to grasp?
Originally Posted by Qre:us
Most of us do, some cannot. Like the 3 blind mice......?..
Most of us cannot do what exactly?
I dunno...pee standing up? Btw, you misread me. I said, MOST of us CAN, SOME canNOT. Most of us can have the faculty of our five senses. Some of us cannot, like the 3 blind mice. Thanks, btw, for dryly murdering my cheesy joke. I may never forgive you for this, sir! Never!
I did not mean that imagination conjures items that have nothing at all to do with what we have observed. I have merely maintained that imagination can conjure images that are distinct from mere recollections of what we have perceived with our five senses.
I challenge you to come up with one instance of an individual who has ideas in his mind that have nothing at all to do with what he has once perceived with his five senses.
There's a logical contradiction to your above thought-process, hence, position. The first bolded would imply that you are clarifying my 'misunderstanding' that I believe that you believe (following?) that imagination can be there without any input from the five senses. However, the second bolded is challenging me of the same thing that you assumed I was challenging you on. Why would you ask me to rise to a challenge that I think is a challenge (and thus, gave to you to clarify in the first place)?
Remember, typology is a study of natural unconscious dispositions.
Another example as a food for thought. Sensation is quite objective in that it picks up all relevant info with its direct (5) senses from the external environment. It is contingent on the external, then, no? Why then shouldn't most sensors be extraverted, which gains energy from the external/objective, rather than from within/which is subjective to self? Cuz, apparently, Jung thought introverts to be 'afraid' of the external world, which S's kinda depend on.
Anomalies are not relevant to the study of typology. Anomalies are a matter of psychology and sociology only. Or studies that are concerned with an inquiry into personality, which typology is not one of.
Actually anomalies are
treated as irrelevant in typology. Cuz no behaviour can be used to falsify a type, while any behavior can be used to verify it. Double standard!
Typology, is analogous to anatomy. It simply represents the basic features every mind has in order to function. Exactly like anatomy represents the basic physical features every body needs in order to survive. (Such as the heart, the brain, the stomach, and so on). No anomalous body lacks one of such features, just as truly as no mind lacks one of the cognitive faculties mentioned above.
I like this analogy for its aesthetics value. Then, I raised some eyebrows (well, 2). Is there ever a proposition that when one uses the heart more, they are then relying less on the stomach? As well, there's already those things called cognitive map(ping). And, nothing comes close to touching typology or its self-defined 'terms'. Aside- funniest of them, the Homunculus (altho, its a somatosensory mapping). If you're ever interested, I can speak to how the Homunculus justifies foot fetishists. I
know you're intrigued.
At the point when neuroscience matures, we will be able to conduct typological empirical investigation in the following manner.
Step 1: Amass a group individuals who are adept at identifying their cognitive states.
Step 2: Discover what activities occur within the individua's brain when he claims that he is experiencing a certain cognitive state.
This will enable us to discover empirical confirmation with regard to the existence of the cognitive faculties described above.
Lofty dreams. Quite impractical. Esp. considering one cannot readily conjure up such cognitive states of T/F or N/S, regardless of how 'adept' they are. Then only to be introduced to bias due to variability of stimuli or other external cues. And, if recurrance of experiment is exactly the same, then it would still not make commentary on the cognitive states, but, more so on how that particular controlled environment is processed by said individual. Really, really, delve into neuroscience and cognition. It's made quite a few landmarks in what it does measure (and how).
Sample size is not relevant. His argument was not inductive. He did not claim the following; "So many of my patients do X, therefore all people do X'.
Sample size is not relevant only in generalization. It is quite relevant in seeing a pattern, distribution. At its simplest. But, I have a feeling, like Jung, you don't think much of stats. Well, except for that ONE experiment he did using stats...on *ahem* astrology.
If we want to infer what the distribution of typology would be, it would be bimodal. However, it is not, in that, for ex., most peeps lie within E & I. Which, Jung also anticipated, saying that otherwise, we'd all be unbalanced. But, not adhering to bimodality also infers that, a person scoring as an E, may be very similar to another scoring as I. Meaning that E/I wouldn't really tell us anything. And, so forth with other functions. Also, keeping in line with the stats talk, Jung lacked controlled studies. His were anecdotes, or 'observations of facts', whatever.
I think he described 'intuition' in this female patient of his cuz she came into the room, and said his previous patient was a male. When he asked her how she knew, she just said, she felt it. This was: intuition. Forget the fact that, he still recognized there was a butted out cigar with the stentch hanging in the room, she apparently didn't notice those to come to her conclusion. It was the spooky intuition. Or, his concept of intuition like syncronicity. Which, for anyone who is fond of stats, would understand that it is very likely to occur by chance, and that confirmation bias plays a huge role.
And, along the thought of astrology, there's this inherent aspect of Forer effect.
The argument he has made is as follows. What we have observed is the skeleton or the basic structure of the human mind. All components, or all parts of the skeleton are present in all cases. What varies is merely the order in which they are presented, or how they interact with one another. (For instance, one may be an Intuition dominant, or a Sensation dominant.) Much like all persons have a heart, a brain and a stomach, yet the brain, the heart and the stomach do not always interact with each other in the same way.
His argument is sound in its realm of philosophy. When it wants to transfer from person to person, be measurably sound....we hit a few (many) hurdles.
Typological matters will be falsifiable when neuroscience has matured enough to conduct the aforementioned empirical investigations.
No it wouldn't. As it is not set up to be falsifiable because it is very allowable for it to bend to fit its own mold.