Theory of extraverted judgment functions and their relevance.
Is it true that Te indicates thinking which desires resolution? in other words would say an ENTJ desire their thinking to be resolved but not necessarily their feelings?
According to this page:
The 16 Type Patterns
The two types with Te in the 1st position are ENTJ and ESTJ.
Since closure is a function of J and both of those types are J, I would say yes...
Te desires resolution, at least in those two types who are primary Te users.
Those types with Te in 2nd position are ISTJ and INTJ, so that principle would hold true for them also.
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Another thought, my father once referred to a girl as being an ISFJ with an "internalised F". Now upon pursuing the concept he explained that this was where the usual care paid to other's wants and desires is focused more on her own wants and desires and so unlike most of her type she is selfish and seemingly unaware of any importance to what others want to do.
I know your dad is quite trustworthy with determining people's types, so I won't argue that point, but it seems to me that once we see a person who is acting so far outside of the scope of the norm for her type, I don't think type alone can explain things. A selfish ISFJ is an anomaly. It's not even typical behavior when they're in their shadow. Something seems wrong here. Either she's not really an ISFJ, or she's not really being entirely as selfish as your dad perceived her to be. There has to be external factors somewhere that are not being taken into account.
Maybe the ISFJ with the inward-turned F was actually a shadow of her actual type?
It's confounding.
We're missing part of the picture. Did your dad observe this selfish behavior or did she come to him complaining of it herself? In what way was it selfish?
Was she being stubbornly immovable and it LOOKED like selfishness?
Now we're getting somewhere because that IS typical shadow behavior for the ISFJ.
I'm theorising that this is an issue that would affect any extraverted judgment function. Ergo a Te predominant person may end up acting with internalised T which would lead to a well organised internal world with strict definitions even if their externalised behaviour is seemingly flexible.
Not so fast, Kimosabee.
You know I just started reading Jung, so I only know enough to be dangerous, as they say, but this is what I keep thinking about that:
Jung said:
"... because in every pronounced type there is a special tendency to compensate the one-sidedness of that type, a tendency which is biologically purposive since it strives constantly to maintain the psychic equilibrium."
Psychological Type, C.G. Jung, paragraph 3.
And now that I see it in writing, I have no idea why that kept bothering me...
Ah. I remember.
As in the case with your ISFJ, if she was going through her life being Fe instead of Fi, then there's no way her psyche would be balanced. It's unnatural. It can't happen.
Jung dealt with emotionally unhealthy people for over 30 years, and even they strive for "psychic equilibrium".
For every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction... even in the personality.
There. That's my current stance.
