Decaf
Professional Amateur
I was first introduced to type theory through Keirsey 7 years ago. Recently as I've developed a more cohesive idea of what it is I subscribe to, I've come to believe that Keirsey was wrong. I don't think he used legitimate interpretation of Jung's work to create his temperaments. He worked off the idea that our behavior was based on fundamental desires (Artisans desire freedom and to be impressive, Guardians desire structure and belonging, Rationals desire achievement and competance, Idealists desire maturity and understanding). That's from memory, so if I broke it down incorrectly I apologize, but its not important for my point.
I don't believe that type tells us what we will desire. Some rationals want to change the world for the better. Some artisans want to be in a stable environment that allows them to explore themselves, their trade or their relationships. Some idealists only want to make others believe as they do. Some guardians are comfortable breaking the rules if they think they are broken. His model seems to stereotype types by their behavior rather than simply trying to describe the thought processes they tend to use most.
I tried for a long time to make sense of this theory and try to make it work for analyzing others and their behavior and it consistently led me into problems, misinterpretations and pigeon-holing.
OK, so why am I posting this rant? I want to know if someone has a better understanding of his intention. A key to help me unlock the usefulness of his theory. Or if someone agrees with me and would help me figure out if I'm taking the right approach (trying to use my perceiving function here)
I don't believe that type tells us what we will desire. Some rationals want to change the world for the better. Some artisans want to be in a stable environment that allows them to explore themselves, their trade or their relationships. Some idealists only want to make others believe as they do. Some guardians are comfortable breaking the rules if they think they are broken. His model seems to stereotype types by their behavior rather than simply trying to describe the thought processes they tend to use most.
I tried for a long time to make sense of this theory and try to make it work for analyzing others and their behavior and it consistently led me into problems, misinterpretations and pigeon-holing.
OK, so why am I posting this rant? I want to know if someone has a better understanding of his intention. A key to help me unlock the usefulness of his theory. Or if someone agrees with me and would help me figure out if I'm taking the right approach (trying to use my perceiving function here)