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Carl Jung observed and classified 16 typical attitudes in human nature like so :
Extraverted
----Rational
--------Thinking
----------------Intuition
----------------Sensing
--------Feeling
----------------Intuition
----------------Sensing
----Irrational
--------Intuition
----------------Thinking
----------------Feeling
--------Sensing
----------------Thinking
----------------Feeling
Introverted
----Rational
--------Thinking
----------------Intuition
----------------Sensing
--------Feeling
----------------Intuition
----------------Sensing
----Irrational
--------Intuition
----------------Thinking
----------------Feeling
--------Sensing
----------------Thinking
----------------Feeling
The principle of this typical theory is that a function attitude must be followed by a dissimilar one in regards to the irrational/rational and extraverted/introverted dichotomies.
16 types is arbitrary(being theoretical, any number is possible), yet Jung's "function attitudes", plus his "general attitudes", is a consistent theoretical system.
As a theoretical subset of psychology, the Jungian typology system and Socionics (or any other system for that matter), do not need scientific proof of its types or postulations, regardless of that fact, they can be applied to reality. As recurrent phenomena, these 16 types have come to be widely accepted as existent, through empirical evidence. What has not been accepted universally are the postulations of how, exactly, do these types manifest and what claims can be said about the psychology and behavior of these types.
Isabel Myers adapted Carl Jung's work and created a new dichotomy for her questionnaire, called the Myers-Briggs Type Indicator. This new dichotomy added another dimension to Jung's 16 types and altered what Jung called "Rational" and "Irrational" to Judging and Perceiving, respectively, which measure something different from what Jung intended - how these types interact with the external world. Thus Myers' types are not the same theoretical types as Jung's, even though both systems intend to represent the same phenomena.
MBTI:
Judging
----Extrovert
--------iNtuition
----------------Feeling
----------------Thinking
--------Sensing
----------------Feeling
----------------Thinking
----Introvert
--------Feeling
----------------iNtuition
----------------Sensing
--------Thinking
Perceiving
----Extrovert
--------iNtuition
----------------Feeling
----------------Thinking
--------Sensing
----------------Feeling
----------------Thinking
----Introvert
-------Feeling
----------------iNtuition
----------------Sensing
-------Thinking
----------------iNtuition
----------------Sensing
This explicitly contradicts Jung's theory of the types, because of it, Myers offers a different understanding: The idea that Irrational types have extraverted perception, and Rationals have extraverted judgment. Thus if we were to use the MBTI Four Letter Code, Socionics Three Letter Code and MBTI function order, Jung and Myers conflict like so, for example:
MBTI/Keirsey = Ni-Te-Fi-Se = Judging, Intuitive-Thinking Introvert = INTJ
Jungian = Ni-Te-Fi-Se = Irrational, Intuitive-Thinking Introvert = INTP
Socionics = Ni-Te-Fi-Se = Irrational, Intuitive Logical Introtim = INTP
Pod'Lair = Ni-Te-Fi-Se = Directive, Cerebral Subjective Perceiver = INTJ or //(#)
Thus, we can conclude:
MBTI types = Pod'Lair types =/= Socionics types = Jungian types
QED.
MBTI intends to test for Jung's types but because of the added J/P dichotomy, it actually ends up changing the types. In the process of explaining function attitudes and type characteristics, over time, this had led Myers, and later interpretors, to skew what would be the original function concepts, semantics and overall type behavior.
This fact is true regardless of acknowledging the accuracy of the visual identification of Pod'Lair or any other system. Since Socionics is the only system to regard Jung's original system, it is the theory to most represent the 16 types that all these systems intend to classify.
Extraverted
----Rational
--------Thinking
----------------Intuition
----------------Sensing
--------Feeling
----------------Intuition
----------------Sensing
----Irrational
--------Intuition
----------------Thinking
----------------Feeling
--------Sensing
----------------Thinking
----------------Feeling
Introverted
----Rational
--------Thinking
----------------Intuition
----------------Sensing
--------Feeling
----------------Intuition
----------------Sensing
----Irrational
--------Intuition
----------------Thinking
----------------Feeling
--------Sensing
----------------Thinking
----------------Feeling
The principle of this typical theory is that a function attitude must be followed by a dissimilar one in regards to the irrational/rational and extraverted/introverted dichotomies.
16 types is arbitrary(being theoretical, any number is possible), yet Jung's "function attitudes", plus his "general attitudes", is a consistent theoretical system.
As a theoretical subset of psychology, the Jungian typology system and Socionics (or any other system for that matter), do not need scientific proof of its types or postulations, regardless of that fact, they can be applied to reality. As recurrent phenomena, these 16 types have come to be widely accepted as existent, through empirical evidence. What has not been accepted universally are the postulations of how, exactly, do these types manifest and what claims can be said about the psychology and behavior of these types.
Isabel Myers adapted Carl Jung's work and created a new dichotomy for her questionnaire, called the Myers-Briggs Type Indicator. This new dichotomy added another dimension to Jung's 16 types and altered what Jung called "Rational" and "Irrational" to Judging and Perceiving, respectively, which measure something different from what Jung intended - how these types interact with the external world. Thus Myers' types are not the same theoretical types as Jung's, even though both systems intend to represent the same phenomena.
MBTI:
Judging
----Extrovert
--------iNtuition
----------------Feeling
----------------Thinking
--------Sensing
----------------Feeling
----------------Thinking
----Introvert
--------Feeling
----------------iNtuition
----------------Sensing
--------Thinking
Perceiving
----Extrovert
--------iNtuition
----------------Feeling
----------------Thinking
--------Sensing
----------------Feeling
----------------Thinking
----Introvert
-------Feeling
----------------iNtuition
----------------Sensing
-------Thinking
----------------iNtuition
----------------Sensing
This explicitly contradicts Jung's theory of the types, because of it, Myers offers a different understanding: The idea that Irrational types have extraverted perception, and Rationals have extraverted judgment. Thus if we were to use the MBTI Four Letter Code, Socionics Three Letter Code and MBTI function order, Jung and Myers conflict like so, for example:
MBTI/Keirsey = Ni-Te-Fi-Se = Judging, Intuitive-Thinking Introvert = INTJ
Jungian = Ni-Te-Fi-Se = Irrational, Intuitive-Thinking Introvert = INTP
Socionics = Ni-Te-Fi-Se = Irrational, Intuitive Logical Introtim = INTP
Pod'Lair = Ni-Te-Fi-Se = Directive, Cerebral Subjective Perceiver = INTJ or //(#)
Thus, we can conclude:
MBTI types = Pod'Lair types =/= Socionics types = Jungian types
QED.
MBTI intends to test for Jung's types but because of the added J/P dichotomy, it actually ends up changing the types. In the process of explaining function attitudes and type characteristics, over time, this had led Myers, and later interpretors, to skew what would be the original function concepts, semantics and overall type behavior.
This fact is true regardless of acknowledging the accuracy of the visual identification of Pod'Lair or any other system. Since Socionics is the only system to regard Jung's original system, it is the theory to most represent the 16 types that all these systems intend to classify.